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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>