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<text id=94TT1776>
<title>
Dec. 19, 1994: Diplomacy:Next, A Cold Peace?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Dec. 19, 1994 Uncle Scrooge
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
DIPLOMACY, Page 50
Next, A Cold Peace?
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Relations between the U.S. and Russia are rapidly turning
sour
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow and
Ann M. Simmons/Washington
</p>
<p> Perhaps there should have been no shock. Long before last
week's meeting in Budapest of the 53-nation Conference on
Security and Cooperation in Europe, there had been abundant
warnings that U.S.-Russian relations were turning sour. Russian
officials had tried unsuccessfully to get the U.S.-designed
embargo on Iraq's oil sales lifted and had resurrected Moscow's
veto in the U.N. Security Council to block an American-backed
resolution on Bosnia.
</p>
<p> Shortly before the CSCE summit began, Russian Foreign
Minister Andrei Kozyrev refused to go through with the scheduled
signing of documents to create loose military ties between
Russia and the U.S.-led NATO alliance.
</p>
<p> But the exchanges in Budapest joltingly escalated the
tensions to the heads-of-state level. This time it was
Presidents Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin who dropped the
big-grin, buddy-buddy act of their previous six face-to-face
meetings and traded barbs. Clinton chided Russia indirectly for
opposing NATO's plans to define the criteria for admitting
Moscow's former satellites Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia
and Hungary by the end of 1995. NATO is the "bedrock" of
European security, said Clinton, and expanding it will make "new
members, old members and nonmembers" safer. And if Russia thinks
otherwise? Well, tough. "No country outside will be allowed to
veto expansion."
</p>
<p> Yeltsin responded by voicing fear that Europe was about to
split again into hostile blocs, this time consisting of
everybody else vs. Russia. Expansion of NATO, in his view, would
push what many Russians still see as an anti-Moscow alliance
right up against the borders of the old Soviet Union. Said
Yeltsin: "Europe, not having yet freed itself from the heritage
of the cold war, is in danger of plunging into a cold peace. Why
sow the seeds of mistrust?" The Russian President also accused
Washington of overweening arrogance in playing the role of sole
superpower. In his words, "It is a dangerous delusion to suppose
that the destinies of continents and the world community in
general can somehow be managed from one single capital."
</p>
<p> U.S.-Russian wrangling helped keep the CSCE from reaching
any agreement on what to do about the war in Bosnia. Russia,
which sympathizes with Bosnia's Orthodox Serbs, blocked a
proposal to condemn Serb attacks on the Muslim enclave of Bihac.
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl suggested a bland appeal for a
truce, but even that failed.
</p>
<p> At week's end, to placate doubting allies, the Clinton
Administration expressed a willingness to put U.S. combat troops
into Bosnia, possibly as many as 25,000. But the pledge came
festooned with important maybes: the troops would go in only to
help the 19-nation U.N. peacekeeping force withdraw, and then
only if the blue helmets came under attack and had to shoot
their way out--and even then only after "consultation" with a
very unenthusiastic Congress. But even a remote possibility of
American G.I.s shooting at Bosnian Serbs will hardly help ease
the irritation between Washington and Moscow.
</p>
<p> Those tensions are not the whole story of U.S.-Russian
relations. After their testy exchange last week, Clinton and
Yeltsin reconvened at a ceremony that formally put into effect
the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks treaty. Under terms
negotiated in 1991, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan will destroy
all their nuclear warheads, while the U.S. and Russia will
greatly reduce the numbers they possess. The fact that the
ceremony went almost unnoticed testifies to how effectively
Washington and Moscow have worked to dispel the once rampant
dread of nuclear holocaust. On a lower level, Yevgeni Kozhokin,
director of the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies, points
out that thousands of ordinary Americans and Russians are
working together every day on various projects and that "that's
a new factor for stability that never existed before." Vice
President Al Gore is flying to Moscow this week for a scheduled
meeting with Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin at which some
soothing will probably go on.
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, the tensions are real and not to be dismissed
as mere mouthings by Yeltsin to appeal to nationalist sentiment
at home. The very fact that Washington bashing is increasingly
popular will make it tempting for Yeltsin to do more and more of
it--especially since his prospects of being re-elected in 1996
currently seem as shaky as Clinton's. In one recent poll,
Russians were asked whether they would rather live in the "state
system" headed by Yeltsin or in the one ruled by the late Leonid
Brezhnev, whose leadership of the Soviet Union was long derided
as the "period of stagnation." Brezhnev won, 46% to 28%.
</p>
<p> Some of the frictions result simply because certain
Russian national interests clash with U.S. policies. Russia has
been trying to get the embargo on Iraqi oil sales lifted
because the oil revenue is the only way Iraq can pay for arms
it buys from the old U.S.S.R., and Moscow needs the money.
Financial pressure also underlies Moscow's insistence that any
Western companies drilling for oil in Azerbaijan build a
pipeline through Russia, a demand that has aborted some
promising deals. The U.S. responded calmly to Yeltsin's
announcement on Friday that he had authorized the army to use
"all means at the state's disposal" to bring the breakaway
republic of Chechnya back into the Russian Federation. "The
Chechnya question is a Russian internal matter," announced the
State Department. But in some American--especially
Republican--eyes, Russia's dispatch of "peacekeeping" troops to
Tajikistan, Georgia and other now independent Soviet republics
looks like an attempt to force them back under Moscow's rule.
But Russians insist they have a legitimate interest, indeed a
duty, to prevent disruption in neighboring countries.
</p>
<p> The big problem is one of psychology. Despite, or because
of, current military and economic weakness, Russians of every
political opinion yearn to see their country once again treated
as the great power it historically has been. Instead, they
think, it is being brushed aside. Russian fears of an expanded
NATO may be exaggerated but are not totally paranoid. Fear of
Russia is indeed a factor driving Moscow's former satellites to
seek full NATO membership. Russians tend to forget their
country's long history of aggressive expansion under czars as
well as commissars. Worse, Russians think the U.S. and other
Western powers are reneging on an implied deal. Moscow has done
much of what they wanted--pulled its troops back from Central
Europe and the Baltic states, for instance--only to face
continued exclusion from an alliance that now aims to include
much of Europe.
</p>
<p> The U.S.-Russia strains may get even worse when the new
Republican Congress takes office. While the Clinton
Administration has made friendship with Moscow a top
foreign-policy priority, the conservatives who will run key
committees are inclined to mistrust even a non-Communist Russia.
In particular, some incoming congressional powers are likely to
look on Russian financial aid with a jaundiced eye,
believing--with some reason--that much of it has been stolen or
misused. They may try either to cut the total, or to redirect
some of it to Ukraine and other former Soviet republics. That
would intensify another Russian grievance: that when it comes
to aid, the U.S. and other Western countries talk big but
deliver little.
</p>
<p> Neither Russia nor the U.S. is so idiotic as to take any
chance of reviving the cold war. In the midst of his blast
during the CSCE meeting, Yeltsin took care to insist, "We are
no longer enemies, but partners." But however one-sided his
expression, there is a very real danger that what just a short
time ago looked like a blossoming friendship will indeed
degenerate into a mere cold peace.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>