Gore's role: Deep in the detailsBy Karen Tumulty/Manchester, N.H.
Few people last week were as anxious as Al Gore about the peace
initiative of Russia's Viktor Chernomyrdin and Finland's Martti
Ahtisaari. As the Vice President campaigned in New Hampshire,
the topic of the day was to have been health care for the
elderly, but at every stop Gore met questions about the peace
plan that had just been accepted by the Yugoslav parliament.
Gore maintained a cautious face publicly, warning that it was
premature to claim victory. Still, several times in private he
dashed to a secure phone line to get the latest, increasingly
optimistic assessments from his national security adviser, Leon
Fuerth. As Oliver North told his conservative radio listeners
last week, the combat "may be ending just in time to save Al
Gore's hide."
Gore can claim direct involvement in the breakthrough. He and
then Prime Minister Chernomyrdin had sat across many tables over
six years, negotiating issues from safeguards on plutonium to
trade disputes over frozen chicken legs. But never had their
knowledge and trust of each other been so tested as on May 3. On
that day, Chernomyrdin came as Russia's Balkan envoy to Gore's
Victorian mansion in Washington to discuss the situation in
Yugoslavia. Sitting down at the Vice President's dining-room
table, they could not have known they were putting into motion
the strategy that would ultimately produce a peace plan for
Kosovo.
During two hours of intense talks that night, Chernomyrdin
warned Gore and other top U.S. officials that he could not do
alone what the West was asking. As a result, the next morning,
at the same table, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright came up
with the name of Finnish President Ahtisaari as Chernomyrdin's
likely partner. And as everyone stood to leave, Gore told
Chernomyrdin that there was something else he should have. He
handed the Russian a manila envelope containing a reminder of
the most fundamental reason why both countries needed to
succeed--a draft of a yet unreleased State Department report,
prepared overnight, laying out the extent of the ethnic
cleansing that was taking place in Kosovo.
Gore's interest in the Balkans goes back long before the current
crisis. While still in Congress, he was denouncing Slobodan
Milosevic on the Senate floor when few Americans had even heard
of him; in his first week as Bill Clinton's running mate, he
pressed the Arkansas Governor to make the Balkans a foreign
policy priority. But now the whole endeavor is playing out in
peculiarly personal terms for Gore: the success of a Kosovo
peace plan will bear directly on his run for the presidency.
Already, the war has taken its toll on public opinion about both
the performance of the Clinton-Gore Administration and the
direction of the country in general. And it remains far from
certain that Gore and Chernomyrdin can meet the standard of
success they agreed upon that night last month: the safe return
of Kosovar refugees. Still, it is hard to imagine a worse
disaster for Gore than the prospect of a campaign season with
U.S. ground troops in a war with the Serbs.
Which may explain why one of the first things Gore did on
getting back to Washington was send Chernomyrdin a
congratulatory note. Sometimes, he has learned, personal touches
make all the difference.
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Cover Date: June 14, 1999
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