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- <text id=91TT0215>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: Soviet Union:The Edge Of Darkness
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 50
- SOVIET UNION
- The Edge of Darkness
- </hdr><body>
- <p>If Moscow and the Baltics do not find common ground soon,
- perestroika could perish in violence and repression
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney and John Kohan/
- Moscow and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> New concrete walls seal off the narrow cobblestone streets
- leading to the Latvian parliament in Riga's Old Town. Four
- barricades block access to the small square in front of the
- building. Milling around bonfires near the parliament's
- entrance, wearing combat gear and carrying AK-47 assault
- rifles, are militiamen loyal to the republic's separatist
- government. At other bonfires in nearby Cathedral Square,
- hundreds of Latvians stand vigil through the night, listening
- to passionate music and somber poetry blaring from
- loudspeakers.
- </p>
- <p> The scenes suggested a forward outpost of civilization
- girding itself for an impending attack by barbarians--and
- such an impression would not be far from the truth. Early last
- week, without warning, a squad of thuggish special forces from
- the Soviet Interior Ministry, known as black berets, attacked
- the Latvian Interior Ministry. In a 30-min. exchange of
- machine-gun and rifle fire, they killed two Latvian militiamen,
- a well-known filmmaker and a bystander.
- </p>
- <p> The attack in Riga came only seven days after army
- paratroops had seized Lithuania's television center in Vilnius,
- killing 15 unarmed demonstrators. There too the republican
- parliament has been turned into a fortress, with a 10-ft.-high
- concrete wall in front and a deep antitank ditch along one
- side. Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis has been holed
- up in the parliament building since the current crisis began
- in mid-January.
- </p>
- <p> Besieged as they are, these structures are coming to
- symbolize the failure of Soviet reform. Latvians and
- Lithuanians, along with appalled observers inside and outside
- the U.S.S.R., are convinced that the crisis between Moscow and
- the republics is not over so long as troops range the cities
- and independence-minded legislatures hide behind barricades.
- The breakaway republics are under no illusion that they can
- defeat the Kremlin, but they still desperately hope that they
- can negotiate a peaceful solution.
- </p>
- <p> That may prove wishful thinking. Although the Soviet
- military's bloodletting in the Baltics touched off a
- 100,000-strong protest march in Moscow and a stream of warnings
- from abroad, the Kremlin has not backed down. Its armed forces
- continue to rumble through the tiny republics' streets, seizing
- buildings and striking threatening attitudes. The Interior and
- Defense ministries have announced that the national police and
- the army will begin joint patrols next month in all major
- cities, apparently including the Baltic capitals. They claimed
- the move was intended to fight the increase in violent crime,
- but the heavily armed patrols will obviously be available for
- any tasks Moscow assigns them.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of it all, the democratically elected Baltic
- governments refuse to compromise on their demands for
- independence. A lopsided stalemate is setting in.
- </p>
- <p> Given the stubbornly peaceful nature of the Balts' defiance,
- the next move is up to Moscow. The present face-off is
- untenable for President Mikhail Gorbachev, since it leaves him
- open to attack from old-line communists for not bringing the
- rebels to heel and from reformers for using force to halt
- nonviolent political activity. In addition, other potential
- defectors from the Union might begin to wonder whether
- Gorbachev's government lacks the will to carry through with
- military repression.
- </p>
- <p> How does Gorbachev get out of his dilemma? He can hardly
- wave the separatists on their way out of the Union, a course
- he has fought for years and one which his army and KGB backers
- would veto. But a military overthrow of the elected governments
- would bring disaster to his reforms and his own political
- future. He, like the Baltic leaders, must be asking himself
- whether any compromise solution is still possible.
- </p>
- <p> One of Gorbachev's biggest concerns is to maintain his
- liberal image abroad and the West's willingness to support him
- in that role with economic aid and cooperation treaties. Last
- week the European Parliament blocked a billion-dollar package
- of food aid, and the U.S. Congress passed nonbinding
- resolutions calling on President Bush to consider economic
- sanctions against Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet President tried to head off actions like those
- with a surprise press conference to assure doubters that he has
- not changed his mind about perestroika. To underscore the
- point, he arrived at the Foreign Ministry press center
- accompanied by Alexander Yakovlev and Yevgeni Primakov, two
- former advisers noted for their reformist views--although
- neither holds an official position any longer.
- </p>
- <p> Looking tired and tense, Gorbachev offered a strange mixture
- of contrition and combativeness. He extended his condolences
- to the families of those who had been killed in the Baltics and
- pledged the shootings would be "thoroughly investigated." But
- he still denied responsibility for the violence and ridiculed
- the idea it had resulted from "mythical orders from higher
- authorities." His main theme was familiar: nationalist leaders
- in the Baltics were persisting in "unlawful acts" that created
- a situation in which "these kinds of clashes can flare up."
- If the republics are set on secession, he said, they have to
- pursue it on the basis of Soviet laws. But appeals to the armed
- forces to use force, he declared, are also "inadmissible in the
- political struggle."
- </p>
- <p> The muddled message offered little more than a respite in
- the tension. But Gorbachev does have a technically legal means
- at hand for breaking the deadlock. Citing a breakdown of public
- order, he could impose direct presidential rule from Moscow and
- disband the local governments, a move that would, if backed up
- by force, deprive the independence movement of an official
- voice. This might have been the original scheme behind the
- appearance of the black berets and paratroops. Detachments of
- the special-purpose militia had been roaming Riga, terrorizing
- the citizenry and generating a sense of lawlessness. Last week
- Interior Minister Boris Pugo agreed to call them off.
- </p>
- <p> Now at least a short pause for negotiations could be in the
- works. After a "constructive and friendly" meeting with
- Gorbachev in the Kremlin, Latvian President Anatolijs Gorbunovs
- said "there is no basis for any concern that presidential rule
- could be imposed in Latvia today or tomorrow." Gorbachev, he
- said, had agreed there was still room for a peaceful solution.
- </p>
- <p> If so, what might that solution be? All three Baltic states
- take the position that they were illegally absorbed into the
- U.S.S.R. in 1940 and are not part of the Union. They refuse to
- sign Gorbachev's proposed Union Treaty or consider anything
- short of full independence. For his part, Gorbachev insists
- that the Baltics must accept their current status and start the
- secession process on the basis of Soviet law--which
- technically permits independence but makes it almost impossible
- in practice.
- </p>
- <p> "The kind of compromise that Gorbachev wants--that we
- adhere to the Soviet constitution--is impossible," says
- Egidijus Bickauskas, Lithuania's chief representative in
- Moscow. "We will not back down on our declaration of
- independence." If presidential rule is decreed, adds Valdis
- Berzins of the Latvian Foreign Ministry, "the republics won't
- follow it. You may not call it a military dictatorship, but
- that is what it would be."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, Gorbachev must fend off the increasingly
- popular stance of Russian President Boris Yeltsin, who warned
- last week that the country was being pushed "back toward the
- darkest times in recent history." Yeltsin is trying to outflank
- and deflate the central authorities in Moscow with his own
- alternative to the Union Treaty. Gorbachev's version keeps most
- power in the central government's hands and makes no provision
- for secession. Yeltsin calls instead for a negotiated union
- among four republics--Russia, the Ukraine, Belorussia and
- Kazakhstan--containing most of the country's people and
- resources. Other republics would be free to join if they wish.
- </p>
- <p> Still another conflict broke out in the midst of the Baltic
- crisis when Gorbachev suddenly decreed that 50-ruble and
- 100-ruble bank notes were no longer legal tender. Overnight he
- managed to distract the nation with a confiscation not seen
- since Khrushchev's day. In one swipe, more than one-third of
- the 136 billion rubles in circulation were taken out. The idea,
- which Western economists regarded as pointless without
- accompanying free-market measures, was to soak up part of the
- immense "ruble overhang" of billions in savings that are unspent
- because there is nothing in the stores to buy. Officials said
- the measure was aimed primarily at black marketeers, but
- ordinary citizens will bear the brunt. Unless prices are
- decontrolled and competition introduced into the market, says
- Ed Hewett, a Brookings Institution expert on Soviet economics,
- "it makes no sense at all."
- </p>
- <p> Soviet citizens were given three days to exchange up to
- 1,000 rubles ($50 to $1,600, depending on the exchange rate)
- in big bills for smaller ones, but banks and enterprises had
- neither sufficient forms nor manpower to cope with the crush.
- Four republics--Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Armenia--announced that they would extend the deadline for several
- days. The Soviet State Bank immediately declared the extensions
- illegal and threatened to revoke the licenses of the republics'
- banks. Said a Muscovite who identified himself only as Alexei:
- "Elsewhere people rob banks. This seems to be the only country
- where it's the bank that robs the people."
- </p>
- <p> Such piecemeal "reform" has become the hallmark of
- Gorbachev's perestroika. In almost every sphere he has failed
- to be decisive or consistent in implementing reform plans. He
- has been unwilling to move fully into a free-market economy,
- preferring to tinker with the centralized planning machinery
- in hopes of making it more efficient. He has been willing to
- liberalize the political life of the country but not to allow
- any of its separatists to break away. He has alienated not only
- the separatists but also the traditionalists, who accuse him of
- "betrayal" for failing to completely carry through on crushing
- the independence drive in the republics.
- </p>
- <p> While he is reluctant to force out the Baltic governments
- because of the price he would pay abroad, Gorbachev has
- accepted the use of the military fist in an attempt to
- intimidate them. He is probably under pressure to go much
- further by the hardliners who now surround him: his original
- perestroika team has been replaced by a Vice President from the
- Communist Party hierarchy, a KGB man and a combat general at
- the Interior Ministry, and an unreconstructed cold warrior at
- the head of the KGB.
- </p>
- <p> Analysts wonder whether Gorbachev has lost his nerve or
- returned to his true roots. Says Yuri Shchekochikhin, a reform
- member of parliament: "He should understand that they have
- already made a dictator out of him. He has refused to put down
- the military-industrial complex, and his popularity has fallen
- throughout the country. He should make his final choice. Either
- he is an imperialist or a democrat."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, he has never claimed to be a democrat, preferring
- to describe himself as a loyal communist determined to return
- to the policies of Lenin. But if he is simply looking for a way
- out of his cul-de-sac in the Baltics, there is one he could
- use. He could identify them as a special case, republics that
- were kidnapped by Stalin, and allow their departure--accompanied by treaties on defense and economic links that
- would make them in effect another Finland. He could then say
- to other potential secessionists that, as members of the Union
- forged by Lenin, they do not meet those conditions. By cutting
- his losses with the Baltics, Gorbachev might be able to draw
- a firmer line around the Soviet heartland.
- </p>
- <p> There is little chance that Gorbachev will choose this way
- out. Western Sovietologists read him as a leader dedicated to
- preserving his empire. It seems to them he has concluded that
- if he gives the Balts such an opening, the other rebellious
- republics will rush for it as well. And even if the President
- could bring himself to accept a little secession, the army and
- KGB would not. Now that he has been deserted by the reformers,
- he must rely on the men in uniform if he wants to stay in
- power. One of his advisers, Georgi Shakhnazarov, warned that
- if Gorbachev gave in to separatists he would be overthrown and
- replaced by a military dictatorship.
- </p>
- <p> No matter how much he must depend on the armed forces,
- Gorbachev will have to think carefully before turning to
- martial law in the republics that defy him. All 15 of the
- republics--with giant Russia in the lead--are in some ways
- loosening the ties that bind them to Moscow, and despite the
- pervasiveness of the security forces, it is not clear they
- could hold them all in check at the same time. "If they have
- to crack down in lots of places," says an analyst in
- Washington, "that could create a revolutionary situation." The
- Soviet people can still be frightened by threats from the
- Kremlin, but the period of reform has given them new courage.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev's political genius so far has been his ability to
- swerve from left to right, to set things up so he is always the
- leader between the extremes, the man of moderation. He no doubt
- intends to continue that pattern by trying to balance the
- Baltics' demand for independence with the dark threat of
- violence from the reactionaries. In that effort, the most
- ominous question is whether there is any ground in the middle
- left for him to stand on.
- </p>
- <p>Where Have All the Rubles Gone?
- </p>
- <p> By presidential decree, 50-ruble and 100-ruble bank notes
- (a 100-ruble note is worth anywhere from $5 to $160) are no
- longer legal tender in the U.S.S.R. In effect, many people's
- savings have been confiscated by the government under these
- provisions:
- </p>
- <p>-- Workers have three days to exchange the equivalent of a
- month's salary, up to 1,000 rubles, in large-denomination notes
- for smaller ones or newly issued large-denomination bank notes.
- </p>
- <p>-- Pensioners can exchange the equivalent of their monthly
- stipends, up to 200 rubles.
- </p>
- <p>-- Anyone holding larger amounts in big bills must prove
- they were acquired legally.
- </p>
- <p>-- Citizens with bank accounts will be permitted to withdraw
- no more than 500 rubles each month.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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