This transcript appears in the  
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=911794&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.larouchepub.com%2Feiw%2Fpublic%2F2015%2Feirv42n08-201500220%2Findex.html>
 Febuary 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=911794&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.larouchepub.com%2Feiw%2Fpublic%2F2015%2Feirv42n08-201500220%2Findex.html>
  20, 2015 issue of Executive Intelligence Review.

Former Ambassador to USSR Matlock Lambasts U.S. Policy on Russia

[ 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=911794&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.larouchepub.com%2Feiw%2Fpublic%2F2015%2F2015_1-9%2F2015-08%2Fpdf%2F10-14_4208.pdf>
 PDF version of this transcript]

 

Jack Matlock, who served as U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union, 1987-91, was 
the featured speaker at an event sponsored by the Committee for the Republic, 
at the National Press Club in Washington Feb. 11. Here is a transcript of his 
opening remarks.  
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=911794&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DVmP513n78YE>
 A video is available on YouTube.


The last quite a few years, we have been basically living outside the 
Washington Beltway. It's always nice to come back and see friends, though I 
must confess that I'm sometimes puzzled, sitting out in the boondocks, at what 
goes on here. Because there seems to be group-think about many things in 
foreign policy—it affects both the media and those in the government—that to 
me, I find more and more difficult to comprehend.

 

I didn't understand that they wanted me to talk for 20 minutes—I prepared 
something that I hoped I could say in 40. So, what I'm going to give you is a 
barebones summary of how I view the situation, and what I think we should be 
seeing about it, and expect you to ask me questions so that I can actually 
expand a bit on the details.

 

I think we're in a very dangerous situation right now, in regard to Russia, 
over Ukraine. Six months ago, a year ago, when people were talking about Cold 
War II, I said, this is silly; this is not Cold War II. The Cold War was about 
a worldwide confrontation over ideology; it was about communism, and the 
conflict with communism. And it occurred all over—Latin America, Africa, Asia.

 

What we're seeing now is a conflict in an area which 30 years ago would have 
been a local problem, in one country. How can that lead us to Cold War II?

 

However, as things have developed, and as I see debates now as to whether the 
United States should supply lethal weapons to Ukraine, I wonder what is going 
on.

 

I see all these debates, and saying, "Oh, Russia's only a regional power."[1] 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=911794&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.larouchepub.com%2Fother%2F2015%2F4208matlock_us_rus_polcy.html%23fn1>
  What does that mean? What does that mean, particularly in their own region? 
And I think the elephant in the room, which nobody is referring to, is the 
nuclear issue. No country which has ICBMs, ICBMs—10 independently targeted 
warheads, very accurate, mobile (so they can't be taken out)—no country with 
that is a regional power, by any means. It can mean other things.

 

The most important thing we did in ending the Cold War was cooling the nuclear 
arms race. If there are any issues for this country to face that are 
existential, that's it.

 

Now let's face it. Much as I respect and love the people in Ukraine—and I do 
know them. I was probably the only American ambassador to the Soviet Union who 
could and did make speeches in Ukrainian when I went to Kiev, as well as in 
Russian when I was in Moscow. I do know that country. I know its literature and 
its culture. I prize it. My heart goes out to the people who are going through 
hell in eastern Ukraine this Winter.

 

But, I'll tell you: If the United States gets further involved in what is, in 
the minds of the Russians, territory which has historically been part of their 
country, given the present atmosphere, I don't see how we are going to prevent 
another nuclear arms race. And that's what scares me.

 

The Expansion of NATO

Now, how did this all come about?

 

It does seem to me that when we ended the Cold War, we had a coherent 
policy—believe it or not. That's very rare in American foreign policy, 
particularly recently, in my time. We did. Our goal, and that of our allies, 
and that of the Soviet leaders, and their successor Russian leaders, was a 
Europe whole and free. A Europe whole and free.

 

Now, there's been a lot of debate as to whether President Gorbachov was 
promised that there would be no NATO expansion to the East. There was no treaty 
signed saying that. But as we negotiated an agreement to end the Cold War, 
first President [George H.W.] Bush, at a Malta meeting in 1989, and then later, 
in 1990, almost all the Western leaders, told Gorbachov: If you remove your 
troops from Eastern Europe, if you let Eastern Europe go free, then we will not 
take advantage of it.

 

Now, there's no way, by moving an alliance that was originally designed to 
protect Western Europe from the aggression of the East, you move it to the 
East—how are you going to keep a Europe whole and free? If you have a Europe 
whole and free, Russia and all the others have to be part of the system.

 

So later, not out of design, but simply, I think, largely because of domestic 
politics, and the East Europeans, who wanted protection against a threat that 
at that point didn't exist, but it might in the future, we started expanding 
NATO.

 

The Russian reaction at first was not that negative, but then other things 
began to happen. After 9/11, then-President Putin was the first foreign 
President to call President [George W.] Bush, and offer cooperation and 
support. And we got it when we invaded Afghanistan. We got their vote in the 
UN. We got intelligence support and other support, logistics support, in 
getting there.

 

What did they get in return?

 

He [Putin] also removed, without our request, a base, a listening station, in 
Cuba, and one in Cam Ranh Bay [Vietnam].

 

We walk out of the ABM Treaty, which was the basis of all of our arms control 
treaties, and the one in which we could deal with each other as equals. We keep 
on expanding NATO, and not only expand it, we begin to talk about bases there, 
about deploying anti-ballistic missiles, for no good reason at all. Supposedly 
it was to defend the Europeans against the Iranians—the Iranians at that point 
didn't have missiles that could attack them, nor was it apparent to many of us 
why the Iranians would ever want to attack the Europeans. What are they going 
to get out of that?

 

The Russian reaction was again to be increasingly hostile. And, of course, we 
had the outburst in Munich, in 2007, by President Putin.

 

We didn't set out—I'll make this clear—to stick it to Russia. I don't think 
there was any intent. We had a lot of reasons, mainly domestic political 
reasons, to follow these courses. But, we were simply ignoring the Russian 
reaction, the inevitable Russian reaction.

 

And so what we began to get was a reaction from what you could say was, at 
best, inconsiderate American actions, to a Russian over-reaction. And you know, 
when you set up these vibrations, they can be amplified. Small ones can get 
bigger and bigger and bigger. Cosmologists tell us, for example, that maybe all 
of the universe began with a single singularity, and you get these vibrations.

 

But the process was, that we developed an atmosphere, which, even before this 
Ukrainian crisis broke upon us, was one of alleged hostility, perceived 
hostility, I should say, between us. Something that we had, which, at the end 
of the Cold War, we had ended. And an attitude on both sides that we were 
facing each other not only as competitors, but adversaries, and that we were in 
what you call a zero-sum game. Anything that the U.S. wanted, would be to 
Russia's detriment. Anything that Russia wanted, is to the U.S. detriment.That 
was precisely the attitude that we put an end to, to end the Cold War.

 

The Reagan Memo

Just a couple of words about how we did it.

 

I was thinking back, when we got into all of this. Okay, you know, by the 
mid-80s, we were in one of the most intense confrontations with the Soviet 
Union. The Europeans at that point were talking about Cold War II; the rhetoric 
was high. And what was the attitude, and the policies, that we followed then, 
in order to put an end to this?

 

I pulled out something I had almost forgotten about. It was a memo that 
President Reagan wrote, in his own handwriting, just before he met Gorbachov 
the first time. Simple language, but his insights into how you deal with, at 
that time, what's our principal adversary. And I don't have time actually to 
quote them—I have his words here—but there are four points there that I wanted 
to quote.

 

One was, he started out by saying, Gorbachov is going to be a tough negotiator, 
but I have to remember that he has to justify what he does to the Politburo 
back home. In other words, he's not a dictator.

 

Second, he defined what he considered the three most important areas that we 
had to deal with. They were: arms control, our conflict in third areas, and the 
distrust between us. The distrust between us. And he understood that until we 
worked on that, we weren't going to solve the others.

 

Human rights? He said we're much too upfront on human rights. We will get a lot 
of cheers from the bleachers by beating up on them on human rights, but it will 
not help the people involved. In fact, it could hurt them. And he went on to 
say, we've got to go private. It's too important to confront them.

 

And he concluded this memo by saying, whatever we achieve, we must not consider 
it victory, because that will simply make the next achievement more difficult.

 

You have, in a nutshell, a description, I would say, of what, in the last 15 
years at least, we have been doing the opposite. And I think what Reagan 
understood—he was not a specialist in a lot of these other things, he had 
people to work on that—what he understood was human relations. And he also 
understood, unlike many of the people on his staff, that the other side are 
made up also of human beings, with their own politics, their own requirements. 
And number one, you've got to deal with them with respect, and you've got to 
deal with them in a way that you don't expect them to do something that is not 
in the true interest of their country.

 

So, our effort then was simply, that we needed to convince the Soviet 
leader—and in this case, eventually, Gorbachov—that their past policy was not 
serving their interests. And it was not!

 

Now one thing he never did—he called the system an Evil Empire once. People 
would never let him forget it. He also later said it wasn't any more. But he 
never denigrated any Soviet leader by name. He would begin every conversation, 
whether it was a foreign minister, or the President, with, "We hold the peace 
of the world in our hands. We must cooperate."

 

In other words, he met them as human beings, even though he disliked the system 
for very good reason. He dealt with them with respect.

 

How the Russians See It

 

Now, what do we see has happened? I can give you a lot of details when you ask 
questions about it, but obviously, we're in an entirely different mode with 
Russia. And I would say it's not just the President—in fact, the worst offender 
by far is the U.S. Congress. And what Russia has been reacting to is what they 
consider insufferable arrogance and humiliation for several years.

 

Now, they may exaggerate a lot of that, but it has led to the fact that we seem 
to be operating off two entirely different—and both of them 
unfounded—narratives. The Russians feel that we intend to create a world 
empire, if not an empire, at least hegemony, and that our goal is to hem them 
in, to surround them, and to keep them as simply suppliers of raw materials, 
and determine not to treat them as, you might say, equals. They know their 
economy is not up, they know they don't have the military that we do, but is 
that what we are supposed to respect when we deal with other people? Is there a 
gradation that the more powerful you are, the more right you are?

 

Our actions, in many cases, descend to that.

 

And obviously, this narrative picks up on some things that are half truths, 
some things that are other, some things that are exaggerated, 
misunderstandings—but, to them, this is a contest over what is their vital 
interest.

 

Now, the American narrative, of course, is quite different. It is that you have 
the recurrence in Russia of an autocratic system that has taken away the 
possibility of democracy from Russia, has turned it once again into an 
autocracy, and has begun to threaten its neighbors. Never mind that these 
neighbors were part of the country 30 years ago. And never mind that none of 
them fought for their independence. It was handed them.

But, you get these two narratives, and, of course, we're reading op-eds right 
now—to save the world system of peace, we must provide arms to Ukraine so that 
they can defend themselves, etc., etc., etc.

 

It seems to me that both of these narratives are wrong. Ours is based upon a 
total misunderstanding of the end of the Cold War! How many have heard we won 
the Cold War? You were defeated. How many have heard, the Cold War ended when 
the Soviet Union broke up? The fact is, we negotiated an end to the Cold War, 
which was to the benefit of both countries. And the understanding then was, 
that we were creating a Europe whole and free, as I mentioned.

 

The breakup of the Soviet Union occurred over two years after the Cold War had 
ended, and it ended definitively. And it broke up because ofinternal pressures, 
and that breakup was led by the elected leader of Russia.

 

Now, you have part of their narrative now. Because of our triumphalism, ah yes, 
they fooled Gorbachov. In fact, some would say the CIA hired him. He betrayed 
us, you see. They were after us all the time, they wanted to break up the 
Soviet Union, they're responsible for breaking it up.

 

Totally the opposite of the truth. And yet, step after step, these 
narratives—both of which are wrong—at best exaggerated, but both have elements 
that are simply the opposite of the truth. And yet, both countries seem to be 
developing their policies on it.

 

Stop the Personalization

 

Let me add another element now, which I find particularly disturbing, and that 
is the personalization of the whole relationship. It's hard to read anything in 
most of our press that doesn't attribute all the Russian actions to one man, 
and that man is usually characterized in the most unflattering terms, with 
various names. This is true both of the media, which, of course, can call 
things as they wish, but also, of our officials. You know, it seems to me that 
if you really want to settle the situation, you don't set up, in effect, a 
public duel between your President and another person, particularly when the 
other President has most of the marbles in the nation at issue.

 

When President Putin says we're not going to allow the Ukrainian situation to 
be resolved by military means, he means it. And no amount of shouting about 
this is going to change that. And for the President of the United States to 
appear to challenge him to do other things, simply has a negative effect.

 

Now, I'm one who actually... I thought the President did a fine State of the 
Union address, as long as he was dealing with domestic issues. I know Congress 
is not going to approve it, but that's going to be a good platform for whoever 
runs on the Democratic ticket in 2016. But his comments about President Putin, 
it seems to me, were totally out of place, and can only have a negative effect.

 

So, I think that one thing that we need to do, is to get this personal debate 
at the top of government out. We really have to stop that, because it's got a 
negative effect! When you say, "I've isolated him, he's losing. Look, you 
didn't like what I was doing, but this guy's losing." What's his reaction? 
"I'll show him if I'm losing!"

 

So, who wins from that sort of exchange?

 

An Autistic Foreign Policy

 

But the biggest problem really hasn't been the President. He's been much better 
on many of these issues than Congress. And I would say one of the most 
outrageous things, that did much to create the atmosphere that we are in, which 
is one that nobody is going to benefit from, was the Magnitsky Act. Here you 
have the United States Congress, which, in that year [2012], could not even 
pass a budget, passing a law about a court case in Moscow, where it was alleged 
that the lawyer was mistreated, and he died while he was in detention. That was 
potentially a real scandal in Moscow.

 

So, what does the U.S. Congress do? They pass legislation requiring the 
Administration to identify publicly, and take action, to deny visas to specific 
people who might have been involved. One of the things, when I was ambassador 
in Moscow, I would talk about a lot, is how we really need to respect the 
principle of innocent until proven guilty. Here we have a case, in another 
jurisdiction—there may have been a scandal there, there may not have been—a law 
is passed, limited to Russia, by name, and when, I know, one Congressman was 
asked about it, he said, "Oh, it's not about Russia, it's about human rights."

 

If it's not about Russia, why did you limit it to Russia? And I would point 
out, that was at a time when the United States had torturers and was not 
prosecuting them. Was that any concern to the American Congress? It was a time 
that, since then, we have learned that were several prisoners on death row who 
were proved to be innocent. And so on. It would seem to me that the U.S. 
Congress should pay a little more attention. And I would just say, on the whole 
human rights issue, I think we Americans have to understand: yes, human rights 
are important, very important. But you do not protect them by public pressure 
on another country, particularly when you are unwilling to judge yourself.

 

The State Department, now for decades, has to report on human rights in every 
country in the world, but one—want to guess which one that is?

 

And what sends the Russians up the wall is the language we use, which we don't 
understand how it's understood outside. When we say, we are an exceptional 
people, we're capable of doing good things, protecting other people, and so 
on—they read it as saying that the rules don't apply to us, unless we want them 
to. And we act that way.

 

I'll just make one more addition here, and then we can go to questions, and 
that is, it seems to me when I really looked at what our policies have 
been—given their reaction, and this is not something the U.S. has created 
singlehandedly—what we have gotten has been action/reaction, insults followed 
by insults answered, and so on. I wonder, when I think about how the policy is 
made, I was wondering, how do you characterize this?

 

We've heard a lot recently about autism, and whether there's any connection 
with vaccination and so on. And suddenly, I said, you know, we have an autistic 
foreign policy! Let me read you—I went back and looked at the actual definition 
of autism:

 

"Autism is characterized by impaired social interaction, verbal and non-verbal 
communication, and restricted and repetitive behavior."

 

When the Congress of the United States votes over 30 times in a legislation 
they know is never going to become law, I would say that is restricted and 
repetitive behavior, and the problem is really an autistic foreign policy.

 

[1] 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=911794&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.larouchepub.com%2Fother%2F2015%2F4208matlock_us_rus_polcy.html%23fnB1>
  President Obama, in a press conference in The Hague, March 25, 

 

 

-- 
Ову поруку сте добили зато што сте пријављени на Google групу „SERBIAN NEWS 
NETWORK“.
Да бисте отказали пријаву у ову групу и престали да примате имејлове од ње, 
пошаљите имејл на [email protected].
Да бисте постављали у овој групи, пошаљите е-поруку на [email protected].
Посетите ову групу на http://groups.google.com/group/senet.
За више опција посетите https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to