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...establishment of a bipartisan commission should have been uncontroversial. Indeed, though the idea originally came from Kirkpatrick, it was formally suggested by some influential Senators and Representatives. Clark, however, informed only a few members of Congress that Reagan was about to appoint the commission, and failed to consult with the Republican leadership on the people his National Security Council staff was proposing as commission members. Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee learned who would be on the commission from Democratic Senator Henry Jackson of Washington, whom Clark did consult. "Talk about teed off!" says one White House staffer. "Baker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Big Stick Approach: House Votes to Shut Off Contra Aid | 8/8/1983 | See Source »

...diplomat talks of the "crazy kooks" in the Pentagon who in his view are putting too much emphasis on military moves. Any such kooks do not include the Joint Chiefs, who have made it plain that they are concerned about increased military involvement in the region. Jeane Kirkpatrick, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, has been widely regarded as the Administration's intellectual guru on Latin American policy. She has argued long, hard and convincingly within Administration councils that the loss of Central America to Communist revolutionary regimes would be a devastating blow to U.S. security interests. But Kirkpatrick learned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Big Stick Approach: House Votes to Shut Off Contra Aid | 8/8/1983 | See Source »

...bellicose talk, and through most of 1982 the region got a relatively low policy priority. But last whiter Clark, by then transferred to the National Security Adviser's post, began moving to bring Central America back to front and center among Administration concerns. He formed an unlikely alliance with Kirkpatrick, an academic intellectual who is his temperamental opposite but often supplies a detailed rationale for positions that Clark reaches by instinct...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Big Stick Approach: House Votes to Shut Off Contra Aid | 8/8/1983 | See Source »

Clark in February dispatched Kirkpatrick to the region on a fact-finding tour. She returned with a gloomy assessment of the entire Central American situation. Her findings prompted the Administration to ask for an additional $110 million in military aid to El Salvador in fiscal 1983, on top of Reagan's original request for $61.3 million. Another point on which Clark and Kirkpatrick agreed, with the support of CIA Director William Casey, was that Thomas Enders, then in charge of Latin American policy at the State Department, should be replaced. They felt that Enders was moving too slowly and cautiously...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Big Stick Approach: House Votes to Shut Off Contra Aid | 8/8/1983 | See Source »

...addition, although everyone in the Administration would like to see an increase in aid, there are divisions about how much, over how long a period and in what form. Kirkpatrick insists that the trouble in Central America is primarily economic and social: the poverty, hunger, illiteracy and disease that win masses of recruits for Marxist revolution. She has long advocated a "Marshall Plan" for the area that would provide a sharp and continuing increase in aid well into the future. Three times she wrote a recommendation for such a plan into drafts of Reagan's April 27 speech to Congress...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Big Stick Approach: House Votes to Shut Off Contra Aid | 8/8/1983 | See Source »

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