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- <text id=94TT0182>
- <title>
- Feb. 14, 1994: Move Over, Yeltsin
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 14, 1994 Are Men Really That Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 48
- Move Over, Yeltsin
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Taking charge of the economy, Chernomyrdin seizes the spotlight
- as Russia's second most powerful man
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by David Aikman and James Carney/Washington, Jay Branegan/Davos
- and John Kohan/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> When Boris Yeltsin's 63rd birthday rolled around last Tuesday,
- a reporter was unable to resist asking Victor Chernomyrdin whether
- he had sprung any special surprises on his boss. "We presented
- him with a huge bouquet of flowers," Chernomyrdin solemnly intoned.
- "We doubt if he received a bigger one from anyone else. We knew
- we couldn't allow this. Ours was the best."
- </p>
- <p> It was a statement of seemingly needless obsequiousness for
- the man who is, at the moment, the second most powerful leader
- in Russia and the main link between an increasingly lethargic
- and isolated President and an ever more fractured and cantankerous
- parliament. The Prime Minister is also a man who provokes deep
- ambivalence as Russians--and the West--struggle to figure
- out where he really stands on the issue of economic reform.
- Engaged in a high-wire act between the proponents of radical
- therapy and those who wish to dismantle it, he has emerged as
- a Prime Minister some revere but others fear may be steering
- his nation perilously close to the black hole of hyperinflation.
- </p>
- <p> To many Russians, Victor Chernomyrdin, 55, is the only politician
- besides Yeltsin with the toughness, stability and integrity
- of character needed to pull the post-Soviet economy out of its
- tailspin. To Moscow's radical democrats, however, he personifies
- what former Finance Minister Boris Fyodorov calls the "lifeless
- and illiterate state-planning ideology of the red managers."
- To the West, Chernomyrdin appears little better than a dark
- horseman of Russia's impending apocalypse--a flashback to
- Brezhnevite stagnation whose disdain for the most basic prescriptions
- of capitalism threatens to destroy reform.
- </p>
- <p> For the doomsday predictions he inspires, Chernomyrdin has both
- his rhetoric and behavior to thank. Since taking office in December
- 1992, he has dismissed the "improvisations" of free-enterprise
- thinkers like Yegor Gaidar as "poorly thought-out experiments,"
- taken a verbal slap at "market romanticism" and disparaged privatization
- by comparing it to Stalin's forced collectivization, which killed
- more than 10 million peasants during the 1930s. As for the Prime
- Minister's policy initiatives, International Monetary Fund officials
- weighing whether to unlock $1.5 billion in aid to Russia are
- most disturbed by his willingness to pump increasingly worthless
- rubles into inefficient state enterprises. Only last week, Chernomyrdin's
- new team hammered out a bailout plan that could hand the faltering
- agricultural sector more than 25 trillion rubles.
- </p>
- <p> Equally worrying is his habit of moving back the goalposts on
- Russia's runaway inflation rate, which experts fear may soon
- roar to more than 50% a month. In November, Chernomyrdin promised
- to hold price rises down to 5% a month; in January, after inflation
- shot to 12%, he began talking in terms of 8% to 9%. Then two
- weeks ago, while attending the annual World Economic Forum at
- the Swiss resort of Davos, his pledge of 18% prompted an exasperated
- Fyodorov to quip that "after the three-hour flight back to Moscow,
- there will probably be a different figure."
- </p>
- <p> Aware that Western governments could shut off the aid taps,
- Chernomyrdin has attempted to assuage concern with carefully
- crafted assurances of his commitment to reform. But such moves
- tend to jar as much as the loud black-and-green houndstooth
- jacket he sported in Davos--presumably as a fashionable alternative
- to the boxlike suits that formerly made him look like a stock
- figure from Central Committee Casting. Whether he is reciting
- scripted nostrums for European bankers--"Fighting inflation
- remains our top priority"--or chatting up Pope John Paul II
- in the Vatican, few in the West seem reassured by the hastily
- polished facade.
- </p>
- <p> After reeling off lines like this, the Prime Minister often
- seems unable to resist the impulse to revert to what he really
- is: a blustery, bullying, no-nonsense shop boss who talks tough,
- demands absolute obedience from subordinates and bristles like
- a hedgehog if criticized. At a press conference, a reporter
- inquired whether Chernomyrdin was bothered by the fact that
- one of the most important players on his economic team, Victor
- Gerashchenko, is being called "the world's worst central banker."
- If the reporter would simply bother to meet Gerashchenko, Chernomyrdin
- barked--using a Russian colloquialism more appropriate for
- addressing an unruly factory worker--he would discover a competent
- banker and a thoroughly likable human being.
- </p>
- <p> Chernomyrdin is handicapped by a biography that reads like a
- classic Politburo life story from the communist period: a proletarian
- turned technocrat from the Russian hinterlands works his way
- to the top in Moscow through strategic postings in the state
- and party bureaucracy. Chernomyrdin won great respect--and
- met Yeltsin--during his years in the Soviet oil and gas industries
- but seemed lost in the shuffle of faceless bureaucrats who moved
- in and out of the Moscow power structure. In 1989 he brightened
- his resume by turning the Ministries of Oil and Gas into Gazprom,
- a highly successful state-owned business that negotiated favorable
- deals with the West.
- </p>
- <p> Contrary to the worst predictions, the former industrial ideologue
- has demonstrated a surprising willingness to depart from dogma
- and embrace pragmatism. Like the pipefitter he once was, he
- seems eager to try any angle or approach as long as it achieves
- results. For the Prime Minister, says one of his aides, "the
- main criterion is `Can you or can't you?'" Ordinary Russians
- seem taken with his forthright, no-frills style. Fond of dropping
- unvarnished--and often unprintable--comments, Chernomyrdin
- strikes Russians as far more accessible than the refined and
- snobbishly aloof Gaidar team. To the delight of his compatriots,
- he seems genuinely devoid of pretense and has a reputed fondness
- for saccharine verse, brass bands and accordion music--as
- well as the bread and salt traditionally offered at welcoming
- ceremonies, which he samples with the artless gusto of a peasant.
- </p>
- <p> Chernomyrdin was pulled into the political spotlight late in
- 1992, when Yeltsin was forced to replace Gaidar with a Prime
- Minister more to the liking of parliamentary hard-liners fed
- up with the government's self-important young eggheads, who
- had learned their economics from textbooks rather than on the
- shop floor. Once in office, the new Prime Minister lost no time
- attempting to institute price and profit controls on basic items
- like bread, milk and vodka. He also increased cheap state credits
- to the energy industry and liquidated the 2.6 billion-ruble
- debt of a major Moscow bank run by an old gas-industry crony.
- After this ominous start, however, he did nothing more to sidetrack
- the radical reformers' tough monetary policies and even brought
- Gaidar back into the government.
- </p>
- <p> The Prime Minister's present ascendancy owes much to his loyalty
- to Yeltsin, but his biggest boost came with the humiliating
- performance of the splintered and ego-driven reformers in Russia's
- first parliamentary elections two months ago. The ballot-box
- debacle strengthened Chernomyrdin's hand against ministers like
- Fyodorov who support the shock therapy that Russians find so
- difficult to absorb. As reformers resign from his Cabinet in
- frustration, he appears free to run things his way. And that
- makes him the man of the hour for the Clinton Administration,
- which has been assiduously cultivating a working relationship
- with the Prime Minister. "Chernomyrdin's the key player right
- now," says a Clinton aide. "He's very reliable, he's a man of
- his word, and he's loyal to Yeltsin."
- </p>
- <p> As for the renovation taking place within the Russian government,
- no metaphor captures the spirit of this process better than
- Chernomyrdin's offices, which have been moved to the fifth floor
- of the White House--the target of several dozen tank salvos
- during October's parliamentary revolt. As the sound of hammers
- and drills reverberates through the corridors, the Prime Minister's
- opulent new headquarters is swiftly taking shape. And so too
- is the edifice of his power--still half built but rapidly
- nearing formidable completion.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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