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Even the newspapers of the
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French and German intellectual establishments--Le Monde and Frankfurter Allgemeine--faced up Friday to the fact that
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President Clinton could be in real trouble, and allowed the Monica Lewinsky
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scandal onto their austere, photograph-free front pages. Under the headline
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"Clinton in Need," printed in small Gothic script, the German paper said in an
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editorial that the scandal had the makings of an American nightmare that could
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do as much damage as Watergate.
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In Le
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Monde columnist Pierre Georges said, with Gallic hauteur, that it was
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"extraordinary" that the greatest democracy in the world should permit itself
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the luxury (via Paula Jones) of "a universal media course on the president's
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anatomy." He added: "One can't altogether rule out that these young women may
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be showing off or lying. For women, too, can sometimes lie."
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An editorial in the liberal Paris newspaper Libération said that, "as
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usual, lots of French people will guffaw over all this fuss about a few
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indiscretions." But it said the French should understand that the scandal was
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not about sex, but about truth. "We can trust American freedom of
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expression--and the First Amendment which supports it--to ensure that we are
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not spared any detail, whether spicy or not, of the relations between Bill and
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Monica," it added. "Let's laugh, if we want to, or let's wax indignant; but let
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us not forget to understand."
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In a
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front-page comment in Milan's Corriere della Sera, columnist Ennio
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Caretto spoke up for Clinton's presidential record, saying he had corrected
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the capitalist excesses of Reaganism and that, although he stood accused of
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betraying the liberal traditions of the Democrats, he had at least--by moving
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to the center--kept the Right in Congress at bay. "His suspected relationship
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with Monica Lewinsky may generate sarcasm and evoke comparisons with that
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between Lolita and Humbert, but nothing can take away from his success,"
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Caretto added.
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In London, the conservative Daily Telegraph , which
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is normally hostile to Clinton, said in an editorial that the president should
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not step down until his guilt of either obstructing justice or suborning
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perjury "has been demonstrated beyond a shadow of doubt." "As was illustrated
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by Watergate, the republic can certainly survive such traumas," the
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Telegraph said, "but at a tremendous cost, especially to America's
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foreign relations. (South Vietnam fell largely as a result of the paralysis of
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the presidency.) The stakes are scarcely lower today, with foes such as Saddam
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Hussein continuing to menace the international order."
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The
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Times of London
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urged Clinton to follow the examples of Nixon and Reagan, who had tried to
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restore their reputations during the Watergate and Iran-Contra scandals by
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throwing themselves into foreign affairs. "Mr. Clinton has to prove to
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Americans and to the world that there is a purpose to his presidency. Foreign
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policy is the proper forum for him to do so," it added. Whatever the impact on
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his reputation of the present scandal, "Mr. Clinton should seek to mitigate it
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with international accomplishments. As Harry Truman argued, a president is what
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he has achieved, not what others think of him."
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The Financial
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Times said that "what the US needs above all, and what it is probably not
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going to get, is a rapid resolution to this unhappy affair." It said that a
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president under siege couldn't give the world the leadership it needed. "The
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whole build-up to next Tuesday's State of the Union speech has already been
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thrown off course, and this may be just the beginning," the FT said.
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"The media frenzy in Washington has been extraordinary to behold: there can be
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no rational discussion about the great policy issues so long as this
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lasts."
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The liberal Guardian said the talk of impeachment was premature. "Impeachment is a
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deadly serious matter, best reserved for deadly serious offences," it said.
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"That 'droit de seigneur' White House tradition of serial infidelity, as
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established by John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, may be as gross as it is
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foolish. But it is not yet the stuff of impeachment."
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