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e enabled western Germans to thrive in a free-market , democratic environment . `` There 's a sort of social , cultural convergence taking place that 's making ( Western ) Europe and the U.S. more similar , '' Borinski said . `` I think it has a positive effect in that it helps create a much broader understanding above all among younger generations , which have been welded together in a common you th culture . '' MOSCOW A bipartisan delegation from the Senate Armed Services Committee said Tu esday it would recommend that the first joint exercises involving U.S. and Russi an ground troops be moved from Russia to the United States because of nationalis t hostility here to the planned maneuvers . Sen. Sam Nunn , D-Ga. , chairman of the committee , said that after meeting with Russian legislators `` it was appar ent that this was a sensitive area . '' As a result , the Senate delegation unan imously decided to recommend to President Clinton that the exercises `` be held on American soil at a suitable military base and at a suitable time to both the American and Russian side . '' The joint peacekeeping exercises , involving abou t 250 troops from each side , had been set for July near the city of Orenburg on the Volga River . The Russian military had favored the maneuvers , which would allow the former enemies to engage in joint operations for the first time , but nationalist and Communist forces strongly opposed them , saying U.S. forces shou ld never set foot in `` Holy Russia . '' Last month Russian President Boris Yelt sin had asked the Defense Ministry to reconsider the exercises . Since then , to p defense officials have given mixed signals about the maneuvers , but it was cl ear that planning had all but stopped . U.S. . Defense Secretary William J. Perr y had hailed the joint exercise as proof of a new cooperative era in military re lations between the two countries . Russian parliamentary leaders , wary of hand ing hard-line nationalists such a visible and emotional cause , were clearly rel ieved by Nunn 's proposal . `` It 's not just a question of substance in such ma tters but a matter of tact , '' said Vladimir Lukin , former ambassador to the U nited States , who now heads the Parliament 's foreign affairs committee . Nunn said the delegation of four Republicans and three Democrats was somewhat taken a back when the issue of the joint maneuvers was raised because in Washington they had been told that , after some flip-flops by the Russian side , the exercise ` ` was now back on course . '' `` This exercise is not designed to use armored ve hicles or tanks . It is not even designed for live firing . But it has obviously been a sensitive subject here , and it seems to me we can further our objective s by beginning . . . in the U.S. , '' he said . Nunn said he hopes U.S. troops w ill eventually be able to come to Russia for joint exercises . `` It would be my hope that there would be reciprocity and that at some point in the future we wo uld have that kind of further peacekeeping exercises here in Russia , '' he said . Cambodia awoke from a 20-year nightmare last May with historic U.N.-sponsored e lections . Ninety percent of the population defied Khmer Rouge threats to vote f or peace . There was hope that Cambodia was on the road to reconciliation . But what a difference a year makes . Today Pol Pot 's weakened forces are on the att ack again . In the past few months the Khmer Rouge have recaptured their Pailin headquarters from the government , establishing control over areas in northern a nd western Cambodia and displacing 60,000 villagers . The ineffectiveness of the Phnom Penh government and an ill-conceived military campaign are key reasons fo r Khmer Rouge successes . But a major external factor is Thailand 's help for th e Khmer Rouge . The Thai military provides them goods and , reportedly , arms an d gives their leadership sanctuary . Despite Thailand 's impressive growth and s teady if halting moves toward democracy , the Thai military and its civilian sup porters dominate foreign policy , particularly toward Cambodia and the other nea rby states of Burma , Laos and Vietnam . The cross-border gem and timber transac tions between Thailand and Cambodia are murky but highly profitable for both sid es as much as $ 20 million per month . Yet , there are reasons beyond lucre for Thailand 's de facto alliance with the Khmer Rouge . The Thai government 's atti tude toward Cambodia has been shaped by a troubled history . Bangkok never liked the earlier Sihanouk government and helped stoke up border insurgencies . In th e 1980s , when the overriding concern was getting the Vietnamese out of Cambodia , the United States and Southeast Asian nations did not put any priority on end ing Thai and Chinese support for Pol Pot . The Vietnamese left after the 1991 Pa ris Peace Agreement . China reportedly ceased its support , leaving Thailand hol ding a monopoly on dirty work . Some Thais want to keep a hand in Cambodian affa irs and create a sort of permanent buffer zone against a renascent Vietnam . A s enior Thai official told me in 1992 that protecting the Khmer Rouge was an impor tant element of Thai security . The Thai government publicly proclaims the oppos ite and provides economic assistance to the Phnom Penh government , but even if it doesn't condone the military 's complicity with the Khmer Rouge in violation of Cambodia 's sovereignty , it has not controlled the practice . Perhaps it can not , given the Thai government 's weakness relative to the army . Whether by gr aft or statecraft , Thailand has become Pol Pot 's best ally . The war in Cambod ia could have been brought to an end and 370,000 refugees returned from Thailand only by the largest U.N. peace-keeping and assistance operation ever assembled , costing $ 2 billion . Now only the world community can help ensure that Cambod ia 's pathetically weak state and its hopes for rehabilitation are not destroyed by the Khmer Rouge . Pol Pot 's insurgents have suffered serious political setb acks and losses of manpower , but they are tenacious fighters who survived a war with the far tougher Vietnamese with outside support . The United States and re gional governments need to focus on the issue . Sihanouk 's declining health has added urgency . The problem is tough to crack . Trade sanctions and other punit ive efforts against a friendly Thailand would be ridiculous . Providing weapons and training to the Cambodian government might help , but one can't have much co nfidence in a top-heavy army whose rolls exaggerate the true numbers of servicem en . The only tools remaining are moral and diplomatic suasion continually remin ding the Thais that they are undermining a neighbor and the costly work of the w orld community . Bangkok will resist having the issue raised , but doing so mult ilaterally can put greater pressure on the military and perhaps induce Thailand 's top figures , including its respected monarch , to weigh in . Secretary of St ate Warren Christopher 's participation in Association of Southeast Asian Nation ( ASEAN ) meetings in Bangkok this July offers a prime opportunity to air the w orld 's concerns about Cambodia . ASEAN came into its own during the Cambodian c
risis , which for 10 years was the focus of ASEAN discussions . A voluble Singap ore leadership spearheaded the effort to get the Vietnamese out . Since Vietnam 's departure , Singapore 's interest has evaporated ; it doesn't even have an em bassy in Phnom Penh , and its aid is virtually invisible . ASEAN discussions abo ut Cambodia have been perfunctory . ASEAN must be brought around to face the Khm er Rouge problem and focus on how to reduce Pol Pot 's capacities and strengthen the government 's . It needs to consider Cambodia 's early membership . ASEAN a nd its new security forum willn't become effective instruments for regional stab ility if members refuse to discuss some issues that make them uncomfortable . As for the United States , President Clinton has rightly said that we cannot solve every world problem . But we should work with others when U.S. participation ca n make a difference . Working with our Western allies and ASEAN countries to hel p break the Thai-Khmer Rouge connection is such an opportunity . If we don't tak e it , Cambodia 's resurrection could be short-lived . MANILA , Philippines A conference on human rights in Indonesian-ruled East Timo r opened here Tuesday despite intense opposition from the Philippine and Indones ian governments and a ban on 34 foreign participants , including the wife of Fra nce 's president and a Nobel Peace Prize winner . The privately sponsored Asia-P acific Conference on East Timor , organized by opponents of Indonesia 's 1976 an nexation of the former Portuguese colony , convened after the Philippine Supreme Court overturned an injunction against it . However , the court upheld the gove rnment 's right to ban foreigners from entering the country to participate in th e meeting . Authorities threatened to arrest several foreign delegates who elude d the ban and attended the opening session . But a phalanx of priests , nuns and chanting students surrounded the foreign delegates as they were escorted to the University of the Philippines conference site from nearby hostels . The charged emotions , large Filipino turnout and heavy press coverage of the conference in dicated Indonesian pressure on the Philippines to block the gathering had backfi red badly . A number of politicians and commentators complained that by bowing t o Jakarta 's `` bullying '' tactics , the government had undermined the Philippi nes ' democratic principles and tarnished its international reputation . The res ult has been to focus far more attention on the plight of East Timor here and ab road than would probably have been the case if the conference had proceeded with out interference , organizers said . Although the Philippines and East Timor sha re a Roman Catholic religious heritage , Indonesia 's invasion , annexation and subsequent occupation of the territory had never been an issue here . An estimat ed 100,000 East Timorese , a sixth of the population , died during the 1970s as a result of the invasion , a subsequent famine and efforts to crush guerrilla re sistance , human-rights groups have reported . In a statement read for her at th e opening session of the five-day conference , Ireland 's Mairead Maguire , who shared the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize , accused Indonesia of engaging in `` barbaris m '' against the people of East Timor . Maguire , 50 , was one of 10 foreigners who were detained at Manila 's airport and deported on orders of President Fidel Ramos to prevent them from attending the conference . Danielle Mitterrand , pre sident of the human-rights group France-Libertes and wife of French President Fr ancois Mitterrand , was originally scheduled to deliver the conference 's keynot e speech but canceled after she was blacklisted . She said Monday in Paris that Indonesia had exerted `` tyrannical pressure '' and `` a kind of blackmail '' on her and the Philippines . A Philippine senator said banning Mitterrand was a ma jor political blunder , given that Ramos is scheduled to visit France in Septemb er and his wife , Amelita Ramos , has been invited to open a Philippine exhibiti on at a Paris museum next month . Three bishops , a prominent Japanese priest an d the head of Indonesia 's largest Muslim organization also were blacklisted . O rganizers said one of the bishops died six months ago . The Philippines ' Roman Catholic prelate , Cardinal Jaime Sin , joined the storm of criticism . In a let ter Monday to the bishop of Dili , the East Timorese capital , Sin said he was ` ` sorry to see the political leaders of my own nation giving in to the pressure of a foreign nation . '' Ramos justified his ban on foreign participants in the conference by asserting that freedom of speech and assembly were outweighed by ` ` national security '' issues . In applying pressure to block the meeting , Indo nesia had hinted that , among other measures , it could promote the cause of Mus lim separatists in the southern Philippines , presidential aides said . BANGKOK , Thailand U.S. allegations of drug trafficking by Thai legislators hav e thrown Thailand 's parliament into an uproar and raised the prospect of the fi rst major test of a new extradition treaty . So far , three opposition legislato rs have been publicly named by U.S. officials as suspects in drug-trafficking ca ses , and reports that others might be implicated have aroused apprehension amon g jittery politicians . The publicity has focused attention on the role of big m oney in Thai politics and fueled concerns that the parliament 's reputation is b eing damaged . Thailand is a conduit for much of the heroin produced in the Gold en Triangle , the border area where Burma , Thailand and Laos meet . The huge pr ofits generated by the drug trade have sowed corruption among Thai politicians , security officials and businessmen at the local and national levels , U.S. and Thai sources charge . According to a recent State Department report , efforts to fight drug trafficking and money laundering in Thailand are hampered by such fa ctors as `` widespread police and military corruption '' and `` the narcotics in volvement of some politicians . '' More than 60 percent of the heroin entering t he United States comes from the Golden Triangle , U.S. officials estimate . Burm a produces nearly 90 percent of the triangle 's annual yield of more than 2,500 tons of opium , the raw material for heroin . Some analysts predict a record cro p this year of more than 3,000 tons . Last month , Thanong Siripreechapong , 42 , was forced to resign from parliament after a judge in San Francisco unsealed a 1991 indictment accusing him of involvement in smuggling more than 45 tons of m arijuana from Thailand to the United States between 1973 and 1987 . The indictme nt said Thanong was paid more than $ 13 million in a series of deals . Last year , the U.S. government seized about $ 1 million in assets including a Beverly Hi lls house and a Mercedes-Benz that Thanong was found to have acquired in the Uni ted States with proceeds from drug smuggling . He was notified twice of U.S. for feiture proceedings but did not appear . Thanong denied the charges and said he wanted to fly to the United States to clear his name . The U.S. . Embassy here r esponded it would facilitate the trip , but that if he did enter the United Stat es , he would be `` arrested immediately . '' The Chart Thai party , the largest of five parties in opposition to the coalition government of Prime Minister Chu an Leekpai , expelled Thanong after finding inconsistencies in his testimony in parliamentary hearings . He had represented the northeastern province of Nakhon Phanom , known as Thailand 's premier marijuana growing area . Thailand faces a dilemma over the prospect that U.S. authorities might seek Thanong 's extraditio n . The case already has generated a debate over whether a Thai citizen can lega lly be extradited to stand trial in a foreign country . Extradition of Thai nati onals has previously been banned , but the current constitution is ambiguous on the issue , and a 1992 extradition treaty with the United States neither authori zes nor forbids it . If the government decides Thanong cannot be extradited , it may decide to prosecute him here , officials said . But it remains to be seen w hether Thai authorities could try him based on foreign evidence for offenses com mitted before a new Thai conspiracy law took effect . In a parliamentary session May 19 , Mongkol Chongsuthanamanee , 48 , tearfully denied involvement in the d rug trade after it was disclosed that he had been denied a U.S. visa because his name is on a narcotics watch list . The U.S. . Drug Enforcement Administration has implicated Mongkol in a conspiracy to smuggle heroin to the United States , but currently lacks evidence to indict him , a U.S. official said . Mongkol , wh o represents the opposition Chart Pattana party from Chiang Rai , a northern tow n bordering the Golden Triangle , called the allegations against him `` rubbish '' and threatened to sue the Thai Foreign Ministry and U.S. . Embassy for defama tion . A brother , Arun Chongsuthanamanee , is seeking commutation of a 1992 dea th sentence for drug trafficking . Mongkol is a protege of Narong Wongwan , who was in line to become Thailand 's prime minister in 1992 until the State Departm ent confirmed that he too had been denied a visa on suspicion of drug traffickin g . Narong 's nomination to head a pro-military coalition was later scuttled , a nd Gen. Suchinda Kraprayoon was chosen instead . Suchinda 's accession to the pr emiership then prompted massive protests in which hundreds of democracy demonstr ators were killed by the army before Suchinda was forced to resign . Narong , wh o is still in parliament , remains barred from entering the United States . The allegations linking legislators to drug dealing came to a head after Thai newspa pers quoted Foreign Minister Prasong Soonsiri as telling a cabinet meeting that he had a U.S. list of 17 politicians , including 10 opposition legislators , sus pected of being traffickers . Opposition legislators demanded that he name the s uspects and traded insults with government members . Prasong dismissed the repor ts , and the U.S. . Embassy denied providing any such list . However , lists com piled by Thai academic and media sources quickly began circulating , including o ne that named three senior members of the government . `` I have to confirm that several politicians , both at the local and national levels , are suspected of being involved in the drug trade , '' Prime Minister Chuan told parliament . He acknowledged having a list of suspected drug-dealing politicians , but declined to disclose details . WASHINGTON David Watkins , the White House aide who was forced to resign after taking the presidential helicopter to play golf near Camp David , relented Tuesd ay from his refusal to pay the full cost of the flight and agreed to reimburse t he government for the full $ 13,129.66 tab . The White House announced it was ti ghtening its rules on use of government aircraft , with approval required from t he chief of staff or deputy chief of staff . If they want to make the trip , the y must receive approval by the the White House counsel or deputy counsel . Previ ously , Watkins , head of the office of administration , had authority to approv e helicopter flights . The White House also released a summary of 11 other helic opter trips by members of the White House staff , saying they all appeared to be proper uses of the helicopter . `` There were no other instances of abuse , '' White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said . She said a review of staff use of fixed-wing aircraft would be released later this month . The other trips gene rally involved White House military and communications personnel , three times t o classified locations . Secetary of State Warren Christopher flew to Williamsbu rg , Va. , for a Senate Democratic retrat , and Secretary of Housing and Urban D evelopment Henry Cisneros and Deputy Office of Management and Budget Director Al ice M. Rivlin went on a `` special training mission '' to a classified location . Watkins himself went to Camp David for `` camp familiarization '' last April a nd to Beltsville , Md. , for `` orientation and training '' last September . Wat kins ' decision to reimburse the government spares his former administration col leagues from having to chip in for the reimbursement and the White House hopes p uts an end to the embarrassing episode . After moving quickly to force Watkins t o resign from his post as director of administration , the White House fumbled i ts handling of the matter . It belatedly discovered that a second helicopter was involved and after Watkins balked at paying the tab scrambled to put together c ontributions from nearly the entire senior staff to pay for the cost , billing t he money as a `` gesture of friendship '' to the fired aide . Although President Clinton announced that the taxpayers would not be out `` one red cent '' from t he helicopter incident , Watkins initially refused to pay any more than a share of the costs . He insisted he had done nothing wrong and would not pay up as a m atter of principle , White House sources said . But Watkins said Tuesday that he called Chief of Staff Thomas F. `` Mack '' McLarty Monday night and said he wou ld repay the full amount . Watkins , a Little Rock advertising executive whose f inancial-disclosure statement shows his net worth at more than $ 1 million , sai d in a telephone interview Tuesday that when he learned the amount had grown far beyond the few thousand dollars he originally believed the trip would cost , he decided his former colleagues should not be saddled with the bill . Watkins sai d he had orginally believed the cost would be only about $ 2,500 , and likened t he contributions promised by 13 senior aides to `` buying tickets to Barbra Stre isand . '' But , he said , `` When it 's over $ 1,000 , it 's braces for your ch ildren 's teeth . It could be a financial burden for some . '' Watkins added , ` ` While I contend I did nothing wrong , I was carrying out the duties of my job , it was something that I was involved with and so I should go ahead and not cre ate any resentment or any more resentment . '' The 55-mile trip to Camp David an d the nearby Holly Hills Country Club became public when the Frederick ( Md. ) N ews-Post published a photograph of Watkins and other adminisration officials abo ut to board the presidential helicopter after playing 18 holes of golf . Watkins was accompanided by Alphonso Maldon , the head of the White House military offi Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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