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<text id=93HT0824>
<link 93XP0256>
<link 93XP0255>
<title>
1987: The Spirit Of Washington
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1987 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
December 21, 1987
NATION
The Spirit Of Washington
</hdr>
<body>
<p>With big smiles and some frustrations, detente makes a comeback
</p>
<p> It will be remembered as the summit at which intimacy and
symbolism overshadowed disputes about substance, and its spirit
was captured during a private moment between Mikhail Gorbachev
and Ronald Reagan on the morning after they signed their
historic arms accord. The President led the Soviet leader to
a little study next to the Oval Office and produced a baseball
that Joe DiMaggio had hoped to have autographed by Gorbachev at
the state dinner the night before. Reagan was not just
fulfilling the old Yankee slugger's request. He had a metaphor
in mind. Are we, he asked, going to play ball? Yes, Gorbachev
firmly agreed. Then the two men rejoined their top aides in the
Oval Office for a critical hour-long bargaining session on ways
to reduce their bloated arsenals of strategic weapons.
</p>
<p> Gorbachev's dazzling visit to Washington for the summit of 1987
seemed to herald a new and more personable ball game in the
40-year struggle between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. At center
stage stood the leaders of the world's two most powerful
nations, smiling warmly, shaking hands, exchanging pens, trading
one-liners. The Soviet visitor even burst into song at one
point. When it was all over, Gorbachev called the three-day
Washington summit a "major event in world politics," while
Reagan grandiloquently declared that the meeting had "lit the
sky with hope for all people of goodwill."
</p>
<p> Even though there were no breakthroughs on arms control--the
thorny issue of Star Wars was set aside for another day--and
there were heated exchanges on human rights, the exalted
pronouncements uttered in the afterglow were more than mere
hyperbole. Something extraordinary was taking place: four
decades of often truculent cold-war rhetoric were giving way to
dispassionate discourse and high-level rapport. Neither side
was forgetting the vast ideological chasm that separates the
superpowers, but they were learning to work around their
differences, to stake out common ground on which to build a
better understanding.
</p>
<p> The centerpiece of the summit was the ceremonial signing of an
intermediate-range nuclear forces treaty that eliminated an
entire class of atomic weapons from Europe and the rest of the
world. The product of six years of negotiation, the pact calls
for the destruction of 1.752 Soviet and 859 American missiles
and establishes rigorous on-site verification procedures that
pave the way for more ambitious agreements in the Strategic Arms
Reduction Talks (START) regarding longer-range weapons.
</p>
<p> On that score, the negotiating teams were able to work out some
new details concerning their goal of a 50% cut in strategic
arms. By agreeing to set aside the issue of exactly how the
1972 Antiballistic Missile Treaty would restrict the development
of Reagan's proposed Strategic Defense Initiative, the two sides
showed a willingness--at least for the moment--to make that
dispute less of an obstacle to a START treaty. Such an
agreement, if the SDI issue can continue to be finessed, is
expected for form the basis for a fourth summit in Moscow late
next spring.
</p>
<p> Reagan saw the Washington summit as a vindication of his
hard-line policies of the past seven years. By seeking to roll
back Communist influence and reduce, rather than merely limit,
the number of nuclear weapons on both sides, Reagan believes he
has repudiated the flawed policies of his predecessors. Many
of the claims he made in his televised speech Thursday night
were overstated: the INF treaty is not the first to require
reductions in the number of nuclear weapons (SALT II provided
for limited cuts), the summit did not represent a victory for
his SDI program, and he was not able to make human rights or
regional issues anything more than a sideshow to the business
of arms control.
</p>
<p> In fact, though the President would wince at the thought, the
summit was not so much a triumph of a Reagan revolution in
foreign policy as it was a return of the principles of detente:
a reduction of tensions between the two superpowers and a
recognition that arms control is the focal point of relations
between the two countries. During the long and twisted walk up
to the summit, Fritz Ermarth, the chief Soviet expert on the
National Security Council, cracked, "Detente is dirty work, but
somebody's got to do it." Last week Reagan and Gorbachev made
it seem like good clean fun.
</p>
<p> Although the meager results on substantive issues hardly
justified the excitement and euphoria that surrounded last
week's summit, what really mattered--and captured the public
imagination--was the personal accord and the images of
friendliness that pervaded the event. In diplomacy, especially
in the age of television, the perception that tensions have been
reduced tends to mean that tensions have in fact been reduced.
What happened in Washington last week is that the perceptions
changed measurably--and for the better--on both sides. This
was true for the delighted Washington bystanders who had their
hands pumped by Gorbachev; it was true for the fur-hatted
Muscovites who huddled under a giant TV screen on Kalinin
Prospect to watch their leader's pomp-filled arrival ceremony
at the White House; and it was true, above all, for the two men
who faced each other across the negotiating table.
</p>
<p> This time the two men seemed to hit it off personally from the
first handshake to the last. In some of their public
appearances, they traded quips like a well-rehearsed vaudeville
team. At the White House treaty-signing ceremony, for example,
Reagan repeated the Russian phrase doveryai no proveryai (trust
but verify), only to be interrupted by Gorbachev's good-natured
observation, "You repeat that at every meeting." When the
laughter of the 250 assembled guests died down, Reagan flashed
his off-center grin, gave Gorbachev a little bow and replied,
"I like it." The audience exploded with laughter again. Said
Gorbachev just before his final departure: "I think we trust
each other more."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev had another interlocutor: the American people. From
his Monday afternoon arrival at Washington's Andrews Air Force
Base to his rainy Thursday night departure, the General
Secretary seemed to be leading a full-court media blitz. He
unfailingly turned on the charm in his public appearances, such
as Tuesday night's state dinner at the White House, where he and
Wife Raisa joined Pianist Van Cliburn in singing Moscow Nights.
Later in the week he stopped his motorcade on Connecticut
Avenue to hop out and press the flesh with passersby. Gushed
one thrilled bystander: "It was like the coming of the second
Messiah or something." Now that's public relations.
</p>
<p> The Soviet leader invited several groups of influential
Americans to the Soviet embassy to push his case for arms
reductions, world peace and his internal reforms. By far the
most important of these meetings was with nine congressional
leaders, including four of the Senators who will ultimately
decide whether to ratify the INF treaty. Most of the legislators
came out of the 90-minute meeting impressed by Gorbachev's
intelligence, candor and optimism. But many of them let the
General Secretary know that some positive Soviet actions were
necessary to improve relations. Senate Majority Leader Robert
Byrd, a West Virginia Democrat, noted that a timetable for
Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan "would help" win Senate
ratification for INF. Senate Democratic Whip Alan Cranston of
California asked what could be done to speed the START talks
along. "You know what needs doing," replied Gorbachev. He
pointed out that the Soviet Union was now sending out "good
vibes" and added, "We need good vibes from you."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev later held separate meetings with intellectual and
cultural leaders (including such luminaries as former Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger, Writer Norman Mailer and Composer Yoko
Ono), media moguls and business executives. At times during
these sessions, he seemed almost Reaganesque in his use of
folksy anecdotes to make his points. He began his meeting with
the intellectuals, for example, by reading a letter from an
American teenager calling on the two leaders "to build a world
of responsibility."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev showed the blunt candor that has distinguished his
domestic efforts at economic reform. In his talk with news
executives, he referred to the Soviet Union as the "world's
second ranking power." The remark, which surprised many
Westerners in the audience, was consistent with the message he
has been stressing at home: that the soviet Union must squarely
face up to the problems in its economic system. Soviet Foreign
Ministry Spokesman Gennadi Gerasimov later told TIME that it was
the first time Gorbachev had put his country's runner-up status
so bluntly. Quipped Gerasimov: "He conceded--to Japan."
</p>
<p> But Gorbachev bared his teeth on several occasions, betraying
a testiness that belied his appeals to sweet reason. The
Soviet leader's performance at his farewell press conference,
in fact, may have undone some of the political gains of the
previous three days. After arriving 15 minutes late at the
Soviet Union's new Mt. Alto embassy complex, he launched into
a detailed 70-minute monologue summing up his talks with Reagan.
Near the end of his statement, however, he suddenly delivered
a diatribe against the press--the very group he most needed to
win over to get his message across.
</p>
<p> Chopping the air with his hands and jutting out his lower lip,
Gorbachev charged that all journalists wanted to do was grill
him on human rights, "as if we are agreeing to give interviews
not just to try to search for the truth, to prod each other to
serious thinking, but to drive the politician into a corner."
He then instructed the reporters, like a scolding schoolmaster,
to "think over this part of my talk." The outburst, like his
brusque answers to most of the questions that followed, revealed
that glasnost has definite limits.
</p>
<p> Reagan, meanwhile, showed his own hard-line side in a
postsummit address. Having kept a relatively low profile during
most of the visit, he went on national television only two
minutes after Gorbachev's blue-and-white Ilyushin I1-62 had
roared off into rainy black skies. Speaking from the Oval
Office, Reagan called the talks a "clear success," giving cause
for "both hope and optimism." But his speech included many
declarations of his fundamental opposition to Soviet policies
and philosophy. To some extent, Reagan was merely reverting to
old familiar themes out of habit. But with an eye to the
ratification process, he was also shoring up his right flank
against charges by increasingly jumpy conservatives that he has
gone soft on the Soviets.
</p>
<p> Reagan's desire not to stray too far from his conservative base
also probably accounted for some of his caution in dealing with
arms control at the summit. As he has pursued his visions of
disarmament through strength, many Republican
strategists--notably Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger--warned
that the headlong rush to cut missiles was not being guided by
any strategic vision of how the U.S. and its allies could best
defend their vital interests. Yet another surprise
"breakthrough" that discarded the carefully wrought strategies
of deterrence could have been disconcerting.
</p>
<p> As it was in Reykjavik last year, SDI remained the main
stumbling block to a major breakthrough. The Soviets have long
claimed that all but the most basic Star Wars research is
precluded by the 1972 ABM treaty. The Reagan Administration,
under its much disputed "broad" interpretation of that treaty,
insists that more advanced research and certain types of tests
in space are permitted. In addition, the Soviets seek a
guarantee that neither side will withdraw from the ABM treaty
to deploy a space-based antimissile system for at least ten
years. Dealing with that impasse was the job of the working
group that was set up on Tuesday under Paul Nitze, the
President's chief arms-control adviser, and Marshal Sergei
Akhromeyev, the Soviet armed forces chief of staff.
</p>
<p> Reagan outlined his position on SDI during his
Wednesday-morning meeting with Gorbachev in the Oval Office.
"We are going forward with the research and development
necessary to see if this is a workable concept," said the
President, "and if it is, we are going to deploy it." Gorbachev
listened intently, looking Reagan hard in the eyes as he spoke.
When Reagan finished, the Soviet leader replied: "Mr.
President, do what you think you have to do. And if in the end
you think you have a system you want to deploy, go ahead and
deploy. Who am I to tell you what to do? I think you're wasting
money. I don't think it will work. But if that's what you want
to do, go ahead." He added ominously: "We are moving in
another direction, and we preserve our option to do what we
think is necessary and in our own national interest at that
time. And we think we can do it less expensively and with
greater effectiveness."
</p>
<p> U.S. experts were unsure what he meant but offered several
possible explanations: that the Soviets were working on their
own defensive system (a fact that Gorbachev seemed to concede
in his interview with NBC's Tom Brokaw two weeks ago); that they
might consider breaking the moratorium on antisatellite systems,
which could cripple space-based SDI components; or that they
might resort to abrogating existing treaties and rebuilding
their nuclear arsenals.
</p>
<p> American analysts were similarly baffled by another vague
Gorbachev claim, made during his final press conference, that
the Soviets posses the means to identify the location and
megatonnage of land- and sea-based nuclear weapons--even those
deployed on submarines. If the Soviets could indeed pinpoint
U.S. subs, they could neutralize a key leg of the U.S. nuclear
triad. State Department and Pentagon experts were highly
skeptical that the Soviets possessed such technology.
</p>
<p> However obscure Gorbachev was about his secret hardware, he left
no doubt that the SDI issue was no longer an obstacle to an
agreement on strategic cuts. This was a considerable concession
from the Soviets, whose insistence on nipping Star Wars in the
bud had led them to link SDI restrictions to the tentative
wide-ranging agreements reached at the Reykjavik summit last
year. Yet the Soviets have long pursued a tactic of linking and
un-linking and then relinking SDI to other agreements; the idea
is sure to come back to haunt a START agreement before the two
leaders can clink glasses again in Moscow next year.
</p>
<p> The Nitze-Akhromeyev working group focused its efforts on
drafting the language of its joint communique in such a way as
to defer the SDI problem without undermining the validity of the
ARM treaty. At the same time, it sought to reach agreement on
the "sub-ceilings" that would be placed on different types of
strategic missiles and bombers within the framework of reducing
each side's warheads by half. The group was still struggling
with texts and numbers as Gorbachev and Reagan were ending their
final working lunch in the Family Dining Room of the White
House. Stretching out their meal while waiting for negotiators
to finish, Gorbachev and Reagan lapsed into casual conversation.
The two leaders got to talking about being politicians. Reagan
told Gorbachev that he had watched his curbside handshaking
interlude on TV, explaining that American politicians called
that "working the crowds." Gorbachev laughed and won Reagan's
hearty endorsement of his observation that leaders learned more
when traveling in the provinces than in their own capitals.
There was unintended irony in Gorbachev's remark, since for all
his efforts to impress his views on Americans during this trip,
he had shown little interest in learning about the country
itself.
</p>
<p> Finally, the arms-control group reached consensus and rejoined
the leaders. Gorbachev was escorted to the map room to be
briefed by Akhromeyev, while Reagan retired to the library,
where Secretary of State George Shultz and Lieut. General Colin
Powell, the National Security Adviser, explained the language
to him. Informed that the Joint Chiefs were satisfied with the
text, Reagan approved it. Then he went to shake hands with
Gorbachev before accompanying him to the South Lawn for the
farewell ceremony.
</p>
<p> The working group had refined instructions for the Soviet and
U.S. negotiators in Geneva, who will seek to translate them into
treaty language over the next few months. As originally agreed
in Reykjavik, the plan calls for a 50% reduction in overall
nuclear warheads, down to 6,000 for each side. Of those, the
combined number of inter-continental ballistic missiles plus
submarine-launched ballistic missiles was limited at 4,900. No
more than 1,540 warheads can be on heavy multiwarhead missiles.
They also agreed to a limit of 1,600 delivery systems (missile
launchers, bombers, etc.). Verification procedures remain to be
worked out, although U.S. officials feel their earlier
breakthroughs on INF on-site inspections will take them a long
way toward finding solutions.
</p>
<p> On SDI, the language worked out was both tortured and mushy,
just what was needed to defer the dispute to another day. Says
Gerasimov: "It means we postponed our quarrels." The
negotiators in Geneva were instructed to "work out an agreement
that would commit the sides to observe the ABM treaty, as signed
in 1972, while conducting their research, development and
testing as required, which are permitted by the ABM treaty, and
not to withdraw from the ABM treaty for a specified period of
time." Behind the convoluted language lies a compromise that
allows the two leaders to take opposed positions on SDI. does
this mean the Soviets have accepted the inevitability of
eventual SDI deployment? Hardly. They have given up on trying
to get this President to accept any formula that explicitly
limits SDI testing. Yet they see that Congress is applying its
own budgetary constraints on Star Wars and has made it clear
that it will not let the Administration break out of the narrow
interpretation of the ABM treaty.
</p>
<p> Moreover, given the still preliminary state of the program,
Reagan has little need to violate the narrow interpretation
right away. Having won the President's commitment not to
withdraw from the ABM treaty, the Soviets are content to wait
and deal with the next President on the question of what the
treaty means. Yet it would be a mistake to assume that they
have totally delinked SDI from the question of strategic arms
reduction. In his Friday press conference, Reagan flatly stated
that Star Wars now offers "no impediment" to a START agreement.
That view, however, was openly disputed by a senior
arms-control adviser, who noted that the Soviets might well
relink the issue before the Moscow summit.
</p>
<p> The two sides made even less progress on the other issues under
discussion. Reagan began the very first session with an
hour-long lecture on human rights, pointing out that the U.S.,
a nation of immigrants, felt strongly about the right of people
to travel and live where they pleased. He referred in
particular to the cases of Jews who were not permitted to leave
the Soviet Union. In the heated discussion that followed,
Gorbachev angrily told the President, "I'm not on trial here,
and you're not a judge to judge me." Gorbachev then compared
the Soviet Union's emigration curbs with America's restrictions
on immigrants, notably from Mexico. Replied Reagan, quite
rightly: "There's a big difference between wanting out and
wanting in." Not surprisingly, the debate led nowhere.
</p>
<p> Nor was there any movement on regional issues. There has been
some hope that Gorbachev would announce a starting date for a
promised Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, but he declined to
do so unless Reagan cut off aid to the Afghan rebels. There was
no agreement, either, on Nicaragua or the Persian Gulf.
Commenting on the lack of progress in these areas,
Administration officials pointed out that in private meetings
Gorbachev was much tougher than the charming image he offered
to the public. "What you have gained is a guy you can talk to,"
said one Reagan aide, "but when it comes to substantive changes,
forget it."
</p>
<p> That judgment seems excessive. The INF treaty offers proof that
a man one can talk to is a man one can deal with--at least some
of the time. In an upbeat press conference at week's end,
Reagan said an "entirely different relationship" had now been
established between himself and Gorbachev. To place too much
significance on the wonders that can come from more amiable
relations and personal rapport would be foolish and would
dangerously ignore the vicissitudes of Soviet-American
relations since World War II. Yet to dismiss the opportunity
created by the vigorous Soviet leader who came calling last week
would be equally foolish, and perhaps just as dangerous.
</p>
<p>-- By Thomas A. Sancton. Reported by James O. Jackson with
Gorbachev, Barrett Seaman and Strobe Talbott/Washington
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>