home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
CNN Newsroom: Global View
/
CNN Newsroom: Global View.iso
/
txt
/
fsj
/
fsj0491.003
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-05-02
|
15KB
|
284 lines
<text>
<title>
The Demise of the Reagan Doctrine
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Foreign Service Journal, April 1991
The Demise of the Reagan Doctrine
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By George Gedda. Mr. Gedda, a correspondent with the Associated
Press in Washington, is a frequent contributor to National
Public Radio and the Associated Press Radio Network. He has
visited Cuba 20 times and, most recently, traveled to Latin
America with President Bush in December.
</p>
<p> Almost unnoticed during the confrontation in the Persian
Gulf was the effort by Congress to strip away one of those Cold
War legacies that produced many a memorable hawk-dove clash
during the previous decade. After a five-year run, the Reagan
Doctrine appears headed for oblivion. President Bush is doing
his best to keep the cause alive, albeit under changed
circumstances, but in vote after vote last fall, Congress left
the clear impression that they do not believe it makes sense to
lavish aid on anti-Communist groups when there is nothing left
of the Soviet bloc.
</p>
<p> The public record about the activities carried out under the
Reagan Doctrine--which supports rebel groups against leftist
governments--is fairly skimpy. One reason is that U.S.
funding for the rebel groups, with the exception of the
Nicaraguan Contras, has been carried out covertly. The
administration has made its wishes known to the congressional
intelligence committees, which generally have gone along with
the administration's funding requests. That changed, however,
this past fall with the passage of the Senate Intelligence
Authorization Bill. None of these groups escaped unscathed. All
continue to receive U.S. assistance, but not on the scale or
under the conditions the administration wanted.
</p>
<p>Battle-scarred proxies
</p>
<p> Even though the Cold War is widely proclaimed to have been
relegated to history's dustbin, the leftovers can still be
found in the wretched battlefields of Afghanistan, Angola, and
Cambodia. Nicaragua was such a battlefield until recently.
</p>
<p> In each country, rival armies fight on, using superpower
weaponry. Now that civility has become a hallmark of the
Moscow-Washington connection, the struggles spawned by their
prior hostility seem to carry less weight than before. In
geostrategic terms, does it really matter whether Jonas Savimbi
and his UNITA allies in Angola prevail over Jose Eduardo Santos
and his MPLA cohorts? If the United States was troubled by
Soviet penetration of southern Africa beforehand, is it rational
for Washington to continue propping up UNITA, when the Soviets
have given up on expansionism?
</p>
<p> The administration agrees that the Soviets have become
almost irrelevant. The focus now, it says, should be on
devising a way to achieve a peaceful settlement in those
countries. Only through continued U.S. aid will the leftist
governments opposed by the U.S.-backed insurgents have the
incentive to negotiate peace. Peter Rodman, a former National
Security Council aide, says U.S. support should continue. "Our
strategy ought to be to complete the process," Rodman says.
"Don't leave them [the rebel groups] in the lurch. The next
phase is political accommodation. It makes no sense to penalize
our side."
</p>
<p> Representative Henry Hyde (R-IL) believes Congress is too
eager to shelve the Reagan Doctrine. Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev may have won the Nobel Peace Prize, Hyde says, "but
he is still pouring $650 million into Angola, and Soviet
advisers are still very active there." (Recent official
estimates indicate that Soviet military aid to Angola dropped
from about $1.4 billion in 1988 to between $400 and $500 million
in 1990.) In the same vein, the administration also points out
that despite the Soviet troop withdrawal from Afghanistan,
completed in February 1989, there has been no letup in Soviet
aid for the Afghan regime--an estimated $250 million a month
since then, according to official U.S. estimates. Because of the
continued Soviet military role, the Bush Administration has
continued to seek funding for the Afghan Mujahedeen.
</p>
<p> But Representative Dante Fascell (D-FL), chairman of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee, says it is logical for the
United States to begin loosening its ties to the anti-Communist
insurgencies. "The Soviets have cut back on funding of their
`clients' around the world, and we are responding accordingly,"
he says. "The Soviets are out of Afghanistan, the Contras won
in Nicaragua, and peace talks are in progress in Angola."
Fascell might also have pointed out that there have been major
strides toward a peace settlement in Cambodia. Under the plan,
approved by the five permanent members of the UN Security
Council last November, the United Nations would administer
Cambodia during an interim period leading to free elections. It
also calls for a ceasefire and the disarming of all parties to
the conflict.
</p>
<p> The bill containing funding for the "freedom fighters" in
the remaining Reagan Doctrine countries, approved last fall by
the Congress:
</p>
<p>-- Would halt, among other restrictions, $60 million in U.S. aid
to Angola's UNITA rebels, if the leftist government agrees to a
free election within a reasonable timetable, and the Soviets
halt weapons shipments to the Angola armed forces. The two
sides have had several rounds of peace talks in Portugal, and
some are optimistic a settlement is within reach. One sign of
the more conciliatory mood was an unprecedented meeting in
Washington in December between former Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze and Savimbi, the UNITA leader.
</p>
<p>-- Suspends a $13 million covert aid program to anti-Communist
rebels in Cambodia, a move that resulted partly from
congressional concern that some of the money may have been
reaching the infamous Khmer Rouge rebels. The covert aid
program has been replaced by a humanitarian program. Sensing
widespread hostility to his policy, Secretary of State James A.
Baker III has been disassociating the United States from the
rebel coalition and encouraging a larger Vietnamese role in the
negotiating process. In effect, with the Soviets no longer
considered a menace in Southeast Asia, Baker sees Vietnam as
less of an evil than the Khmer Rouge.
</p>
<p>-- Cuts back aid to the Afghan resistance to $250 million, $50
million less than the administration had requested. Moscow and
Washington have been trying without much success to promote a
settlement. They have differing opinions as to the proper role
for Afghan President Najibullah in a transition process.
</p>
<p> Bush vetoed the legislation because of provisions that he
said put excessive restrictions on the administration's ability
to carry out covert operations. But through a bit of budgetary
sleight-of-hand, the administration, over some congressional
objections, has found a backroom agreement that will keep money
flowing to the rebel groups.
</p>
<p>Ragged remains
</p>
<p> Congress' eagerness to give the administration less than it
wanted in each case may have been influenced by the lesson of
Nicaragua. In February 1988, Congress put an end once and for
all to military aid to the Contra rebels--and the eventual
outcome caught everyone by surprise. Precisely two years after
Congress axed the Contras, Nicaragua's voters axed the
Sandinistas, achieving at the ballot box what years of Reagan
Doctrine aid could not do. Supporters of Contra aid insist that
the Sandinistas never would have agreed to free and fair
elections, were it not for the threat posed to the regime by
the insurgency. The Sandinistas pledged a fair election process
in August 1987, precisely eight months after a $100 million
allocation for the rebels began flowing. It was the last
military aid the Contras ever received and, as it turned out,
the last one they needed.
</p>
<p> An additional remnant of the Cold War is the continuing
struggle in El Salvador, where, instead of backing an
anti-Communist insurgency, the United States has been supporting
a conservative