CHALLENGES TO THE WEST IN THE 1980 S
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CIA-RDP83M00914R002700180006-2
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12
Document Creation Date:
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date:
March 21, 2007
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Publication Date:
September 20, 1982
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REPORT
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I Remarks-
-SUSPENSE
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Extemporaneous Remarks by Henry A. Kissinger
"Challenges to the West in the 1980s"
Remarks to the Fifth
CSIS Quadrangular Conference
Monday, September 20, 1982
Washington, D.C.
Le-t-me begin with a quick survey of a number of
challenges which I see before us in the 1980s.
Let me introduce it with a saying that our Chinese
friends used to use with us when we started calling on
them in the early 1970s.. The saying was: "There is
turmoil under the heavens, but the situation is excellent."
I must admit that on many visits to China the meaning
of that remark eluded me, but since I didn't want to admit
that there were limits to my capacity to comprehend, I
nodded sagely.
The fact is that I would describe the present situation,
as far as the United States is concerned, in somewhat similar
terms. I think there is turmoil under the heavens, but
if one looks at the underlying factors, the situation if
not excellent is malleable. We are in one of the periods
in which creative policy can make major progress and in
which, in almost any area of policy we consider,. the
possibilities of new departures for creative action seem
very considerable indeed. -
America's Adjustment
In fact, one of the biggest problems we have is
psychological or philosophical. It is that the 1980s are
the first decade in which the United States has to conduct
foreign policy as other nations have had to conduct foreign
policy throughout their history. In the 1950s the United
States represented some 52% of the world's Gross National
Product. Under those circumstances, our foreign policy
was really a problem of identifying issues and overwhelming
them with resources. Our allies were largely dependent on
us and our adversaries needed primarily to be-convinced
that we meant business on whatever issue concerned us most.
ld's
Every decade since then, the percentage of the wor
total Gross National Product which the United States
represents has declined by some 10%. Now the United State
Cross National
ld'
s
.represents some 21 or 22% of the wor
Product. It still makes- us the single largest economic
unit, but it imposes on us necessities against which our
.historical tradition has rebelled.
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We now, for the first time in our history, face a
situation in which if the whole rest of the world were
to fall under hostile domination we would be clearly
outmatched. Our policy from now on must be more like
that pursued by Britain towards the continent of Europe
through several centuries. It was a principle of British
policy that a Europe united under the rule of a single
dominant power would be in a position to outmatch and
endanger Great Britain; therefore, Britain made itself the
balancer of the European equilibrium, a role it fulfilled
by acting soberly, rather unemotionally, based on a
careful. assessment of the balance of power.
With respect to the rest of the world, the United
States is today in an analagous position. Maintaining
the equilibrium is no longer a favor we do for other
nations. It is an imperative of our survival. The
balance of power, decried as it is in our international
relations textbooks, is not the end. of our foreign policy
but it has to be the beginning of our foreign policy. Its
requirements have to be studied over an extended period
of time, and what is more, have to be carried out over an
extended period-of time.
It is characteristically American that every new
administration begins convinced not only that it will change
the world, but that it created the world. Sooner or later,
that process has to stop. Sooner or later, a consensus
has to develop, not on every tactical move we make on
individual issues, but on the fundamental requirements of
our national interest -- reluctant as we are to think in
terms of national interest.
There are many here who have heard me say it before,
but the debate which we Americans tend to carry on is
still too much couched in categories that imply that there
are final answers, that there is a final goal towards which
we are working, called peace, after which tensions presumably
disappear. There is too much of a division in our national
debate between the psychiatric school of foreign policy,
which thinks relations among nations are like relations
among people and which emphasizes unilateral concessions
and gestures of almost personal goodwill, and the theo-
logical school of foreign policy, which implies that the
only reason the walls of Jericho have not tumbled yet is
because the right ideological trumpet has not yet been
sounded.
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Our foreign policy henceforth, and that of all
industrial democracies, is bound to have to concern
itself with an adjustment of relative balances. Our
situation is complicated by the fact that many in
Europe paradoxically have moved to positions that they
used to criticize and regard as peculiarly American in the
early postwar period'-- naive reliance on the strenuous
exercise of goodwill to remove objective difficulties with
adversaries and insistence that there be conclusive proof
of the aggressive intentions of potential opponents before
one takes irrevocable or major steps.
With this as a background, let me discuss a number of
particular issues that need to be addressed. Rather than
give-you my conclusions with respect to them, let me state
either the problems as I see them, or some general principles
of action. .
The Middle East
As a general proposition, I do not believe that this
is the time for me to make basic pronouncements in detail
about the Middle East. Fundamentally, I think that all of
us concerned with foreign policy should support the Adminis-
tration through the difficult days and weeks ahead. On the
other hand, I would like to state a number of general
observations.
First, I believe that the opportunity to make major
progress towards peace in the Middle East has never been
greater, despite the tragic and inexcusable events of the
last few days in Beirut, and despite the passions that pre-
ceded them. The fact has been demonstrated that the
Soviet Union is able to supply weapons but no solutions;
that the countries of the rejectionist front in the Arab
world can define a rhetoric but no program; that, on the
other hand, Israel's claim to be seriously threatened must
have been strongly mitigated by its military success. And
all parties in the area must have learned that a continu-
ation of this cycle of violence cannot possibly serve any-
body's interest.
We must take advantage of this opportunity. Let me
confine myself today to a number of`principles in which
I believe. Over the course of the next few weeks I may
elaborate on them.
First, the issue of the West Bank and Gaza, what the
Israelis call Judea and Samaria and the Gaza District,
cannot be settled by annexation by Israel. This is not
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something derived from the Camp David Agreement; this has
been a fundamental position of every American administration
since 1967. it is in that context that the Administration's
opposition to the settlements policy of the Begin govern-
ment should be considered.
Second, the negotiating partner for this negotiation
should be the Kingdom of Jordan. But it is important to
definer what that means, as I will explain further when I
discuss~US-European relations. It cannot mean that Jordan
should provide'merely a mantle of legitimacy for a PLO
entity that then becomes an incubus within the Jordanian
state- It must be genuine Jordanian participation, in
which Jordan will assume real responsibilities on the West
Bank.
MORE
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Third, while Israel must not identify its security with
the annexation of the West Bank and Gaza, equally its security
cannot be defined simply in terms of recognition by its neigh-
bors and normalization of relations with them. Recognition of
the existence of participants in a negotiation is the beginning
of wisdom in foreign policy. It is what all other nations get
for nothing. It is not something which entitles countries or
groups to special compensation. In other words, the question
of security must be given a concrete content and it is a legiti-
mate subject of negotiation, even if it cannot be pushed to the
point of annexation.
Fourth, it is important for Israel and for all other
countries to understand that the dignity and self-respect of
the Arab nations is an important factor and that proceeding
simply by the creation of unilateral faiaccon accomplis is the
basis for the conduct of foreign policy and
relations between close allies.'
Fifth, it is also important for Israel's allies and other
nations, irritated as they may be by acts of unilateralism and
insensitivity, not to make confrontation the defining principle
of their foreign policy. They must keep in mind that for a
nation with a narrow margin of survival, the dividing line be-
tween arrogance and panic, between self-assurance and hysteria,
can be very narrow. In the face of all provocation I would urge
some compassion and understanding and a resumption of dialogue.
This is as far as I will go today, and I think the audience
here can see that it is compatible with the main lines of the
foreign policy that the Administration is pursuing, even if as
it evolves a different content may be given by different people
to this or that proposition.
European-American Relations
Let me now turn to European-American relations. I will be
relatively brief. Some of the difficulties that exist between
Europe and the United States -- it has been said at great length
and repeatedly -- are due to the success of previous Western
policies: the recovery of Europe, the corresponding growth of
a sense of identity, and the inevitable tendency that the conti-
nent which developed the concept of sovdreignty was never going
to find its purpose in sharing our burdens but in developing
perceptions of its own.
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However one may explain it, there seem to me to be two
major problems that must be solved.
First is the issue of military strategy. Others and I
have talked about this at excruciating length. The facts are
perfectly clear: The strategy developed in the early 1950s .
cannot possibly continue into the 1980s. Perpetuating the theory
that American strategic nuclear power can protect Europe against
all contingencies inevitably will lead to a combination of
demoralization, pressures.for unilateral disarmament, and a
failure to build up conventional forces. The issue has been
ducked for fifteen years or hidden behind percentage figures
of budgetary increase that never got to the heart of the
problem of what strategy is really appropriate for the 80s
and 90s. The only possible strategy is one that builds up
conventional forces to resist foreseeable challenges. There
are no short-cuts, there are no gimmicks. Ideas like renounc-
ing the first use of nuclear weapons will have the inevitable
consequence of stigmatizing the weapons on which Alliance
defense must still in part depend, or will create the dangerous
impression that the West may accept a conventional defeat rather
than in the end resort to nuclear retaliation. But the converse
is not true. It is not true that we can continue to rely on
essentially the strategy of the 50.s and 60s, modified with ai
gimmick here and a new technology there. That is the funda-
mental problem in strategy, and it underlies the arms, control
policies that must be related to it.
The second problem has to do with East-West relations. We
have now gone through a period of exuberant detente and then
through a period in which detente was retrospectively made to
carry the blame for all the difficulties that were caused by
our domestic divisions on other subjects. It is now time to
address the fundamental question of how we -should conduct East-
West relations over an extended period of time.
We are at a moment when the Soviet Union is in enormous
difficulty, when it is foreseeable that some time in the 80s
some Soviet leaders must ask themselves how much longer they
can run an economy as unbalanced as the one that they now main-
tain; they must ask themselves how long they can govern a
system that cannot manage a legitimate succession, an economy
that is assailed by shortages and surpluses at the same time --
a problem that no Communist country has yet solved. At that
point, a possibility for serious negotiations must arise --
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provided that we do not make the mere fact of negotiation an
issue in our national debate, with one group considering any
conference progress towards a settlement, and another group
considering any meeting with Soviet negotiators as a pact with
the devil. Our problem is to define what in a serious negotia-
tion we would ask of the Soviets; what we are prepared to pay
in return for what we consider restrained international conduct;
and, indeed, how we define restrained international conduct on
both sides-.-
Now that requires, however, that we husband our assets.
And it implies that we have to avoid unilateral concessions,
either the unilateral disarmament that so many so-called peace
movements attempt to impose on us or the unilateral concessions
in economic relations that in so many countries in Europe are
identified with detente.
Fundamentally what the Soviets want from us in economic
relations is irreplaceable for them elsewhere: food, technology,
general know-how. What they pay in return -- if they pay anything
in return -- is raw materials that are relatively easily re-
placeable for us. In these circumstances, trade would have long
since assumed minimal proportions were it not constantly fueled
by concessional prices and concessional credits. It will seem
incomprehensible to future generations that the West was not'
able to develop a coherent East-West economic policy and that
it was not able to exact a political quid pro quo for the
economic benefits it was unilaterally bestowing on the Soviet
Union.
I do not think that the timing and the tactics of the
American decision on the pipeline will go down in history as
classic examples of modern diplomacy. I do believe, however,
that the questions raised by the President's pipeline decision
were important. And I cannot endorse the self-righteous con-
frontational reaction of so many of our allies who hide behind
allegations that they were'simply carrying out obligations
and make debating points that since we were selling grain
they had a right to sell the pipeline. Everybody knows that
it we stopped selling grain tomorrow the pipeline would still
go forward. The question raised by the Administration was
fundamental. Incidentally, I am not a wild supporter of the
grain sales, either.
I do not join those who believe that an economic boycott
of the Soviet Union can bring about a collapse of the Soviet
system -- though I would not go into mourning if it happened.
I do believe that the Soviet Union understands best a negotiation
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on the basis of strict reciprocity. And I think it is a failure
of Western leadership that we have not been able to define for
ourselves what it is we-want from the Soviet Union in the politi-
cal field or that we have not been able to agree with each other
on credit policies and pricing policies that are in the common
interest. Lenin is supposed to have said sixty years ago that
the day would come when the capitalists would fight with each
other for the privilege of selling the rope with which to hang
them. What he didn't know is that they would also offer credits
to buy the rope.
The lesson to be drawn from the pipeline affair is not
by'what face-saving formula we can end the immediate crisis.--
which clearly, if rationality prevails, will be ended before
matters get totally out of control -- but rather whether we
can use the pipeline crisis to fashion a fundamental agreement
among the industrial democracies about how they visualize East-
West economic relations and for what political price. The
democracies should do so in the context that they are prepared
of a
to have these economic relations with the East in support fundamental negotiation -- a fundamental negotiation that they
are also prepared to define eorthemselves
pressures onthat
a year~to-year
driven by the need to placatp~
basis. I suspect that if the various arms control proposals are
analyzed in detail, we. would find that they are much too much,
driven by the need to deal with immediate pressure groups and
much too little geared to the security situation we foresee
in the middle 80s. What is true of arms control is even more
true of East-West economics.
Let me make a final point about European-American relations.
It is not possible, nor is it desirable, that we pursue parallel
policies all over the world, but it is also not possible or compat-
ible with the Alliance that we agree on no major policy around the
world. It seems to me that we are perilously close to drifting into
such a state of affairs. In Central America one can only say that
several European policies are deliberately designed, or have the
practical consequence, of undercutting what we are attempting to
do. I am not saying that we are inevitably right, but I do
maintain that when a major country acts in an area it considers
of vital importance, its allies owe it some respect for its
views, as we attempted to show in the Falklands crisis vis-a-
vis Great Britain.
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And we see it again in recent weeks with respect to
the Middle East. A fundamental objective of the President's
speech of September 1 seems to me to have been the intro-
duction of Jordan into the negotiations. How can that process
possibly be helped when PLO leaders are feted all over.Europe
and their status is enhanced before anybody has seen even the
slightest indication of what conclusions they have drawn from
their defeat in Lebanon? Why is it so impossible for us and
the Europeans at least to discuss our assumptions? How can
it fail to lead to a fundamental rupture, sooner or later, if
totally different strategic conceptions are simultaneously
pursued?
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Latin America
Let me make a few observations about Latin America.
Of all the areas in the world, the one about which my opening
quotation about "turmoil under the heavens" and "an excellent
situation" may be least true is Latin America.
We have recently seen in Mexico the impact of economic
crisis on the political orientation of a country and the
temptation to use foreign opponents as a means of rallying
opinion-behind authority. And in the aftermath of the
Falklands-crisis, many Latin American countries are undergoing
fundamental re-examination of their orientations: The
military, because they. feel they can no longer count on
the unquestioning support of the United States, resulting in
a tendency towards a kind of populism. The radicals, because
their relative position has been strengthened. The moderates,
because the OAS system is clearly in need of re-examination.
And all of them because the international economic structure
or, at any rate, the international financial structure, no
longer has a fundamental framework for resolving its difficulties.
Few people invite me to speak about economic problems-
to their great loss--but they can't keep me from mentioning
them once I have a rostrum. if we continue to treat foreign
debt by analogy to domestic debt, this is going to prevent,
any serious examination of some issues before us. The theory
that foreign governments can be made creditworthy by austerity
measures the way domestic debtors can be made creditworthy
by self-discipline misunderstands the nature of many developing
societies. In a developed country, IMF conditionality often
enables got. ernments to provide an alibi for what they would
like to have done anyway. In many developing countries, on
the other hand, conditionality based on purely economic criteria
may be a cure worse than the disease. It may not be sustainable
by the political process and may bring about revolutionary
conditions which will magnify all the difficulties that are
attempted to be solved; or else it creates a kind of cynicism
,.in which the conditions are accepted and never carried out
and then provide a rallying point for extreme nationalism
later on.
I will make for me the historic statement that I have
no answer to this problem. I know that it cannot be dealt with
by business as usual. I do not say that there should be no
conditions , only that they should be related to the political
needs of fragile societies. Some kind of new financial structure,
something like the Bretton Woods understandings, must emerge.
Present policies cannot go on forever without leading, if not
to an economic crisis, to an unmanageable loss of confidence.
All of these problems exist more acutely in the Western hemis-
phere than anyplace else. The Western. hemisphere is also the
area where American creativity can still make the biggest difference.
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Conclusion
I could go on to other problems, but I think I have
made my fundamental point. It is that inevitably when one
speaks before a group like this, one emphasizes difficulties.
If you analyze the difficulties I have described, they are
all amenable to policy solutions by either the United States
or by the industrial democracies taken together. If you
analyze the difficulties which other parts of the world face,
they rewire systemic changes. There is no way the Soviet
system-can solve its problems without some sort of
constitutionalism by which leaders can be replaced, if not
by democratic means, then by some regular procedure. There
is no way- their economy can operate efficiently on the basis
of total planning. And there is no way many of the developing
countries can progress through the mixture of Marxism,
Third World radical rhetoric, and inefficient governments
that now characterize them.
We have a rare opportunity for creative leadership.
The West has the problem fundamentally of a reluctance to face
the facts of power, to develop a calculus of incentives and
penalties in dealing with the East. Americans have a
national reluctance to face up to the reality of only contingent
answers and permanent responsibilities. We are handicapped
by a domestic process in which decisions are made by adversary
proceedings, which gives a premium to each of the contenders
for the President's attention to exaggerate his position
and creates the concurrent temptation to settle each dispute
by some phraseology that either permits each party to do
what he wanted to do in the first place or which represents
a sort of waffled consensus. These are real problems but
all of them are problems we should know how to solve, and we,
I think, are getting better at it.
I conclude, having begun with a Chinese saying, with
another Chinese saying that my friend Lee Kuan Yew told me.
He probably put it a little more eloquently and I may have
got it.a little confused in my recollection:
"When there is turmoil under the heavens,
little problems are dealt with as if they
are big problems, and big problems are not
dealt with at all. When there is order
under the heavens, big problems are turned
into little problems, and little problems
are seen in their right perspective."
I would submit to you that we have a unique chance to
create order under the heavens.
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