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Introduction: Two Themes. Vice President's role in national securityIs a Vice Presidential role needed?What should it be?Challenges of stabilizing and encouraging reform abroadThese two themes meet in analyzing Gore's role in the Clinton administration's Russia policy. Key Sources. Paul Light,
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1. The Vice President and Foreign Policy:From the most insignificant office to Gore as Russia Czar
Aaron Mannes
Researcher - University of Marylands Institute for Advanced Computer Studies
Ph.D. student - University of Maryland School of Public Policy
www.aaronmannes.com
amannes@umd.edu
2. Introduction: Two Themes Vice Presidents role in national security
Is a Vice Presidential role needed?
What should it be?
Challenges of stabilizing and encouraging reform abroad
These two themes meet in analyzing Gores role in the Clinton administrations Russia policy
3. Key Sources Paul Light, Vice Presidential Power: Advice and Influence in the White House
Paul Kengor, Wreath Layer or Policy Player? The Vice Presidents Role in Foreign Policy
Marie Natoli, American Prince, American Pauper: The Contemporary Vice Presidency in Perspective
Senate Historical Office, Vice Presidents of the United States, 1789-1993 James Goldgeier and Michael McFaul: Power and Purpose: U.S. Policy toward Russia after the Cold War
Strobe Talbotts The Russia Hand: A Memoir of Presidential Diplomacy
4. Overview of the Vice Presidency:The First 150 Years Minimal Constitutional authority
Marginalized by the Senate
Often perceived by Presidents as rivals
5. FDR & The Vice Presidency
Henry A. Wallace, 1941-45
Ran the Bureau of Economic Warfare (BEW), a 3000 person agency charged with stockpiling crucial war supplies
Got into turf wars with the Commerce and State
FDR dissolved BEW in 1943 and dropped Wallace from the ticket in 1944
Harry S. Truman, 1945
On taking office after FDRs death was unaware of the atomic bomb project or the status of talks with Stalin on post-war Europe
To ensure this never happened again the VP was included as a statutory member of the National Security Council
6. Nixon & The Vice Presidency Established the role of the political vice president under Eisenhower
Active at NSC, but denied line authority
Although Nixon did not include his VP in the policy process there were enormous changes to the office
VPs office received its own budget line item in 1969
Watergate, Agnews resignation, and the unelected Ford Presidency placed the VP in a new light
7. Short Unhappy Vice Presidency of Nelson Rockefeller Selected to strengthen the unelected Ford presidency
Hoped to run domestic policy by chairing Domestic Policy Council
Frozen out of policy-making when Ford moved in other directions
Demonstrated two principles of VP influence
Without the Presidents support the VP has no influence
Line assignments can enmesh VPs in turf wars and make them lightning rods for opposition
8. Mondale: VP as Senior Advisor Carter was the first true outsider VP and he selected an insider VP
Carter agreed to give Mondale all the tools he needed for the position
Mondale rejected line authority, preferring a role as Senior Advisor
Mondale had key allies on the Presidents staff
Adopted a low-key, non-public role in the policy process
9. George H. W. Bush:Low Profile Continuity Adopted Mondales model
Took on some line assignments, chaired the crisis management unit of the NSC
Bushs restrained response when Reagan was shot won praise
As President, Bush did not rely heavily on his VP
- changes to the VPs status are not permanent
10. Clinton-Gore:The Vice President as Partner
Experience in Washington and internationally complemented Clinton
Personal compatibility
National security process innovations reflected this relationship
Gores National Security Advisor had seats on the Principals and Deputies Committees at the NSC
NSC deputies had an arrangement ensuring that Gore was in the loop and did not derail the process
11. Russia Policy: From Stability to Transformation
Post-Soviet Russia risked, in the words of Clintons top Russia advisor Strobe Talbott, becoming a nuclear Yugoslavia
Bush 41 focused on what we do not want to happen there
Talbott sought to nurture the best that might happen in the former Soviet Union
Three tracked process:
Security
Economic Liberalization
Political Liberalization
12. Establishing the Gore-Chernomyrdin Commission (GCC)
Proposed by Russian FM Kozyrev to Talbott in March 1993
Intended to be an extended working group that would help build Russian governance capabilities with a focus on Russias inter-agency process
Mechanism for institutionalizing bi-national partnerships
13. Growth of the GCC GCC met 10 times, first meeting on September 1-2, 1993
After Chernomyrdin was fired in March 1998, meetings were held with several Chernomyrdin successors
GCC included hundreds of officials from Energy, Defense, Commerce, HHS, Agriculture, NASA and others
Signed over 200 agreements from major energy and space deals to nuts and bolts technical exchanges
15. Early Mandate: Space & Energy
Focus on preventing proliferation of missile & nuclear technologies
Implemented Cooperative Threat Reduction Program (Nunn-Lugar)
First meeting dealt with Russian rocket sales that could have triggered US sanctions under MCTR
Sought to establish a broad space and energy partnership worth billions making smaller deals from proliferation unappealing
16. Security Track Assessment
Worst case scenarios were avoided while NATO expanded eastward
Political and technical levels reinforced one another
Iranian exception
Despite a 1995 Gore-Chernomyrdin agreement arms sales to Iran did not stop
Russia continued to sell nuclear technology to Iran
July 1998 administration sanctioned seven Russian entities that were transferring technology to Iran - forestalling more severe congressional sanctions
The administration was concerned that congressional sanctions would have damaged overall relations
17. Transformation Track:OVP & State vs. Treasury US sought to foster economic and political reform
1993 rise of ultra-nationalists raised concerns about Russias stability
Gore criticized ultra-nationalists, but also IMF conditions
Talbott called for less shock and more therapy
Treasury officials felt their efforts undermined
1996 flawed Russian privatization led to the rise of the oligarchs
Chernomyrdin, former Gazprom chief, a suspected beneficiary
US government did not criticize for fear of undermining Yeltsin
1998 Russian economy collapses, Russians assume US linked to oligarchs
18. Committed to Yeltsin Transformation agenda focused on supporting Yeltsin
Skeptics did not develop alternatives
Gore and Talbotts combined influence dominated policy process
19. Micro-Issues Some agencies resisted GCC initiatives while others were pre-empted by GCC activity
VP staff may have been too small to manage the process
Accusations that GCC was a PR exercise that distracted from real work and the established inter-agency process
20. Transformation Track Assessment Efforts to build civil society, rule of law, and democracy were not successful
Russian economic growth has been driven by resources, not economic liberalization
Demographic and public health trends are abysmal
Engagement fostered suspicion of US motives among Russian
Transformation efforts may have been essential to the security track
21. Analyzing the VPs Role VPs engagement brings prestige
Preparation for the Presidency
VP may not have necessary staff
VP may not have time
Can burnish a VPs reputation, but can also harm it