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- WORLD, Page 36Coming to America
-
-
- During his eight-day odyssey through the land of the free,
- he lurched from speech to speech more like a back-of-the-pack
- presidential contender than an aspirant to the mantle of Lenin.
- But if jet lag, fatigue and generous helpings of Jack Daniel's
- occasionally took their toll, Boris Yeltsin, 58, the former
- Moscow party boss who has achieved unusual visibility and
- enormous popularity as one of Mikhail Gorbachev's most acerbic
- critics, still impressed Americans with his charm and
- appreciation of the U.S. His knack for an ingratiating riposte
- was apparent at John and Vicki Hardin's hog farm in Danville,
- Ind. "Would Mr. Yeltsin like to see some pigs?" the host asked.
- "I'd prefer to see some Americans," Yeltsin cracked, "but pigs
- will do."
-
- Behind Yeltsin's down-home humor was a stark message about
- the Soviet Union. The U.S.S.R., he warned, had barely a year,
- or less,to put its house in order. "We are on the edge of an
- abyss," he told the Council on Foreign Relations in New York
- City, "and if we go over the edge, it will lead to a cataclysm,
- not only for the Soviet Union but for the whole world."
-
- Yeltsin, who won an astonishing 89% of the Moscow vote in
- his election to the Congress of People's Deputies last March,
- reported the pitfalls facing perestroika to President Bush, Vice
- President Dan Quayle, Secretary of State James Baker and
- National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft, as well as thousands
- of ordinary Americans. And he had plenty of prescriptions for
- improvement: clean the deadwood from the Politburo; subordinate
- the party to the People's Congress; open up foreign investment.
-
- But Yeltsin's main target was what he called the weak
- leadership of Gorbachev. And for that, his campaign-style trip
- to the U.S.seemed to offer one solution: himself.
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-