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- <text id=91TT0109>
- <link 91TT2016>
- <link 90TT0171>
- <title>
- Jan. 21, 1991: Soviet Union:The Iron Fist
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 21, 1991 January 15:Deadline For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 48
- SOVIET UNION
- The Iron Fist
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Moscow orders troops to the restive republics, separatists
- conclude that the long-feared crackdown is under way
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES WALSH--Reported by James Carney/Vilnius and John
- Kohan/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> The general growled his warning over the telephone. As elite
- Soviet paratroopers were ordered into the Baltic republics
- early last week, Fyodor Kuzmin, the regional commander, rang
- up the presidents of secessionist Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia
- with a stony message. If your people obstruct the mission to
- round up draft dodgers, he said, the troops will shoot. Four
- days later, in an atmosphere of mounting confrontation, General
- Kuzmin kept his word.
- </p>
- <p> Moving to seize Lithuania's self-defense headquarters and
- main printing plant in Vilnius, armed assault forces opened
- fire at the plant, known as Press House, shooting into the air
- and smashing windows. Though most soldiers apparently fired
- blanks and only one colonel used live ammunition, eight people
- were reported wounded, one young man shot in the face. As
- air-raid sirens shrilled across the cobblestone streets of the
- capital's center, angry young civilians at the publishing
- center surrounded a tank. "Why are you here?" they screamed at
- a crew member. "What are you doing?" Lithuanian President
- Vytautas Landsbergis, charging that troops were "spilling
- blood," placed an urgent call to Mikhail Gorbachev. The Soviet
- President could not come to the phone, Landsbergis was told;
- he was having lunch.
- </p>
- <p> Fretful foreign governments wondered whether Gorbachev would
- countenance bloodshed to suppress the independence movements.
- A chilling indication came early Sunday morning. Thousands of
- unarmed Lithuanians, singing freedom songs, tried to prevent
- Soviet troops and tanks from taking control of a television
- tower 3 miles outside Vilnius. Shots were fired, and at least
- 7 people were reported killed and 70 injured. At least two of
- the dead had been crushed beneath the treads of Soviet tanks.
- </p>
- <p> The confrontation in Vilnius began to recall events in
- Hungary in 1956, when the Soviet army moved against a restive
- population under cover of another Middle East flare-up, the
- Suez crisis. After a week-long show of force in which armored
- convoys roamed the city and 1,000 paratroopers secured key
- buildings, Lithuanians started to form makeshift antitank
- barricades outside the parliament building.
- </p>
- <p> As tensions grew, Gorbachev provided a dark hint of the
- Kremlin's intentions. In a strong message to Lithuania's
- rebellious parliament, he said "people" had lost faith in that
- body's leadership and "demand the introduction of presidential
- rule"--in other words, an emergency takeover by Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> In neighboring Latvia, special black beret units from the
- Interior Ministry mounted a similar show of force two weeks
- ago, causing fear that presidential rule would soon follow.
- "This invasion," declared the parliament in Riga, "is only a
- pretext for starting a large-scale attack on the democratic
- institutions of Latvia." A contingent of Baltic lawmakers
- gathered for a regional conference in Finland went even
- further. Echoing the warning of Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard
- Shevardnadze when he abruptly resigned in protest last month,
- they charged that Moscow's display of the iron fist signaled
- "the restoration of the power of dictatorship in the U.S.S.R."
- </p>
- <p> That possibility was what worried much of the world.
- Officials in Washington and Europe held their breath in the
- hope that Gorbachev the reformer had not changed his spots.
- They found little reassuring evidence. Troops mobilized to go
- not only into the Baltics but also into Georgia, Armenia,
- Moldavia and the restive western reaches of the Ukraine.
- </p>
- <p> By Saturday a military crackdown in Lithuania seemed well
- under way: armed units seized two Vilnius police academies and
- the special-forces division, detaining policemen loyal to the
- Landsbergis government. "There must be law-and-order
- everywhere," said a paratroop lieutenant. Thousands of defiant
- Lithuanians sustained their vigil outside the parliament
- building, warming themselves around bonfires. But Landsbergis,
- in a press conference, expressed "very modest optimism."
- Gorbachev's new Federation Council, a supercommittee consisting
- of leaders of the Soviet republics, unanimously criticized the
- use of force.
- </p>
- <p> "Gorbachev is using the world's attention on the gulf to get
- away with this," said Geoffrey Hosking, a Soviet-affairs expert
- at London University. Agreed British Sovietologist Peter Frank:
- "Gorbachev is showing his steel teeth as he shifts to the
- right, which he must do to somehow regain control over the
- country."
- </p>
- <p> Washington called the troop deployments "provocative and
- counterproductive," but the move leaves President Bush in a
- quandary. Despite months of insistent appeals for stronger
- condemnations of Moscow's behavior in the independence-minded
- Baltics, Bush has rationalized that it was more important to
- support Gorbachev. A thorough crackdown could force him to
- re-evaluate that position.
- </p>
- <p> More immediately, U.S. officials were murmuring about
- putting off the scheduled Feb. 11-13 Moscow summit with
- Gorbachev. Their fear was that Bush might have to stay home if
- the U.S. was at war in the gulf. But the fresh internal strife
- in the U.S.S.R., combined with reports that Soviet generals
- have been cheating on last November's Europe-wide treaty for
- cutbacks in conventional arms, made the summit look even less
- desirable.
- </p>
- <p> For the record, White House Press Secretary Marlin Fitzwater
- insisted the summit was still on. Until Lithuania's ordeal, at
- least, Bush's investment in the rendezvous remained as heavy
- as Gorbachev's. The meeting promised to be an important show
- of solidarity between the superpowers at a time when U.S.
- forces might be in full assault on Iraq. For the Kremlin it
- would illustrate that friendly Soviet relations with the West
- remain on track, even without icebreaker Shevardnadze. Gennadi
- Yanayev, the new Soviet Vice President, re-emphasized that
- Moscow's foreign policy will be "just the same."
- </p>
- <p> But Bush had cause to wonder how solid the Soviet Union's
- cooperation in the gulf really was. Near the Red Sea, U.S.
- forces intercepted a Jordan-bound Soviet freighter loaded with
- military hardware. In a phone call to Bush, Gorbachev affirmed
- Soviet support for the blockade and the other U.N. resolutions
- against Iraq, and his lieutenants promised to investigate the
- shipping incident. Yet Washington also had doubts about whether
- the Moscow summit would achieve its main purpose: the signing
- of the first treaty prescribing actual cuts in U.S. and Soviet
- long-range nuclear weapons. According to U.S. negotiators, the
- Soviets have been dragging their heels in agreeing on the
- details.
- </p>
- <p> That reluctance seemed to square with Western intelligence
- reports that the Soviet military has been quietly circumventing
- the new treaty reducing conventional forces in Europe. The
- outright violations, according to NATO observers, consisted of
- understating the real level of Soviet forces and reassigning
- three European-based infantry divisions as "coastal defense"
- units under command of the navy, which the agreement exempts.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Communist Youth organ Komsomolskaya Pravda
- baldly confirmed that the military had shifted thousands of
- tanks and artillery pieces across the Urals into Soviet Asia
- to spare them from the destruction required under the pact.
- Economist V. Litov, an international-affairs specialist, wrote
- in the conservative daily Sovietskaya Rossiya that the moves
- were needed to "correct the errors" of Shevardnadze's diplomacy.
- Litov called on legislators to reject the conventional-arms
- treaty. But Soviet diplomats were aghast. Said the liberal
- paper Moscow News: "The situation has given rise to
- understandable fears in the West about who is in charge."
- </p>
- <p> Presidential spokesman Vitali Ignatenko scoffed at rumors
- that the security establishment was ruling his boss. His denial
- seemed borne out by Gorbachev's ultimatum to Lithuania on
- Thursday. What he called the public "demand" for Moscow to take
- over in the Baltics actually referred to ethnic Russian
- demonstrations in Vilnius and Riga orchestrated by Interfront,
- the anti-independence league of non-Baltic workers in the
- breakaway republics. Massed outside the parliament building in
- Vilnius on Tuesday, a wave of these workers broke down the
- front door before local national guardsmen pushed back the
- assault with fire hoses. The next day the agitators returned to
- shout at some 12,000 Lithuanian counterdemonstrators summoned
- by President Landsbergis to display "our solidarity and
- determination."
- </p>
- <p> Inside the legislative chamber, how ever, the republic's
- leadership was anything but solid. The troop arrivals coincided
- with the republic's worst internal political crisis since
- Vilnius declared its independence last March. Prime Minister
- Kazimiera Prunskiene's government resigned after the parliament
- voted to rescind hefty food-price increases imposed just a day
- before. The economic reform drew outraged protests from
- Lithuania's Russians. Prunskiene, a moderate widely admired for
- her ability to cool tensions with Moscow, also came under fire
- from ardent Lithuanian nationalists who consider her too soft
- on the Kremlin. The result, as liberals saw it, was a breakdown
- of authority tailor-made for Moscow to exploit.
- </p>
- <p> A similar facedown was shaping up in Georgia. The
- ferociously independent Caucasus republic was ordered by
- Gorbachev to withdraw its police from the autonomous enclave
- of South Ossetia. While asserting their own right to go it
- alone, Georgians have clamped down vigorously on Ossetians
- venturing to break away from Georgia. Lawmakers in Tbilisi
- called Gorbachev's fiat "interference in the internal affairs
- of a sovereign republic."
- </p>
- <p> Amid the swirl of gunshots and shouting, Gorbachev did
- manage to conciliate one important rival: Russian republic
- leader Boris Yeltsin, who agreed to increase his state's
- contribution to the central treasury from a tightfisted 23.4
- billion rubles ($13 billion) to 80 billion rubles ($45
- billion), though still short of its previous 60% share. In
- return, Yeltsin won concessions on budgetary accounting and
- greater control over the sprawling republic's enormous coal,
- natural gas and oil reserves. But Yeltsin withheld any
- endorsement of the troop deployments, arguing that "violence
- begets violence."
- </p>
- <p> That view was reflected even more strongly in an Izvestia
- article by Georgi Arbatov, the noted Americanologist and former
- Gorbachev adviser. He warned that opponents of perestroika
- "have tried to exploit natural discontent and worry to turn the
- clock back. They are trying to blackmail our parliament,
- politicians and even the President." If so, the principal
- blackmail victim was proving no mean shakedown artist himself.
- </p>
- <p>CHILL FROM THE DRAFT
- </p>
- <p> Officially, Soviet troops were ordered into seven rebellious
- republics to round up draft dodgers. In the autumn call-up, the
- 4 million-man armed forces fell short of their 1991
- draft-fulfillment quota by more than one-fifth. The main
- offenders sent only:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>GEORGIA 10.0%</l>
- <l>LITHUANIA 12.5%</l>
- <l>ESTONIA 24.5%</l>
- <l>LATVIA 25.3%</l>
- <l>ARMENIA 28.1%</l>
- <l>MOLDAVIA 58.9%</l>
- </qt>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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