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Clinton's Peace Therapy
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Last Friday, after nine days
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of talks under President Clinton's supervision at the Wye River plantation in
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Maryland, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader
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Yasser Arafat reached an agreement on the next phase of the Middle East peace
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process. Clinton rushed the two leaders to the White House to complete the
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signing ceremony before sundown, the beginning of the Jewish Sabbath. Minutes
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after the ceremony ended, the sun set, Jews all over the world ceased their
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labors, and the White House spin doctors went to work, lobbying reporters to
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give Clinton credit for pulling off the deal.
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Clinton's
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critics could have denied that the Wye deal was a triumph or that Clinton
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deserved credit for it. But this would have been futile. Instead, they
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diminished his achievement in a subtler and more effective way. From a
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political standpoint, Clinton's true payoff for facilitating the peace deal is
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to put the Monica Lewinsky scandal behind him. His enemies are trying to
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deprive him of that payoff by binding the two stories together.
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The Clinton camp's spin in the days since the agreement has
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made clear that its game plan is to change the subject. In campaign
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fund-raising appearances, Clinton portrayed himself as a peacemaker and said
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the agreement "reminds us what counts." On NBC's Meet the Press , when
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conservative activist Gary Bauer denounced Clinton's behavior in the Lewinsky
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matter, Democratic Party Chairman Roy Romer paraphrased the king of Jordan's
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praise for Clinton's performance at Wye. "This election is not about that
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[scandal]," said Romer. "This election's about leadership. It's about a
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president [of whom] King Hussein [said], 'I've never seen his equal in all the
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presidents I've known.' " Strategist James Carville similarly brushed off
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questions about Lewinsky: "When you see what King Hussein has said about this
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president," asked Carville, "who do you believe has got more integrity and
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character? King Hussein and Nelson Mandela or Bill Bennett and Jerry Falwell?
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People know this president's doing the job."
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Clinton
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sympathizers in the media picked up this spin. Clinton's "performance at Wye
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River disposes of the argument that because of the Lewinsky affair he cannot be
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an effective President," wrote Anthony Lewis in the New York Times . It
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also "put [that] affair in perspective. How trivial it looked compared with the
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stakes at Wye River." On ABC's This Week , Sam Donaldson noted that
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Clinton would visit the Gaza Strip in triumph in December. "While the
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Republicans are holding [impeachment] hearings in the House," boasted
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Donaldson, "Mr. President will be striding the world like a colossus."
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Far from denying Clinton's triumph,
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conservative pundits and politicians graciously acknowledged it. On Fox News
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Sunday , Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., credited Clinton for shepherding the
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talks. On CNN's Late Edition , Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, called it "one
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of Clinton's grandest moments." Fox's Brit Hume argued that Clinton's
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achievement shouldn't be underestimated. "Bill Clinton is good at peace
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processes," agreed ABC's Bill Kristol. "Let's give him credit."
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Instead,
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conservatives slyly appropriated the theme of a Sunday Washington Post
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front-page article, which suggested that Clinton's vices in the Lewinsky affair
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had become virtues at the Wye summit. The summit, "with its all-night sessions
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and constant brushes with disaster, was a setting in which Clinton's penchant
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for keeping all the balls in the air at once seemed to thrive," said the
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Post . "Clinton relied on a personal style of charm, persistence, and
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language that could be artfully imprecise," particularly when Netanyahu sought
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his assurance that the United States would release Israeli spy Jonathan
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Pollard. According to the Post , "one Clinton adviser acknowledged that
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Clinton had been encouraging enough about the Pollard case in a vague way that
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the Israelis could have heard a pledge that was never precisely made." In an
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acid reference to the Lewinsky cover-up, a confidant of Netanyahu's suggested
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that Clinton, after initially saying that Pollard "is going to be released,"
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had taken refuge in "a dispute about the word 'is.' " On This Week ,
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former Clinton spinner George Stephanopoulos confirmed the Post 's
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thesis: "The things that drive you most crazy about Bill Clinton, in a
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situation like this, work. He can see gray. He can understand both sides of the
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argument."
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Clinton's enemies flattered him in the most sincere
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way--imitation--by exploiting the ambiguity of the ambiguity thesis. Rather
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than celebrate the transformation of his vices into virtues, they argued that
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his momentary virtues will revert to vices. "It depended on qualities that he
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really had: doggedness, a willingness to stay up all night, charm," said Hume.
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"And yet, like so much that he does, it was somewhat stained by this seamy
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little business about Jonathan Pollard, in which you can't quite figure out
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who's telling the truth, but one suspects that it may not be the president."
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CNN pundit Tucker Carlson agreed: "The two things he did during this
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negotiation" were "to stay up all night" and to "throw a temper tantrum." In
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this light, the traits for which Middle East leaders lauded Clinton at the
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signing ceremony took on ironic shadows: his "tolerance," his "flexible mind,"
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and the fact that, as Netanyahu put it, "he doesn't stop."
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The virtues-as-vices argument
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hurts Clinton not only by cementing the Lewinsky episode as the defining moment
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of his presidency but also by obscuring the ways in which he succeeded at Wye
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by overcoming the vices he displayed in that episode. By some accounts,
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Clinton's chief contribution at Wye was his refusal to buckle in two showdowns
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with Netanyahu. But over time, this aspect of his success will be forgotten
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because it doesn't fit the pattern. And as the public comes to believe instead
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that Clinton's flexibility and artifice led to the Wye agreement, the
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agreement's antagonists--or even its reluctant signers--will be tempted to
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demand that the terms be revised, arguing that Clinton deceived them and
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figuring that he will bend under pressure.
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What will
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help conservatives most in their efforts to link Wye to Lewinsky is Clinton's
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incorrigible narcissism. Hours after announcing the agreement, he said in a
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speech to a conference of religious leaders, "I felt that it was a part of my
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job as president, my mission as a Christian, and my personal journey of
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atonement." Personal journey? Atonement? Perhaps Clinton's enemies needn't
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bother laboring to make the Lewinsky mess the touchstone of his presidency.
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He's determined to do it himself.
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Recent
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"Frame Games"
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"The Microsoft
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Trial": The lesson of Flytrap is to attack the inquisition. (posted
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Wednesday, Oct. 21, 1998)
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"St. Matthew": The
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political use of a gay man's gruesome death. (posted Friday, Oct. 16,
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1998)
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