Source: International Herald-Tribune Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Pubdate: Mon, 8 Jun 1998 Author: Jim Hoagland, Washington Post Service CHIRAC, RISING FROM ELECTORAL BLUNDER, SEEKS TO LEAD AGAIN PARIS---There was still a tinge of shock in Jacques Chirac's voice as the French president recounted discovering in mid-May that President Bill Clinton, Prime Minister Tony Blair and other leaders attending the Group of Seven summit meeting did not intend to go to the United Nations for the special session on the world's drug problems that begins Monday. "This seemed unthinkable to me," recalled Mr. Chirac, who immediately began lobbying the leaders of the world's richest countries and Russia to add a trip to New York "as an act of faith" and compassion. "How could we have this meeting be meaningful without the participation of the leaders of major drug-consuming countries, which contribute so much to the problem?" he asked. U.S. and UN offlcials confirm that President Chirac's energetic and emotional intervention at the Birmingham, England, summit meeting helped get Mr. Clinton, Mr. Blair and others to rearrange their schedules to be present at the special session on drugs in New York. Each head of government or state will speak for seven minutes at the one-day conference. "We cannot change the world in seven rninutes," Mr. Chirac remarked May 29 in an hour-long interview in his Elysee Palace office. "But we can show that we will just not sit by and abandon the world' s desperate and destitute." Mr. Chirac's speech at the United J Nations and his initiative to get others to aftend the meeting are big steps in his comeback from the political roadside where he was left for dead a year ago after his call for early elections led to his coalition's loss of National Assembly control. Less than a month after he took on the rest of the European Union and forced a compromise in the choice of a new head of the European Central Bank, Mr. Chirac made clear in the interview that he is finding his voice again and that he intends to claim a larger role for France on the global scene. This is likely to be a mixed blessing for Mr. Clinton, as hinted by the troublesome changes Mr. Chirac inspired in the American president's schedule for Monday. Mr. Clinton's policies face increasing challenge from the French president, who says he is acting in the name of global social justice and seeking to ease the inevitable transition " to a multipolar world, equipped with a wellfunctioning multilateral system." Throughout the interview, Mr. Chirac laid strong emphasis on his personal admiration for Mr. Clinton and on France's determination to cooperate with American global leadership where possible. But he did not hesitate to underline differences on sensitive topics like Washington's extensive use of economic sanctions, the future of NATO and the authority of the United Nations. The one subject he would not discuss was the eerie similarity between coverage by the U.S. press of the pursuit of Mr. Clinton by special prosecutor Kenneth Starr and recent headlines here raising the possibility of a criminal investigation implicating the French presidency in burgeoning carnpaign finance scandals. "I never discuss France's domestic politics with a foreign publication," Mr. Chirac said, indicating between the lines that he did not believe that the separate controversies on opposite sides of the Atlantic had impaired his or Mr. Clinton's abilities to govern. "Reason always wins out in the end," he said as a general comment. Foreign affairs have provided Mr. Chirac with a lifeboat in which to ride out a political shipwreck that would have ended the career of a lesser politician. Last June he called parliamentary elections a year early and saw his conservative coalition lose its commanding majority to the Socialists and Communists,- enabling Lionel Jospin to become prime minister and form a government. Under the French system Mr. Jospin, a Socialist who is to visit Washington June 17-20, controls the country's domestic agenda, while Mr. Chirac, a Gaullist, has a major say only in foreign policy and defense. The two men are considered the most likely candidates for president when Mr. Chirac's mandate expires in 2002, but they have worked to keep signs of rivalry out of public view. The public honeymoon may now be ending, as labor strife presents Mr. Jospin with his first serious political challenges at home and as Mr. Chirac feels comfortable in raising his profile on a number of issues, including U.S.French relations. His most pointed remarks concerned emerging differences between Washington and Paris over the future mission of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization which Mr. Chirac said France wili not permit to be turned into "a Western alliance that would exercise military force anytime anywhere in the world. That would be an immense danger for world peace." Mr. Chirac discussed with Mr. Clinton over lunch at Birmingham the French misgivings about the strategic concept the United States wants NATO to adopt at its 50th anniversary sumnnit in Washington next spring. Discussions of the strategic concept were formally launched at a NATO foreign ministers gathering on May 28 in Luxembourg. The administration and its supporters in the recently concluded U.S. Senate debate on NATO enlargement have strongly indicated that they will Push for a significant widening of NATO responsibilities and "power projection," including missions outside Europe. "If NATO gives itself the right to intervene where it wants and when it wants, other powers would immediately start doing the same thing, with as much justification," Mr. Chirac said. To pre-empt that, France will insist that NATO military operations outside the alliance's European zone of selfdefense be approved by the UN Security Council. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)