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Why We Need a Concert of Europe Now
| Article
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17857 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
3 / 1990 |
565 Words |
| Author
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Morton A. Kaplan Editor and Publisher |
The article by Z and the opposition to it are manifestations of the old Washington syndrome of either/or thinking. The United States has a genuine interest in preventing anarchy in Soviet Union, which involves help to Mikhail Gorbachev, but it also has an interest in seeing that this help is not used to prevent or delay necessary change. It needs to find a modus within which these twin objectives can be pursued.
My proposal in the February issue of THE WORLD & I (Page 48) for a Concert of Europe that would include the United States and the Soviet Union becomes even more urgent as events unfold in the Soviet Union. Matters in Lithuania are coming to a head. If we support independence unilaterally, in the absence of a Concert in which the Soviet Union plays an equal role we are interfering in Russian politics in an unacceptable and dangerous way. The mass unraveling of the Soviet system could set off unpredictable and very violent currents. Yet, we have no alternative except to favor independence for Lithuania, however much we may downplay this diplomatically.
Discussions within a Concert could produce a joint guarantee that Lithuania, for instance, has an unconditional right to independence and, at the same time, could lead to collective attempts to persuade the Lithuanians to delay the choice of independence for five years, during which time some form of a relationship with Russia and the other republics could be explored.
The case of the Baltic states, which were incorporated into the Soviet Union after the Nazi-Soviet Pact, could be distinguished from the cases of the other Russian republics, which were part of Russia at the time of the
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