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- <text id=91TT0274>
- <title>
- Feb. 11, 1991: New World Order? Or Law And Order?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 11, 1991 Saddam's Weird War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 58
- SOVIET UNION
- New World Order? Or Law And Order?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Reformers fear that a crackdown on street crime and business
- fraud heralds more repressive moves
- </p>
- <p>By John Kohan/Moscow--With reporting by J.F.O. McAllister/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Even in the best of times, Moscow was a militarized city,
- where officers in uniform rode the metro and army vehicles
- mingled with city traffic. But as tensions rise and visions of
- chaos begin to haunt the nation, jittery Muscovites have been
- paying more attention to all the soldiers in their midst.
- </p>
- <p> As soldiers and sailors teamed up with police last week on
- joint patrols in cities across the country, the question of
- just what they were there for took on fresh urgency. Defense
- Minister Dmitri Yazov and Interior Minister Boris Pugo, who
- drafted the order in secret last Dec. 29, say the new patrols
- are intended to combat an odious side effect of economic and
- political liberalization: a steep rise in violent crime.
- </p>
- <p> But many Soviets interpret the measure differently. They see
- it as one more piece of evidence that Mikhail Gorbachev has
- given way to hard-line pressures to curtail the reforms he
- ushered in himself. In the past month the Kremlin has sent the
- army into the Baltic republics, tightened controls over
- television and radio, outlawed 50- and 100-ruble notes and
- seems to have shelved plans for introducing a market economy.
- Gorbachev has also authorized KGB fraud squads to stamp out
- so-called economic crime. A new era of repression seems to be
- in the making.
- </p>
- <p> While there is widespread resentment of these measures, many
- Soviets fear the confusion attending wholesale reform and
- welcome the reassurance that the central government does not
- intend to let liberalization get out of hand. The Soviet people
- are accustomed to a system that guarantees order and stability,
- whatever the cost in individual liberties. Now that crime and
- disorder are up, people are frustrated and afraid. "I get the
- impression," says a State Department analyst, "that a lot of
- Soviets are saying, `Let's get things calmed down.' And if it
- takes a little arbitrary justice to make life more stable, well,
- O.K."
- </p>
- <p> But as democratic forces in the country pointed out, the
- dispatch of paratroops to Lithuania last month was first
- justified in the same way--as a limited move against draft
- dodgers. Yet it quickly turned into a bloody assault against
- pro-independence demonstrators that claimed the lives of 14
- people.
- </p>
- <p> Demands for law and order have become a favorite rallying
- cry of the hard-liners. Declared an Interior Ministry colonel:
- "People are afraid to walk the streets. Something must be
- done." But reformers are skeptical. Russian leader Boris
- Yeltsin, who now stands at the head of the democratic
- opposition, called the moves "a serious step toward
- dictatorship." Reformers argued that bringing troops into the
- streets has involved the military in areas beyond its
- competence. Said the independent weekly Moscow News: "The army
- must not be used as a muzzle on the people!"
- </p>
- <p> The string of policy reversals cast something of a chill on
- U.S.-Soviet relations as well. Last week the superpowers agreed
- to postpone the presidential summit that had been scheduled for
- Feb. 11-13 in Moscow. The ostensible reason was the gulf war
- and the need for more work on a strategic-arms treaty. But the
- U.S. was also attempting to indicate its disapproval of the
- Kremlin's backsliding on reform.
- </p>
- <p> Few of the signals from Moscow offered much cause for
- optimism. Gorbachev's decree on economic crime gave security
- squads the right to raid government enterprises, cooperatives,
- private businesses and even joint ventures involving foreign
- firms, and to carry out audits of their wares, cash holdings
- and accounts. The crackdown is supposed to wipe out the black
- market, but it may well trample underfoot the first fragile
- growth of free enterprise. Said Deputy of the Russian parliament
- Artyom Tarasov, a new Soviet entrepreneur: "This is no longer
- the politics of the free market but the politics of
- discipline."
- </p>
- <p> With public confidence in the Kremlin steadily ebbing,
- ordinary Soviets doubted that either politics or public safety
- explained the security patrols. Citizens suspected that the
- troop "deployments" were going to be coupled with an
- announcement of steep price hikes: the Kremlin wanted to be
- ready in case the people rioted. Government officials assured
- the population that no such decision was coming any day soon.
- </p>
- <p> If the rest of the country was suffering from a bad case of
- nerves, the troubled Baltic republics enjoyed a moment of
- relative calm. After meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister
- Alexander Bessmertnykh in Washington, President Bush said he
- had been given assurances that Moscow intended to withdraw some
- of its forces from the region and reopen talks with the
- republics. Interior Minister Pugo said that all paratroops,
- except those permanently stationed in the Baltics, and
- two-thirds of the Interior Ministry forces would be withdrawn
- by week's end. In another conciliatory gesture, Gorbachev set
- up Kremlin delegations to begin talks with the Baltic
- republics.
- </p>
- <p> There were signals too of a slight softening in the stance
- of Baltic leaders. "If we see signs of a reduction of the
- Soviet military presence in the republic now," admitted
- Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis, "the step can become
- a good signal for talks." Nationalist governments in the three
- republics have rejected Gorbachev's plans for a nationwide
- referendum in March on the future of the union. The Lithuanians
- and Estonians plan to hold their own polls on independence
- before then. That would help defuse Moscow's charges that the
- Baltic governments only represent the views of radical
- minorities.
- </p>
- <p> With the Baltics cooling down, Gorbachev's decision to send
- troops into the streets everywhere else seemed all the more
- bizarre. Even though the Defense and Interior ministries' order
- on joint patrols was dated a full month ago, Gorbachev gave his
- official authorization for the decree only last week. When he
- did publish the directive, it was considerably watered down and
- accompanied by provisions for local watchdog committees on "the
- activities of law-enforcement organs."
- </p>
- <p> Reformers had been incensed by the permission for the joint
- patrols--and even armored vehicles--to control "mass
- actions by citizens" and "social-political activities." Their
- anger led Pugo to explain that the reference was not to
- "rallies" but to "hooliganism and other criminal offenses and
- nothing else." Pugo also said that each republic had the right
- to decide whether it wanted the army to join forces with local
- police. Taking him at his word, the Baltic republics and
- Georgia, Armenia and Moldavia promptly turned down the offer,
- and the Russian Federation called on Gorbachev to suspend the
- entire decree.
- </p>
- <p> Mistrust of the security forces runs high--with good
- reason. According to Colonel Victor Alksnis, a spokesman for
- disenchanted reactionaries, the pro-Communist National
- Salvation Committee in Lithuania was prepared to seize power
- and expected Gorbachev to pave the way by imposing presidential
- rule. But Gorbachev did not act, leading Alksnis to conclude
- that "the President betrayed us."
- </p>
- <p> The colonel put Gorbachev on notice that if he did not
- intend to use his powers more decisively he would face a mutiny
- within the army. At the same time, Gorbachev's hesitation to
- impose presidential rule in the Baltics or give his unequivocal
- support to military actions has not won him applause from
- reformers either. If the Kremlin has a strategy nowadays, it
- seems to be to get tough--then back down. But with the
- growing polarization between radicals and reactionaries, no one
- seems prepared to accept uncertainty anymore.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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