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Throughout 1993 and 1994 Republicans accused Clinton of naïveté and vacillation. Opinion polls showed that the American people lacked confidence in U.S. foreign policy, while European and Asian leaders were dismayed by what they saw as weak leadership from Washington. On issues of international trade, however, Clinton scored major successes, albeit with Republican help. As befitted a president who wanted to focus on the economy, Clinton stood forth as the strongest proponent of free trade in decades. First, he completed negotiations begun under Bush for a North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to forge a common market among Canada, Mexico, and the United States and won its passage in Congress in November 1993. Clinton then dispelled fears that NAFTA might divide the world into hostile commercial blocs when he won passage in December 1994 of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), dedicated to reducing trade barriers worldwide and establishing the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The November 1994 elections transformed the environment of American foreign policy making by giving the Republican Party control of both houses of Congress for the first time in 40 years. Indications were that the new Congress would insist on higher military budgets but be less willing to see armed forces deployed in regional crises. Beyond that all one could predict was that Clinton’s foreign policy was likely to tilt more toward the “realistic” direction and less toward the “idealistic” one that had informed the sanguine rhetoric of assertive multilateralism.

Europe adrift after the Cold War

For 45 years Europe had been divided by the Iron Curtain. Though tragic and often tense, the Cold War nonetheless imposed stability on Europe and allowed the western sector, at least, to prosper as never before. The end of Communism, therefore, posed several vexing questions. Would a united Germany dominate Europe economically and waver dangerously between East and West in foreign policy? Could the new democracies of east-central Europe achieve Western levels of prosperity and avoid the ethnic strife that had sparked two world wars? In the short run, the worst fears were not realized. Chancellor Kohl took every opportunity to reaffirm Germany’s commitment to the idea of a united Europe, while the high cost of rehabilitating the former East Germany allayed fears of a German economic hegemony. Europe’s long-term stability, however, depended on the continued vitality of institutions built up during the Cold War. Would the EC and the NATO alliance remain vigorous in the absence of a Soviet threat?

In the 1980s the dynamic Jacques Delors had revived the momentum of European integration by promoting the Single European Act, under which EC members were to establish full economic and monetary union, with substantial coordination of foreign and social policies, by 1992. Most of Delors’s provisions were embodied in the Maastricht Treaty approved by the 12 EC member states (Spain and Portugal had been admitted in 1986) in December 1991. This unprecedented surrender of national sovereignty worried governments and voters, however. A national referendum in France barely approved the treaty, the Danes rejected it the first time around, and the government of John Major, Thatcher’s successor as British prime minister, nearly fell from power before persuading Parliament to ratify Maastricht in July 1993. The treaty went into effect on November 1. In order to create “an ever closer union among the peoples of Europe,” Maastricht replaced the old EC with a new European Union (EU), enhanced the powers of the European Parliament at Strasbourg, promised monetary union by 1999, promoted common policies on crime, immigration, social welfare, and the environment, and called for “joint action” in foreign and security policy. The EU promptly voted to “broaden” as well as “deepen” its membership by approving the applications on March 29 of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Austria (although Norwegian voters later rejected joining).

Relations with Russia

Even the prospect of a unified Europe could not ensure peace and prosperity unless two other issues were addressed: the future of NATO and the relationship among the EU, the United States, and the struggling democracies of eastern Europe, above all Russia. Western relations with the new Russia began auspiciously. In early 1992 Yeltsin toured western Europe and signed friendship treaties with Britain and France in exchange for aid and credits. On January 3, 1993, Bush and Yeltsin signed the START II pact, promising to slash their long-range nuclear arsenals by two-thirds within a decade. After a personal appeal from former President Richard Nixon, the Bush administration also approved an economic assistance package for Russia, and Congress voted funds to help Russia dismantle its nuclear weapons. On April 4, 1993, at a summit meeting with Yeltsin at Vancouver, Clinton pledged an additional $1,600,000,000 in aid. It remained unclear, however, how much the Western powers could influence Russia’s future. Did outside assistance hasten Russia’s progress toward capitalism, or just help it to subsidize old, inefficient industries? Should Western leaders urge “shock therapy” to propel Russia quickly into capitalist modes even at the risk of high unemployment, or should they advise Yeltsin to reform slowly? Should NATO stand firm against signs of Russian assertion in foreign policy, or might accommodationist policies boost Yeltsin’s popularity at home?

Such questions became paramount after September 1993 when a coalition of Yeltsin’s opponents in the Russian Congress of People’s Deputies challenged his reforms and emergency powers and called for the President’s ouster. On September 21 Yeltsin dissolved the parliament, and the latter promptly impeached him in favour of deposed Vice President Aleksandr Rutskoy. Violence soon erupted between security forces and mobs of Communist and nationalist sympathizers marching in support of the insurgent deputies. On October 4, Yeltsin ordered army units to attack the parliament with heavy weapons, resulting in an estimated 142 deaths. He clearly was acting in “undemocratic” fashion, but he did so to suppress opponents of democracy who had been elected under the Communist constitution. When fully free elections were held in December 1993, however, ex-Communists and extreme nationalists led by Vladimir Zhirinovsky won stunning victories. Clinton’s expert on Russian affairs, Strobe Talbott, immediately called for “less shock, more therapy” in Russian economic policy, and Yelstin proceeded to dismiss his more liberal ministers. He also took a harder line in foreign policy in hopes of deflecting the criticism that he was too eager to please his Western benefactors. This ominous turn of events called into question the fundamental assumption of Russian partnership that underpinned Clinton’s foreign policy.