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- <text id=93HT1150>
- <title>
- 80 Election: Carter Takes Charge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- February 4, 1980
- COVER STORIES
- Carter Takes Charge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Buoyed by victory in Iowa, he issues a major warning to Moscow
- </p>
- <list>
- <l> "Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered."</l>
- <l> --Thomas Paine</l>
- </list>
- <p> For Jimmy Carter, these were indeed the times that try
- men's souls. For weeks he had been striding angrily around the
- White House, frustrated over his inability to free the 50
- American hostages in Tehran and outraged over the Soviet
- invasion of Afghanistan. He had been uncharacteristically
- short-tempered with aides, sometimes snapping at them for no
- good reason. On occasion he seemed distant and depressed. He
- prayed more often than usual. Finally, this phase of Jimmy
- Carter's time of trial seemed to end last week as he emerged
- from the White House to try seriously to take charge of the
- nation's fortunes.
- </p>
- <p> In the first real test of his campaign for re-election, he
- gave Senator Edward Kennedy the walloping of his life at the
- Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses. Without a doubt, as once
- predicted, Carter did "whip his ass." Then, standing in the
- glare of TV lights in the House of Representatives, the
- President sent the Soviets a forceful warning in his State of
- the Union address: "Let our position be absolutely clear: An
- attempt by any outside force to gain control of the Persian
- Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital
- interests of the United States of America. And such an assault
- will be repelled by any means necessary, including military
- force." To make that warning more credible, Carter reversed a
- policy of just a few months ago and decided to ask Congress to
- authorize the registration of young Americans--perhaps
- including women--for the draft.
- </p>
- <p> The sense of decisiveness that Carter projected in his
- speech was reinforced throughout the week. The House voted 386
- to 12 to back the President's request that the Summer Olympics
- be moved from Moscow, canceled or boycotted by the West; the
- Senate is expected to follow suit soon. Congress granted China
- most-favored-nation status, which has long been denied to
- Moscow, meaning that tariffs on Peking's goods will be reduced
- to the lowest rates levied on imports from other U.S. trading
- partners. The Defense Department announced that the U.S. is now
- willing to sell China military equipment, including trucks,
- communications gear and early-warning radar, but no weapons. The
- Air Force flew several B-52s from Guam over Soviet ships in the
- Indian Ocean to demonstrate U.S. ability to project military
- power in the area. Said a Pentagon official: "If that message
- was lost on them, their hearing aids were turned off."
- </p>
- <p> There had been advance speculation that the President was
- drawing up a "Carter Doctrine," something comparable to Harry
- Truman's 1947 decision to aid Greece and Turkey in resisting
- Soviet expansionism. Carter's speech was hardly that. There were
- too many ambiguities, too many loopholes, too many major things
- that should have been faced but were not. Nonetheless, the
- speech marked a turning point in U.S. global policy. For the
- first time since the Viet Nam War, a President was stating his
- willingness to sent troops to defend U.S. vital interests in a
- faraway place. In explicitly extending the U.S. defense shield
- to Southwest Asia, Carter was officially laying to rest the
- so-called Nixon "Doctrine" of 1969, by which Washington was
- supposed to rely mostly on regional allies to protect
- themselves and American interests.
- </p>
- <p> For Carter, this was a deep and difficult change. He had
- entered office believing that detente meant cooperation between
- the U.S. and the Soviet Union. He had promised to cut military
- spending, withdraw U.S. troops from South Korea, reduce arms
- sales abroad and demilitarize the Indian Ocean. In May 1977,
- Carter stood in cap and gown at the University of Notre Dame
- commencement and exulted that the U.S. was "now free of that
- inordinate fear of Communism, which once led us to embrace any
- dictator who joined us in that fear." Henceforth, he said, the
- U.S. would try "to persuade the Soviet Union that one country
- cannot impose its system of society upon another [through
- military force]." Despite arguments over human rights and
- various conflicts in Africa, Carter clung to his faith and
- emotionally embraced Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid
- Brezhnev when they signed the SALT II agreement at last year's
- Vienna summit.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and Brezhnev's at best
- misleading explanation on the hot line to Washington struck
- Carter as a personal betrayal. Many said he had brought the
- crisis on himself, that his policies conveyed an impression to
- the Soviets of weakness and indecision. If that was the Soviet
- impression, Carter was plainly determined to wipe it out.
- </p>
- <p> As the President struggled to define a U.S. response to
- the crisis in Tehran and Afghanistan and formulate his new
- position on Soviet adventurism, aides found him extraordinarily
- preoccupied. He uncharacteristically left to them most of the
- day-to-day details of his re-election campaign. He came as usual
- to the Oval Office at 5:30 a.m., often brooding alone and
- scribbling notes at his big carved oak desk. He summoned outside
- foreign policy experts, such as former Secretary of Defense
- Clark Clifford and former U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, to
- supplement the views that he was getting from Secretary of State
- Cyrus Vance and National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski.
- Almost daily, the President asked aides to obtain old Government
- reports and history texts on how his predecessors handled
- international crises. He consulted by phone with foreign
- leaders.
- </p>
- <p> In the evening, he often worked in his living quarters
- until midnight, cutting back on his sleep by about an hour, to
- no more than five hours. Though he seemed well rested in the
- morning, he tired noticeably by the end of the day. He had less
- time for jogging, about three miles a day instead of his usual
- four or five.
- </p>
- <p> When Rosalynn was at his side, in between her repeated
- campaign forays to Iowa and New England, she continued to
- perform her extraordinary role as the President's most trusted
- adviser. Around the White House she is known as a
- "Brzezinski-liner" because she has long shared the security
- adviser's hawkish views, both on the Soviets and on the plight
- of the American captives in Tehran. She has warned that Soviet
- assurances of future cooperation should be mistrusted. She has
- also argued that persuasion has no effect on the Ayatullah
- Ruhollah Khomeini, and as far back as when the hostages were
- first seized, she favored blockading Iran's ports.
- </p>
- <p> In preparing his State of the Union speech, Carter followed
- his normal practice of asking aides for suggestions, then
- meeting with them individually and in groups to discuss their
- ideas. it quickly became apparent that even though he was beset
- by inflation and other economic problems at home, he wanted the
- speech to be devoted mostly to foreign policy and that he
- wanted to take a stronger approach to Moscow than had previously
- been favored by the State Department.
- </p>
- <p> One major debate within Carter's inner circle was over
- whether he should call for revival of draft registration, which
- ended in 1976 when Congress put the Selective Service System in
- hibernation. Carter was opposed to restoring the draft itself,
- but Vance and Secretary of Defense Harold Brown argued that by
- resuming Selective Service registration, Carter would
- underscore his intention to stand firm against further Soviet
- expansionism. Carter was still not persuaded, and draft
- registration was not part of the speech that he took with him
- to Camp David on the weekend before he was to deliver his
- address.
- </p>
- <p> At the presidential retreat, with no advisers but his
- wife, Carter practically rewrote the entire speech. On Saturday
- he inserted draft registration to give the address more bite.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Carter returned to Washington on Monday, he had
- a new speech that an aide described as "tougher than what went
- with him to Camp David." It was a hard, anti-Soviet address
- that largely reflected Brzezinski's views, rather than those of
- Vance. Said a senior State Department official: "Zbig's finally
- got his cold war." Indeed, is struck some foreign policy experts
- as ironic that Brzezinski's longstanding advocacy of a tough
- line had apparently been vindicated by a crisis that his
- arguments, his Moscow-baiting and his tilt toward Peking may
- have helped to cause.
- </p>
- <p> That evening, Carter took a break to watch the caucus
- results from Iowa on TV. At 9:30 p.m., Appointments Secretary
- Phillip Wise phoned to congratulate Carter on his overwhelming
- victory. The President and his wife were ecstatic. Said an aide:
- "You could practically hear him grinning from ear to ear."
- Rosalynn was even more emotional. Said another staffer: "She was
- so excited that she was just flying." Next morning, Carter
- greeted a top adviser with "the biggest smile that I've seen in
- a long time," but he quickly got back to the speech. When
- another aide raised the subject of politics later in the
- morning, the president snapped: "Get out. Stop bothering me.
- I don't have time to talk about it."
- </p>
- <p> By then, some key aides were objecting that the address
- drew too specific a line against the Soviets and contained to
- many details. It described, for example, how U.S. forces would
- eventually be based at defensive facilities around the Persian
- Gulf and Indian Ocean (the U.S. is negotiating for use of ports
- and airfields in Kenya, Oman and Somalia). It was argued that by
- making the speech more ambiguous, the President would retain
- more flexibility on critical questions, such as what specific
- Soviet actions would constitute a threat against U.S. interests
- in the Gulf region and how the U.S. would respond. Another
- debate was over how Carter should refer to the area he was
- proposing to defend. He finally decided that "the oilfields"
- sounded too crass, and settled on "the Persian Gulf region."
- </p>
- <p> By Wednesday morning Carter had slightly blurred the
- speech, disappointing the hawkish faction among his White House
- advisers, who feared that the Soviets would view it as mostly
- rhetoric. One of the President's aides took consolation in
- describing the speech as "forcefully ambiguous." Vance was
- also unhappy with the rhetoric, but for a different reason.
- According to a close associate, he was concerned that the
- language was too flamboyant, giving the impression that Carter
- was overreacting and raising the danger that he would not be
- able to deliver on his threat of repelling a Soviet assault in
- the Persian Gulf.
- </p>
- <p> That evening, as Carter stood at the polished walnut
- lectern, he looked nervous for only a moment, first licking and
- then biting his upper lip. Then he began moving somberly but
- smoothly through the 32-minute address, before a packed
- audience of top Administration officials, Supreme Court
- Justices, Congressmen, Senators and diplomats--and a TV
- audience of tens of millions.
- </p>
- <p>Among his key points:
- </p>
- <p>-- He is firmly opposed to sending a U.S. Olympic team to
- Moscow because of the Soviet forces in Afghanistan. (This was
- greeted with 15 seconds of applause, the longest ovation of the
- speech.)
- </p>
- <p>-- The long-pending CIA charter must be enacted to improve
- U.S. intelligence. The legislation would tighten the agency's
- control over sensitive information and broaden the range of
- covert activities that it could conduct without specific
- presidential approval.
- </p>
- <p>-- Energy legislation left from last year, including the
- windfall profits tax, must be passed promptly. U.S. dependence
- on foreign oil is "a clear and present danger to our nation's
- security," said Carter. But he did not call for any new energy
- measures, and he failed to emphasize the obvious need for an
- all-out drive to cut U.S. oil consumption.
- </p>
- <p> [Carter also blamed imported oil for much of the U.S.'s
- inflation problem. Three days earlier, on NBC's Meet the Press,
- he had claimed that "all the increases [in prices] for
- practical purposes of inflation rates since I have been in
- office have been directly attributable to increases in OPEC oil
- prices." It was a stunning misstatement, which he corrected in
- his State of the Union address, in which he accurately described
- OPEC's price hikes as "the single biggest factor in the
- inflation rate last year." Carter's chief inflation fighter,
- Alfred Kahn, told a congressional committee last week that 2.2
- percentage points of last year's 13.3% inflation rate were
- directly due to higher energy prices.]
- </p>
- <p> All in all, it was one of the best-received speeches of
- Carter's presidency. It was firm, measured, strongly felt. He
- was stopped by applause 20 times. As he left the House chamber,
- he waved exuberantly, grinned broadly and plunged into the
- crowd like a campaigner, grabbing for arms with both hands.
- </p>
- <p> Reaction to the speech in Congress was sharply partisan.
- Democratic Senator Henry Jackson of Washington, a proponent of
- increasing military strength and generally no Carter ally on
- foreign policy issues, called the address "a good beginning on
- hammering out a doctrine [on Southwest Asia]."
- </p>
- <p> South Dakota Senator George McGovern, who favors less
- military spending, described the speech as "a good and
- constructive effort." Florida Democrat Richard Stone, chairman
- of a Senate subcommittee on the Near East, said that Carter
- outlined "a clear containment doctrine, and, if it means what
- it implies, it is the strongest statement that any President in
- recent years has made." By contrast, House Minority Leader John
- Rhodes of Arizona accused Carter of "rattling the scabbard
- without anything in it." Said Senate Acting Minority Leader Ted
- Stevens of Alaska: "If the Carter Doctrine had been in effect
- before Afghanistan we'd be at war with the Soviet Union now.
- We're attempting to speak strongly while carrying a short
- stick."
- </p>
- <p> The initial Soviet reaction also involved sticks. Said
- Soviet newspaper Izvestia: "The Carter Doctrine is an attempt
- to revive President Theodore Roosevelt's 'big stick' policy.
- [It portends a] rapid and global interference with a view to
- suppressing the national liberation movement of the peoples and
- protecting the colonial interests of the dollar empire."
- </p>
- <p> Among U.S. allies in Europe, only Britain, which has
- consistently backed the U.S. in the Afghanistan crisis,
- expressed immediate support for Carter. With Prime Minister
- Margaret Thatcher nodding agreement, Deputy Foreign Secretary
- Sir Ian Gilmour declared in the House of Commons: "We and our
- American allies will use all possible measures to contain this
- [Soviet] threat." A West German Chancellery official
- complained that Carter's "warning about the Gulf states could
- have been made more subtly. A lower, very steady tone would be
- better than stridency." Many foreign diplomats in Washington
- agreed. Said a French diplomat who represents the Common
- market: "Carter's rhetoric is tough, but the program is not."
- Added an official in the British embassy: "The proof of
- Carter's intentions will be in the execution. If you don't
- follow up, you risk inviting Soviet influence into the area."
- </p>
- <p> That may be, at least in the short run, a critical
- deficiency in Carter's policy. The U.S. at present does not have
- the military forces to repel any Soviet invasion of the Persian
- Gulf area. The U.S. now has 21 warships, including two aircraft
- carriers, in the Indian Ocean. But their planes can be used only
- for lightning strikes. Pentagon officials admit that the U.S.
- would require at least a month of preparation before landing
- units that could fight for any length of time. The problem is
- primarily one of supply. The troops could be moved in quickly,
- but the U.S. lacks the ships or the planes to deliver all the
- equipment required by a modern army: from tanks and trucks to
- food and fuel.
- </p>
- <p> The President decided last fall to assign 100,000 men--basically
- members of the Marine Corp's 1st and 3rd divisions and
- the Army's 82nd and 101st airborne divisions--to a Rapid
- Deployment force that eventually will be able to respond quickly
- to emergencies anywhere in the world. The force will be supplied
- by a fleet of 15 ships, most of them stationed near areas of
- crisis, and an undetermined number of new cargo planes probably
- based in the U.S. Total cost: about $10 billion. But the ships
- and planes exist only on drawing boards. The force is not
- expected to be in operation for at least three years. Scoffs
- Richard Helms, the ex-CIA director and former Ambassador to
- Iran: "What is a doctrine without power?"
- </p>
- <p> Another uncertainty about Carter's policy is his
- unwillingness to define the extent of the Persian Gulf area or
- what U.S. "vital interests" really are. A senior Administration
- official tried to make a virtue out of this imprecision,
- maintaining that it gives Carter room to maneuver. Moreover, if
- Carter went so far as to draw a clear line against the Soviets,
- he might inadvertently encourage adventurism on the other side
- of that line. But the Soviets are just as likely to regard
- Carter's ambiguity as a sign that he himself is unclear about
- the area covered by his warning.
- </p>
- <p> The minimum U.S. interests in the area are obvious.
- Raymond Hare, a ranking U.S. ambassador in the Middle East in
- the 1950s, summed them up as "right of transit, access to
- petroleum and absence of Soviet military bases." But how
- willing are the countries involved to have the U.S. intervene
- to protect those interests? A quarter of a century ago, the
- U.S. tried to answer that by helping to organize a Southwest
- Asian defensive alliance that included Turkey, Iran and
- Pakistan, but the fall of the Shah last year brought the end of
- that alliance.
- </p>
- <p> As Carter considered the prospect of some new alliance, he
- could only be vague. Said he: "We are prepared to work with
- other countries in the region to share a cooperative security
- framework that respects differing values and political beliefs,
- yet which enhances the independence, security and prosperity of
- all."
- </p>
- <p> The statement had its origins in a policy memorandum that
- Brezinski sent Carter in February 1979, after the Shah's fall.
- Brzezinski proposed that the U.S. form a protective umbrella
- over North Africa, the Middle East and southwest Asia. it would
- include signed understandings with several governments in the
- area--at the very least with Egypt, Jordan and Israel--and
- an American military shield that would stretch as far west as
- Morocco. If Carter is still thinking along those lines, the
- shield now has been extended as far east as Pakistan.
- </p>
- <p> Because of rivalries and internal instabilities in the
- region, no alliance in the NATO mold is even remotely possible.
- But a senior White House adviser insisted last week: "There
- could be a variety of relationships, depending on the nature of
- the security interests of the countries concerned, their
- relationships with us or one another." These might include
- economic and military aid, permission for the U.S. to use
- airfields and seaports, or promises of mutual assistance in the
- event of attack. Still, Carter's "security framework" seems an
- idea that was launched with only the hope that support for
- cooperative arrangements with the U.S. would grown with more
- obvious Soviet threats.
- </p>
- <p> It is far from certain that this will happen. Says James
- Akins, a former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and now a
- consultant on Persian Gulf business: "It would be a grave error
- to think that the moderate Arab nations regard the Soviets as
- the enemy. At this point the consensus is that the superpowers
- are equally evil." Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheik Sabah
- al-Ahmad al-Sabah criticized both Washington and Moscow last
- week and urged Arab countries to develop "a common strategy to
- stand up to superpower pressures." He added: "The occupation
- of Arab territories and Jerusalem by Israel, with American
- support, is no less worrisome than the Soviet intervention in
- Afghanistan." In the United Arab Emirates, the newspaper
- al-Ittihad complained: "The big powers only want us as a market
- for weapons, a source of oil and an experimental battlefield."
- Said a top Western diplomat in the Middle East: "The Gulf
- states want to be securely defended, but they also want any
- U.S. presence to be beyond the horizon."
- </p>
- <p> As Akins and other experts note, any U.S. defense agreement
- with the Saudis and other Arab countries is probably impossible
- until the Palestinian problem is settled or until there is a
- clear sign of major progress. The so-called autonomy talks
- between Egypt and Israel on the future of Palestinians in the
- West Bank are as of now hopelessly stalled. Both sides are
- talking of the need for a new Camp David summit to break the
- deadlock. Yet Carter, who will have to exert more pressure on
- the Israelis if there is to be any progress, recommended no
- policy changes in this crucial matter--the one that could most
- quickly win U.S. support in the Persian Gulf area.
- </p>
- <p> Carter's speech also failed to deal with the complexity of
- potential crises in the Persian Gulf area. The threat to the
- U.S. is not so clear cut as a Soviet invasion of the oilfields.
- Hardly anyone expects that. Instead, the U.S. faces the same
- kind of challenges in Southwest Asia that have frustrated
- Washington for several years: local revolts, radicalism, tribal
- rivalries, religious extremism and instability bordering on
- anarchy. The oilfields of the Persian Gulf are in jeopardy not
- so much because of Soviet tanks in Afghanistan as because of
- local outbreaks like the dissident Arab invasion of the Sacred
- Mosque in Mecca and the Iranian militants' seizure of the U.S.
- embassy in Tehran. The biggest disaster that has befallen
- Western interests in the area in the past decade remains the
- collapse of the Shah--for which Moscow was not responsible.
- And the worst threat to Western interests in the near future is
- a spread of turmoil to Iraq, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey,
- for which the Soviets might or might not be responsible--and
- for which Carter's proposals offer no remedy.
- </p>
- <p> This does not mean, of course, that the area is beyond
- salvation. In a negative sense, Soviet aggression often brings a
- sobering new sense of the need for defensive action. The Saudi
- monarchy, the Pakistani military government and the crisis-prone
- leaders of Turkey may be sufficiently frightened by the example
- of Afghanistan, and impressed by the new look of the Carter
- Administration, to become more amenable to U.S. efforts to
- protect them and help them put their houses in order. Perhaps
- the Saudis will be more receptive to American pressure for a
- crackdown on corruption, one of several slow-burning fuses in
- Riyadh. Perhaps Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq will
- allow the U.S. to push him more quickly toward restoring a
- broad-based democratic government.
- </p>
- <p> But for these things to happen, Carter will have to mount
- a long diplomatic campaign on several fronts. Observed a top
- aide: "Our program is for tomorrow more than today, and it
- calls for a sustained effort, not just a single knee jerk."
- </p>
- <p> To build his prestige in the Persian Gulf region, Carter
- could try new approaches to solving the hostage crisis in
- Tehran; he took a step in this direction last week by urging
- Iran to recognize the Soviet Union as by far its greatest
- threat. To win respect and influence throughout the Muslim
- world, he could lean on Israel to settle the Palestinian
- problem. He also could push harder for American energy
- independence, which would free the U.S. from OPEC blackmail. At
- the same time, he could plan on eventually resuming his campaign
- for Senate approval of the SALT II pact, for stabilization of
- the superpowers' strategic capabilities would benefit the U.S.
- as well as the Soviet Union, and the longer that treaty is
- delayed, the more inevitable will be a major new nuclear arms
- race.
- </p>
- <p> In international relations as in domestic U.S. politics,
- perceptions can be almost as important as actions, and image
- can be almost as important as reality. Is the President
- perceived to be tough, decisive, realistic? Is the U.S.
- perceived to be standing up to the Soviet Union? Until
- recently, the answer was no. Last week Carter sought to correct
- those problems of perception and image, and in large measure he
- succeeded. As Commander in Chief, he made the U.S. sound as
- though it is determined, in a way that it was not before, to
- stand up the Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p>Minority Report
- </p>
- <p> Vernon Jordan, head of the National Urban League, regularly
- uses the President's State of the Union message as an occasion
- to offer is own report on the state of black America. Last
- week's installment, like its predecessors, was grim. Describing
- blacks as "boat people without boats," Jordan said that their
- average wages had shrunk from 61% of white wages in 1969 to 59%
- in 1978. And despite the reports of a growing black middle
- class, the number of blacks in that category remained stationary
- at about 25% throughout the 1970s; so did the larger number of
- black poor at 28%.
- </p>
- <p> Not only is the problem not being solved, Jordan declared,
- but the efforts to solve it are fading. Said he: "The
- nations's energies are being focused on inflation, energy and
- defense to the neglect of racial equality, full employment and
- urban revitalization." The prevailing philosophy, he added,
- has become one of, "He who has keeps, and he who has not
- doesn't get."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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