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- +⌐ THE UNION, Page 66GO FASTER! NO! GO SLOWER!HOLDING BACK
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- In advancing his agenda, Gorbachev faces growing pressure from
- two opposite camps: the liberals and the conservatives
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- "There is a sharp ideological battle taking place in our
- society today. There are no indifferent people because the
- direction of perestroika will determine the fates of our
- children and grandchildren." So argues Nina Andreeva, 51, who
- only a year ago was an obscure teacher of chemistry at a
- Leningrad technical institute. Today she is famous -- notorious,
- some would say -- as a symbol of opposition to Mikhail
- Gorbachev's reform program. His opponents are unorganized, and
- their criticism takes different forms, but they nonetheless
- represent a potential threat to his leadership.
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- Andreeva's challenge first came in a letter to the
- conservative daily Sovetskaya Rossiya, attacking "left-wing
- intellectual socialism," a reference to the flirtation with
- democracy and glasnost practiced by such journals as Ogonyok and
- Moscow News. The current debate, she wrote, focused on "whether
- or not to recognize the leading role of the party and the
- working class in socialist construction and in perestroika." The
- intelligentsia, she claimed, "almost as a force is hostile to
- socialism."
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- Harsh words, and not just the views of a lone woman.
- Sovetskaya Rossiya's editors gave her letter (some Soviets
- believe it was actually written by Andreeva's husband, a fellow
- teacher) the prominence of an editorial. After it appeared,
- orders were issued, supposedly by Yegor Ligachev, then the
- party's leading ideologue, that the letter should be studied by
- military units and other party cadres. Significantly,
- publication took place the day Gorbachev departed on a visit to
- Yugoslavia. After his return, Pravda counterattacked, labeling
- the letter "an attempt to reverse party policy on the sly."
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- But Andreeva remains unchastened. In response to questions
- from TIME, she repeated the most frequently heard popular
- criticism of perestroika -- namely, that it is responsible for
- "a deterioration in food and other supplies, inflation (and)
- disruption of the financial system." She openly questioned
- whether Gorbachev's metaphorical proposal to "shake down the old
- trees" is compatible with true socialism.
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- Some of Gorbachev's most hostile critics are among those
- whose help he needs to make perestroika work: the 18 million
- members of the nomenklatura, or ruling class. Says Eldar
- Shakhbazov, deputy minister of finance in Azerbaijan: "The first
- layer of opponents of perestroika are people who would lose
- their economic privileges." Not only might they be shifted to
- less desirable jobs, but the nomenklatura fears that reform may
- also eliminate the perks -- special stores, food sources, even
- schools -- that make them the Soviet Union's pampered elite.
- Those privileges are a touchy matter. When Pravda published a
- letter from a reader complaining about nomenklatura perks,
- Ligachev chided the paper for admitting that the privileges even
- existed.
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- At a more theoretical level, perestroika has been attacked
- by conservative intellectuals who improbably combine a
- nationalist nostalgia for Russian Orthodoxy and the Stalin era
- with a xenophobic hatred of corrupt Western influences on Soviet
- life. Many of these critics belong to the Writers' Union of the
- Russian Federal Republic, the largest of the U.S.S.R.'s 15
- constituent republics. The literary monthly Nash Sovremennik has
- denounced rock music and beauty pageants as demeaning influences
- on Russian culture. Such writers as Yuri Bondarev and Vasily
- Belov have attacked the de-Stalinization process for defaming
- a period when, despite Stalin's tyranny, the Soviet Union became
- a world power.
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- Many of the Russian writers are openly sympathetic to the
- ugliest manifestation of Soviet neoconservatism. Founded in
- 1979 as a cultural and historical group attached to the Ministry
- of Aviation Industry, Pamyat (memory) has grown into a
- violence-tinged social movement that blends ardent nationalism
- with virulent anti-Semitism. To Pamyat's conspiracy theorists,
- an evil alliance of Zionists and Freemasons is responsible for
- most of the world's woes; Jews who were at the heart of the
- Bolshevik Revolution are blamed for the failures of Communism.
-
- "It's important to remember that the Great Russian
- Revolution was not great, and it was not Russian," says Dmitri
- Vasiliev, the group's principal theoretician. "It was organized
- by Jews." Vasiliev is mildly contemptuous of Gorbachev ("He has
- no clear thoughts and no perseverance") and calls Lenin a
- "merciless Bolshevik." At the movement's noisy rallies, hecklers
- are often attacked by Pamyat toughs who are the Soviet version
- of skinheads. Soviet Jews are concerned that Pamyat's modest
- membership of several thousand is an inadequate index of its
- power. Says Boris Kelman, a Leningrad refusenik: "Pamyat is not
- only protected but controlled by people at a high level in the
- party. It gets support from the KGB."
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- So far, Gorbachev has outmaneuvered his critics within the
- party hierarchy. His control of the media means that, even
- under glasnost, opposition to perestroika gets limited voice.
- Yet by now it is clear that unless Gorbachev can inspire
- widespread public support for the reform process -- no sure
- thing -- his attempt to shake down the old trees will be
- truncated before it has a chance to grow.
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