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- December 28, 1981POLANDThe Darkness Descends
-
-
- Freedom is extinguished and a nation is held hostage by its own
- army
-
-
- "Polish [is a] nationality [that is] not so much alive as
- surviving, which persists in thinking, breathing, speaking,
- hoping, and suffering in its grave, railed in by a million
- bayonets."
-
- --Joseph Conrad, 1911
-
-
- The silence of the bayonet fell on Poland last week. To a
- degree unprecedented in Europe since the end of World War II,
- a modern nation was sealed off from the outside world. In the
- icy cold of a savage winter, the country's telephone and telex
- lines were cut. What little news reached the West was smuggled
- out by travelers, or was broadcast over tightly censored Polish
- radio and television.
-
- That news told an alarming story. At least seven people were
- killed in clashes with security forces, hundreds more were
- injured, as many as 50,000 were under arrest--and an entire
- nation of 36 million was being held virtually incommunicado by
- its own army. Every private telephone in the country was dead.
- Gas stations were closed to private cars. Flights were
- canceled. All travel, even within Poland, was banned. A 10
- p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew was in effect every night.
-
- In Czechoslovakia 13 years earlier, communications had not been
- totally broken, so the world was able to watch and listen in
- horror as Soviet tanks rolled in to crush that country's brief
- flowering of freedom. This time, as the armed forces seized
- power in Poland, the Soviets were not visibly involved, at least
- not yet. But the Polish Communist government of General
- Wojciech Jaruzelski had taken a lesson from the Prague
- experience: the outside world would be given little chance to
- learn details of the takeover.
-
- In the heady days of August 1980, the closed gate of the Lenin
- Shipyard in the Baltic port city of Gdansk became a symbol of
- the spirit of Solidarity, the newly formed independent trade
- union movement. It was here that Lech Walesa, the movement's
- leader, first made his demands for economic and social reform.
- Months later, when Solidarity swept over the country, a
- monument was erected at the gate to commemorate both the birth
- of the union in 1980 and the 45 Poles killed in the food riots
- of 1970. Last week, shortly after the army and police had
- broken a strike by shipworkers protesting martial law and the
- arrest of hundreds of Solidarity's leaders, the gate was closed
- again. In the shadow of the three soaring steel pillars of the
- new monument now stood an armored personnel carrier, a symbol
- of the million bayonets that seem forever poised against a
- surging nationalism. Jaruzelski had announced that the country
- would henceforth be run by a 21-member junta, the "military
- council for national salvation." He declared a "state of war"
- (or state of emergency) under which the trade union movement was
- suspended and civil liberties were curtailed. His army moved
- fast and effectively.
-
- The first to be detained were hundreds of Solidarity activists,
- and virtually first among the first was Lech Walesa. Police
- knocked at his door at 3 a.m. Sunday. He refused to allow them
- in, demanding the presence of Gdansk Party Secretary Tadeusz
- Fiszbach, a noted liberal for whom Walesa had respect. As soon
- as Fiszbach arrived, Walesa gave himself up. He was then taken
- to the airport and flown to Warsaw, where, according to a
- government spokesman, "he is being treated with all the respect
- due the hear of Solidarity." Out of his own choice or the
- government's, not a word has been heard from him publicly since
- he was seized.
-
- The immediate pretext for Jaruzelski's action was Solidarity's
- growing support for rash proposals amounting to heresy in a
- Communist state, including a call for a national referendum on
- whether the government should remain in power. The union had
- also set Dec. 17, eleventh anniversary of the Gdansk food riots,
- as a day of national protest. But the government's massive
- military operation had been in preparation for a long time.
- Deployment of troops had begun at least a fortnight earlier.
- When authorities published a list of 57 dissidents who had been
- "detained," it was plain that the list had been drawn up in
- advance; three people on it were out of the country. (Not on the
- list but determined to protest the "flagrant and brutal"
- crackdown and to express his "solidarity" with Walesa:
- Poland's Ambassador to the U.S., Romuald Spasowski, who sought
- and was swiftly granted asylum along with his wife, daughter and
- son-in-law.) Last week, after the sudden crackdown, a Gdansk
- doctor said he realized at last why so many extra beds had been
- placed in the local military hospital the week before.
-
- Many Poles had been fearing a violent reaction to Solidarity's
- growing militancy. "Operation Birdcage" is what they called the
- anticipated crackdown, in which the union's freer spirits would
- presumably be caged. Even Walesa, upon learning the crackdown
- had begun, angrily told Solidarity leaders in Gdansk: "Now
- you've got what you've been looking for."
-
- In Jaruzelski's view, there was little choice but to impose
- martial law; he had to bring a halt to Solidarity's increasing
- demands. If the government failed to do so, he could see not
- way to stave off the final collapse of Poland's mismanaged,
- strike-hobbled economy. At the same time, he had to reassure
- the Soviets, who, no matter how reluctant they might be to
- intervene directly in Polish affairs, let it be known that they
- would do so if Solidarity was on the verge of seizing control
- of the state. Yet, by moving so forcefully against the union,
- whose 10 million members represent 28% of the Polish population,
- Jaruzelski could only have deepened the resentments that fueled
- Solidarity's growth and brought his country to the brink of
- civil war. Poland's Catholic bishops declared last week that
- "an entire nation" had been "terrorized by military force," and
- demanded the release of the Solidarity leaders. The army
- appeared loyal, but its ranks include large numbers of draftees
- who are sympathetic to Solidarity and sensitive to the country's
- problems. Only two months ago, just after Jaruzelski took over
- as Communist Party boss, Gdansk Party Secretary Fiszbach
- insisted to visiting TIME editors in Warsaw that a declaration
- of martial law was too dangerous even to contemplate. "I cannot
- imagine the aftereffects of such a course of events," he said.
- "Whoever even considers martial law does not take into account
- his responsibility for the destiny of the nation and the price
- that would have to be paid." In the weeks that followed, his
- colleagues evidently concluded that the price would have to be
- paid.
-
- As Poland's week of darkness began, Jaruzelski set out to
- reassure his frightened countrymen. He spoke of law and order
- as his first objective, and he promised that the process of
- renewal that had marked the past 16 months would not be
- reversed. He insisted that Solidarity had merely been
- suspended, not abolished, and he declared that there would be
- "no return to the pre-August 1980 system of rule." To
- underscore that assertion, he ordered the detention of 32
- members of the incompetent and scandal-ridden former regime,
- including deposed Communist Party Chief Edward Gierek, state
- television was filled with patriotic World War II films and
- other uplifting programming, such as an interview with a
- bemedaled old general who said he had known Jaruzelski since the
- Battle of Monte Cassino in World War II. (The man was mistaken;
- Jaruzelski fought in the Soviet army as it marched through
- Poland and on to Berlin.) He sang the leader's praises and
- assured viewers that Jaruzelski was an honest soldier who did
- not have it in his nature to be a dictator.
-
- Were the Polish people reassured? On the contrary, they were
- in shock and mourning. The queues at food shops, a familiar
- sight in contemporary Poland, had resumed. But the shoppers,
- their cheeks red form the deep cold ( 5 degrees F in many
- places), were sullen. In the countryside, the only visible
- evidence of the nation's changed circumstances was the
- snow-muffled rumble of tanks and military trucks along the
- roads. But inside their houses, people were praying--and--
- cursing. "I have lived through two wars," said a farmer north
- of Warsaw, "and now I am on my third. Just let them come get
- my family or may land!" One elderly woman in Warsaw observed.
- "I thought from the beginning that the Russians would do this.
- They hate Poles. They cannot bear to given us a little bit of
- freedom, a little bit of what's our own. They will starve us."
- Her husband replied, "It's a generational thing. The young
- went too far. It had to finish this way. When you're young,
- you don't see the dangers. I fought in the Warsaw Uprising, but
- I don't know what I would have done if I had been an old man at
- the time."
-
- Some Poles went into hiding, moving every night from one place
- to another. A university professor who lives with a woman in
- Warsaw was hiking six miles back and forth every day to his own
- unoccupied house on the outskirts of town to keep the snow
- shoveled from his sidewalk. "If I don't do it, they'll think I'm
- hiding, and so they will start looking for me." Intellectuals
- have been particularly hard hit, arrested by the thousands.
- Some 40 Warsaw scientists narrowly escaped the roundup when one
- of them managed to alert a network of taxi drivers known to be
- Solidarity members. The cabbies picked up the scientists at
- their homes, according to a prearranged plan, and drove them to
- hiding places. On the streets, friends talked to one another
- while looking over their shoulders for soldiers. In their
- homes, people once again began to panic when someone knocked on
- the door at night. "We are back to 1951," lamented one Pole.
- "It will take us 20 years to rebuild."
-
- The ban on travel and communications imposed special hardships.
- Rumors flourished--that Archbishop Jozef Glemp, the Primate of
- Poland, had been arrested, that a top Solidarity leader had
- committed suicide--and could not be checked. Messages about
- sicknesses and funerals could not be sent. "I will die now,"
- said a woman in Warsaw matter-of-factly. She had been
- scheduled for brain surgery in the U.S. this week, and now could
- not leave. At her side, her doctor sadly agreed. Because of the
- curfew, nurses and doctors could keep their hospitals open 24
- hours a day only by taking up residence inside. Said one
- doctor: "This is worse than the German occupation. At least
- then we had telephones."
-
- Partly because of the prevailing uncertainty and partly because
- of the communications blackout, public response to the crackdown
- seemed muted. The population was depressed and weary from the
- crises that had beset the country in recent months. Poles were
- also disillusioned by the disunity within Solidarity,
- traumatized by the newly imposed military rule, anxious over the
- lingering possibility of Soviet intervention and fearful for the
- fate of their national hero, Lech Walesa.
-
- The government said that Walesa was not under arrest and was
- being well treated. It was widely believed he was in detention
- in a government guesthouse in Chylice, just south of Warsaw.
- The government spread stories that he was broken psychologically
- and weeping uncontrollably; Solidarity passed the word that he
- was "psychologically strong." One reason the government flew
- Walesa to Warsaw was to have him discuss the emergency with
- government officials. Reportedly, he refused to negotiate, on
- the grounds that he could not do so as long as his advisers were
- not at his side. On Monday he was visited by a church
- representative, Archbishop Bronislaw Dabrowski, who brought him
- a change of clothes. According to Solidarity, Walesa told
- Dabrowski that workers should avoid strikes, should use only
- nonviolent methods of protest and should "not allow the spirit
- of the nation to be crushed." Archbishop Glemp was said to have
- refused a request to meet with Jaruzelski unless Walesa was also
- present.
-
- From underground, Solidarity called for a general strike. There
- was none, though it was known from the beginning that there were
- pockets of protest and resistance. As the shock of the
- crackdown began to ease, it became apparent that there were
- strikes and sit-ins throughout the country and that the
- government was determined to stamp them out before they spread.
- To the chant of "Fascists! Fascists!" from an angry crowd,
- soldiers removed a group of professors and students from the
- Polish Institute of Science. Gray-uniformed police entered the
- Church of the Holy Cross, where Frederic Chopin's heart is
- buried, and confiscated antigovernment posters and leaflets.
- As they removed a picture of the late leader of the Polish
- church, Stefan Cardinal Wysznsik, the taunts of spectators
- appeared to embarrass the soldiers.
-
- On Monday and Tuesday nights, taking advantage of the
- prevailing curfew, military authorities broke up strikes at
- three big industrial plants in Warsaw. Some 60 armored cars
- carrying troops and riot police armed with fixed bayonets and
- tear gas entered the grounds of the huge Urus tractor factory,
- shooting into the air and quickly ending an occupation of the
- plant by workers. The next target was the Huta Warszawa steel
- mill, which had been occupied by 7,000 workers. On Tuesday the
- assembled throng had issued a statement demanding an end to
- martial law. "We are workers," the group declared. "We shall
- never be slaves." The document, signed only by "the strike
- committee," ended with the opening words of the national
- anthem: "Poland is not yet lost." That night the steelworkers
- got their answer. Troops stormed the plant, arrested a score
- of union leaders and told the rest of the hungry and frightened
- workers to go home.
-
- A sit-in was also under way at the famous Lenin shipyard in
- Gdansk, the birthplace of Solidarity. On Tuesday night a few
- friendly soldiers had shared coal fires with some of the
- workers, trying to stay warm in the bitter Baltic winter. But
- early the next day, special armored units and elite Red Beret
- forces arrived to seize the plant. As six helicopters circled
- overhead, troops attacked the occupied buildings. They met with
- only passive resistance form the workers inside. A crowd of
- spectators was kept to a distance of 500 yards and tear gas was
- sprayed in the area. At one point leaflets fluttered down from
- a window somewhere overhead, declaring: "If we give up, we
- shall bury our hopes for freedom for many years to come. Several
- thousand people cannot destroy 10 million."
-
- By Thursday, the anniversary day that Solidarity had set for a
- national protest, Warsaw was generally calm, but military forces
- were again seen everywhere. Helmeted police using shields and
- batons dispersed crowds that gathered in Warsaw's Old Town and
- on the steps of the Church of the Holy Cross to talk and to sing
- the national anthem. By 7 p.m. the streets were empty. That
- night, in its first admission of casualties, Warsaw radio
- reported in somber tones that seven Poles had been killed and
- hundreds wounded in a clash between miners, fighting with picks
- and axes, and troops at a coal mine near Katowice, in southern
- Poland. In addition, it acknowledged, 160 militiamen and 164
- civilians had been injured during continuing disturbances in
- Gdansk.
-
- In the first days after the military takeover, Poles were
- surprised to find grocery shelves stocked with certain items,
- such as smoked fish and tomato juice, that had scarcely been
- seen for six months. "Where has it all been?" asked a woman
- shopper in Warsaw. A clue to that mystery was supplied by a
- Dutch truck driver, who had taken part in a 150-vehicle convoy
- to deliver donated food from Western Europe. He was directed to
- a Polish warehouse that he said contained "more butter than I've
- seen in my entire life." Poles generally welcomed the
- government's sudden bounty, which disappeared in a flash in
- widespread hoarding, but many considered the new supplies a
- cynical effort to win support.
-
- In the meantime, Jaruzelski's efforts to impose authority were
- welcomed with restrained enthusiasm by the Soviet Union.
- According to some Polish government sources, Jaruzelski was
- pressed by the Soviets to make the move. About a month ago,
- according to these accounts, he was given an ultimatum by the
- Kremlin. Soviet representatives told him--and him alone--that
- the Polish party was no longer in control, that the Sejm
- (parliament) was running wild, and that if he did not act to
- restore order, the Warsaw Pact would do it for him. Though
- Jaruzelski emphasized last week that Poland remained a sovereign
- state, many people regarded the crackdown as a Soviet invasion
- by proxy. On Tuesday, some 30 ranking Soviet officers were
- observed disembarking form a military plane. Nonetheless,
- insofar as Western journalists could tell, the two Soviet
- armored divisions based in Poland were nit involved and remained
- in their garrisons.
-
- Indeed, some Western diplomats believe Jaruzelski acted strictly
- on his own when he declared martial law. The reasoning:
- Jaruzelski anticipated a strong Soviet reaction if he did not
- move decisively against Solidarity's increasing demands. In
- this view, Jaruzelski is essentially a Polish nationalist still
- striving to achieve a historic compromise acceptable to the
- moderates in Solidarity, the liberals in the Politburo, the
- church and the army.
-
- In any case, the declaration of martial law neatly fitted
- Moscow's immediate needs. On the one hand, the Soviets have
- been alarmed at the dramatic rise of Solidarity and at the
- aspirations of freedom that it has encouraged. On the other,
- they have no wish to intervene themselves, lest this cause
- trouble elsewhere in Eastern Europe, alienate the governments
- and Europe, alienate the governments and Communist parties of
- Western Europe, break the Soviet-U.S. arms negotiations, and
- lead to a cancellation of Western trade. They are well aware,
- for example, that the multibillion-dollar natural gas pipeline
- deal they signed with West Germany this fall probably could not
- survive a Soviet invasion of Poland.
-
- Last week the Soviet government quickly supplied Poland with
- badly needed food, though the Kremlin refrained from telling its
- own people of the action. Soviet citizens are anticipating
- their third disastrous harvest in a row and might respond
- ungraciously to news that Poland, which they consider to have
- overstepped the bounds of socialism, is almost literally being
- given bread from Soviet mouths. As one Soviet worker groused:
- "We send them our meat, we send them our oil, and all they want
- is more."
-
- In the conventional view, Moscow will intervene in Poland only
- in the event of a general breakdown of law-and-order, or of a
- direct threat to the Warsaw Pact. If they should ever do so,
- in the opinion of Colonel Jonathan Alford of London's Institute
- for Strategic Studies, the intervention would be carried out
- "with a very great margin of superiority." His estimate is that
- the Soviets would bring in as many as 35 divisions, with around
- 500,000 men. But Alford believes the Soviet high command has
- counseled caution over Poland. One reason: even on so crushing
- a scale, the military is rarely able to produce a political
- solution.
-
- One of the anomalies of the situation in Poland is that the
- crackdown was a purely military operation. Jaruzelski is the
- leader of the Polish Communist Party as well as the armed forces
- and the government, but in his speech to the nation last week
- he chose to call himself "a soldier and chief of government."
- There was no mention of the Communist Party. Politburo members
- were reportedly not told that martial law was being declared
- until two hours before the troops began to move. The Polish
- party is deeply demoralized after losing an estimated one-third
- of its 3 million members during the past year. It is distressing
- to the entire Communist world for a country's armed forces to
- become more powerful than its Politburo. That is a
- contradiction of Karl Marx's warning to avoid such "bonapartism"
- by ensuring that the party be always supreme. Thus the
- rebuilding of the party, and how strong he chooses to make it,
- is one of the interesting tasks facing Jaruzelski.
-
- Once again, as in previous crises in Eastern Europe, the U.S.
- and its allies found that their power to influence events was
- sorely limited. President Reagan roundly criticized the Polish
- military takeover and declared that Solidarity was being
- suppressed with "the full knowledge and support of the Soviet
- Union." The U.S. announced that it would withhold $199 million
- of food aid, and refused to consider another $640 million worth
- of food requested by Poland unless the Warsaw regime eased its
- military rule. But Washington could do little else.
-
- There was no way of estimating how much further the government
- planned to carry its crackdown. Late in the week some
- foreigners were allowed to fly out of the country, and there was
- at least one vague sign that Poles themselves might some day be
- permitted to leave: the government's new currency regulations
- introduced a limit ($300) on the amount of money citizens could
- take with them on foreign trips. In addition, the sale of
- alcoholic beverages was resumed after a week of prohibition.
- Many factories remained closed. So did the universities and any
- other institutions that might prove troublesome. Even PAX, the
- pro-government organization of Catholic laymen, was dissolved.
- Observed an American diplomat of Poland's military rulers:
- "They have pulled it off with stunning efficiency. But there
- is an irony here. What they have succeeded in doing is to shut
- Poland down, to bring it to a halt. The real challenge is just
- the opposite, to get the country moving again. And, as a result
- of what has happened, this will now be harder than ever to
- accomplish."
-
- The hopeful view was that the military might yet manage to
- restore order without heavy bloodshed and then, after a period
- of easing tensions, try to reach a new understanding between the
- government and Solidarity. The church, a powerful and respected
- force in a nation that is more than 90% Catholic, would have to
- server a mediating role. Jaruzelski might succeed with such a
- plan if he could somehow convince his countrymen that his real
- goal is one of national reconciliation and that his moves staved
- off a worse fate, namely a Soviet invasion. The drift last week,
- however, was in the direction of rising chaos, and the
- government appeared to be deeply concerned. When Warsaw radio
- first announced the casualties at Katowice, it described the
- killing of Poles by Poles in words of anguish. "Let us lower
- our heads in silence to honor the victims of yet another Polish
- tragedy," declared the announcer. "Let the bloodshed in Silesia
- cause the provocateurs to sober up and make the madmen realize
- that the road to confrontation leads nowhere." Some diplomats
- in Warsaw were convinced that those words had been written by
- Jaruzelski himself out of an obvious worry that his unseasoned
- young army might lose control of the situation. As Poles faced
- their bleakest Christmas since World War II, a dreadful
- stillness settled across the land. The days seemed colder, the
- nights darker, the streets emptier. The quiet was broken only
- occasionally, most often by the rumble of armored personnel
- carriers. But every so often, as it has for centuries, a
- familiar anthem would rise from some church, apartment building
- or worker's cottage: "Poland is not yet lost . . ."
-
- --By William E. Smith. Reported by Roland Flamini/Bonn and
- Gregory H. Wierzynski/Warsaw with other bureaus
-
-