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- <text id=92TT0046>
- <title>
- Jan. 13, 1992: Scrambling for the Pieces of an Empire
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 13, 1992 The Recession:How Bad Is It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 25
- RUSSIA
- Scrambling for the Pieces of an Empire
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With nukes and navies up for grabs, not to mention the
- Bolshoi and the Hermitage, the republics try to sort out their
- inheritance
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney/Moscow and Bruce
- van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Even if its long-term durability has not been tested, the
- nascent Commonwealth of Independent States is firmly established
- in the world of symbols. When the Presidents and Prime
- Ministers of the 11 former Soviet republics met in Minsk last
- week, delegations arrived in former Aeroflot airliners carrying
- the name of their states painted across the fuselage. As the
- leaders sat down to begin negotiating their future, the red
- Soviet banner was nowhere to be seen: the concrete-and-glass
- conference hall was bedecked with the multicolored flags of the
- 11 new nations.
- </p>
- <p> The trappings of empire, of course, extend far beyond
- banners and palaces. When the domain was as vast as the U.S.S.R.
- with a single ruling center, its possessions were almost
- incalculable. They include not only the military forces,
- treasury and administrative machinery of the former rulers, but
- also the common cultural, scientific and intellectual property
- of the union. Sharing out the inheritance among the survivors
- is proving to be complicated and contentious.
- </p>
- <p> At the Minsk meeting, the new states made a little
- progress. They agreed that the intercontinental ballistic
- missiles of the former Strategic Rocket Forces--renamed the
- Strategic Deterrent Force--will be centrally controlled by the
- Commonwealth. Over the next few years, three of the four states
- with nuclear weapons on their soil--Ukraine, Belorussia and
- Kazakhstan--are expected to destroy them or hand them over to
- the fourth, Russia.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, cautious in his
- estimates, says he is "reasonably confident" that the weapons
- are under tight control now, but he worries about the future.
- "We want to help them shrink their stockpiles," he says.
- </p>
- <p> The Minsk conferees made less headway on the former Soviet
- conventional forces and weaponry. The numbers are still
- gigantic: 3.7 million men in uniform, more than 10,000 combat
- aircraft, 56,000 tanks, nearly 90,000 artillery pieces, 800
- warships. Russian President Boris Yeltsin argued for central
- control over all this too, but Ukraine, Moldavia and Azerbaijan
- insisted that they had to have their own national armies. Most
- Soviet naval bases were in Russia, but Ukraine was quick to
- claim the Black Sea Fleet, which had its home port in Ukraine's
- Sevastopol. Without warning, Russia ordered the newest aircraft
- carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, to its port of Murmansk. Yeltsin
- later defended the transfer, noting that the Black Sea Fleet was
- "historically Russian." But he grudgingly conceded that Ukraine
- is entitled to "a share" of the Black Sea Fleet.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, the conference, said Yeltsin, "confirmed the
- right of each state to decide" how to organize its military "in
- accordance with its own laws." As it turns out, the other eight
- will operate under a Commonwealth "single command," dominated
- de facto by Russia. But whether they will be willing or able to
- pay the staggering costs of modern, multimillion-troop armed
- forces is a question they have not yet faced.
- </p>
- <p> The Russian President pre-empted some of the inheritance
- debate. Even before the U.S.S.R. went out of existence, he began
- to seize for his republic such Soviet structures as the
- Kremlin, the presidential office and staff, the Foreign Ministry
- and its embassies abroad, the security forces, the Communist
- Party's Central Committee headquarters and banks and foreign
- currency accounts.
- </p>
- <p> Not all this high-handed accumulation is likely to stick.
- While Russia is the legal successor state to the Soviet Union
- and has taken its permanent seat in the U.N. Security Council,
- Ukraine and other republics are demanding a share of the
- diplomatic dowry. Now Yeltsin has offered to give a portion of
- embassy property in each foreign country to any republic that
- opens formal relations with Russia.
- </p>
- <p> That was not good enough for Ukrainian President Leonid
- Kravchuk, who insisted that every state in the Commonwealth had
- a right to a fixed part of the former Soviet holdings overseas.
- He won his point, and the 11 foreign ministers are to meet this
- week in Minsk to discuss how to divide the property.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the inheritors' discussion is over more prosaic
- issues of money and facilities. Russia has automatically assumed
- control of property and natural resources on its territory, and
- the other republics are doing the same. That may work for
- buildings, mines and wells but not for everything. The state
- treasury, for example, is in Moscow, but some of the wealth
- obviously belongs to other republics. Anticipating a challenge,
- Russia has warned that if Commonwealth members want to continue
- receiving gold mined in Russia, they will have to leave their
- reserves in the now Russian state vaults.
- </p>
- <p> Even currency is a problem. Kravchuk complains that while
- the Commonwealth has accepted continued use of the ruble for
- stability's sake, the printing of ruble notes has not kept pace
- with inflation. Since the printing presses are in Russia, he
- says, "we could find ourselves in the ruble zone without any
- rubles."
- </p>
- <p> Similarly, the central television network, claimed by
- Russia, will have to figure out how to provide national,
- local-language coverage to the 11 states it serves or be split
- up. Now that the Soviet Academy of Sciences is the Russian
- Academy again, some of its non-Russian members may decide to
- return to their home states to join existing academies there.
- At Minsk, the Commonwealth agreed to create an "interstate
- committee on space" to keep the space stations up and running;
- but funding has dried up, and new projects have been curtailed
- since the union began to come apart in August.
- </p>
- <p> Great cultural monuments like the Hermitage Museum in St.
- Petersburg and the Tretyakov National Gallery in Moscow, though
- they are national treasures, can hardly be split up and parceled
- out. Their problem may be finding anyone to keep them, in an
- era when funds just for basics are short. "We do not have
- enough means," Yeltsin has admitted, "to tangibly improve the
- disastrous situation culture finds itself in." The Bolshoi
- Theater in Moscow and the Kirov Ballet in St. Petersburg could
- probably make it as private enterprises--if they can keep
- Western companies from luring away their stars with fat
- contracts.
- </p>
- <p> As for those Soviet sports powerhouses, only tentative
- decisions have been made. The Olympic team will hold together
- for next month's Winter Games in Albertville--more or less.
- Athletes will compromise their national differences by marching
- together under the Olympic flag, and any victories they score
- will be marked by the Olympic anthem. The outlook for the Summer
- Games in Barcelona is even murkier. Russia has proposed a joint
- team there too; but Ukraine is balking, and several states are
- applying for separate membership in the International Olympic
- Committee. So none of the famous pair skaters or hockey and
- basketball teams have been broken up, but no one knows how they
- will fare in the future.
- </p>
- <p> Disputes about how to divide the national inheritance will
- certainly go on for years. Yeltsin, master of the largest and
- richest state, has a clear edge in the bargaining, if
- territorial possession counts. The other Commonwealth members
- are so hostile to central government that they refused to
- designate a capital and created only an administrative hub in
- Minsk. By pointing out that Russia is just another state and
- Moscow just another city, Yeltsin can continue gathering up most
- of the pieces of the fallen giants, the Soviet Union and its
- Communist Party.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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