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- <text id=92TT0437>
- <title>
- Mar. 02, 1992: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 02, 1992 The Angry Voter
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- AMERICA ABROAD
- How to Keep Divorce from Leading to War
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> The Kremlin, once the seat and symbol of absolute power,
- now has the air of a museum, a sprawling, drafty memento mori
- of the old regime. The long corridors are eerily silent; the
- guards seem listless. The nameplates on most doors have been
- removed. Many rooms are not just empty; they seem abandoned.
- Boris Yeltsin has moved in, but a number of his advisers have
- stayed behind at the Russian Parliament to massage legislators
- who are restless--if not rebellious--over the price their
- constituents are paying for reform.
- </p>
- <p> Real politics has come to Russia. Unfortunately, so has an
- economic catastrophe of epic proportions. Hence, everyone is a
- dissident. Several of Yeltsin's former proteges and allies are
- turning against him, exploiting the widespread resentment of
- shortages and the fear of hyperinflation. The government, says
- an official, is printing a billion rubles a day. That figure
- makes "Weimar Russia" sound all too accurate as a description
- of what is happening here--and what could happen next.
- </p>
- <p> Every bit as important as Russia's economic crisis is its
- identity crisis. Now, in the dead of winter, when this country
- is turning a cold shower on the grimy, corrosive residue of 73
- years of communism, it is also being asked to shed virtually
- overnight its centuries-old identity as the metropole of a
- multinational empire. That is not easy, especially in the case
- of Ukraine, which has been dominated by Moscow for more than 300
- years. Most Russians haven't accepted the idea of Ukraine as a
- separate country, not least because 20% of the population there
- is Russian. This is an emotional issue with roots both deep and
- broad, by no means confined to crazies like Vladimir
- Zhirinovsky, who calls his party Liberal Democratic but who is
- actually a fascistic imperialist. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's new
- book, Rebuilding Russia, appeals to Ukrainians not to go their
- own way: "Brothers! We have no need of this cruel partition. The
- very idea comes from the darkening of minds brought on by the
- communist years."
- </p>
- <p> Vladimir Lukin, who is about to become ambassador to
- Washington, has impeccable reformist credentials: as a young
- journalist in Czechoslovakia in 1968, he bravely opposed the
- Soviet invasion. Now he is urging patience on the part of
- everyone--Ukrainians, Russians and outsiders. "An enlightened
- and balanced championship of both Russian and Ukrainian
- interests," he says, "is the only weapon against Zhirinovsky and
- the extreme nationalists." Translation: if Yeltsin yields too
- much, too fast to Kiev, he will be swept away by a coalition of
- demagogues bent on exploiting the hardships of the citizenry and
- die-hard believers in the old union. To be peaceful, a divorce
- between Kiev and Moscow will have to be gradual.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin has already conceded sovereignty to Ukraine in
- principle. Two months ago, he and Ukrainian President Leonid
- Kravchuk, along with the leaders of nine other Soviet republics,
- abolished the U.S.S.R. In its place they formed the Commonwealth
- of Independent States, which is a misnomer wrapped in a
- contradiction inside a political fiction. After living for so
- long under the Kremlin, the new states really are not
- independent at all. Their economies and infrastructures will
- take years, even decades, to disentangle.
- </p>
- <p> They won't have anything like that long to sort out their
- new relations. The precedents for the abrupt end of empire are
- not encouraging. The division of the British Raj into India and
- Pakistan in 1947 resulted in the slaughter of hundreds of
- thousands of people. Outraged over Charles de Gaulle's
- willingness to free Algeria, colonialists and renegade elements
- in the French military stepped up a campaign of terror in an
- attempt to bring him down. With that in mind, one of Yeltsin's
- advisers calls the Russians in the other republics "our pieds
- noirs," as French settlers in North Africa were known.
- </p>
- <p> The officers of the former Soviet Army are overwhelmingly
- Russian, but many of them are unwilling to accept allegiance to
- Russia alone. Their commander in chief, General Yevgeni
- Shaposhnikov, is subordinate not to Yeltsin but to a fractious
- committee of Commonwealth leaders. He attends its meetings as
- a power in his own right.
- </p>
- <p> Everyone agrees that the Commonwealth is not a successor
- state to the U.S.S.R. but only a "transitional mechanism."
- Yeltsin and Kravchuk have left open the question of where the
- transition is supposed to lead. Had they done otherwise, there
- would have been no agreement, since the Ukrainians want a weak
- Commonwealth and the Russians a strong one. During talks with
- Secretary of State James Baker last week, Yeltsin called tension
- between himself and Krav chuk over the future of the military
- "a source of anxiety," requiring "great delicacy." He also
- acknowledged that the Commonwealth is "distinguished by a
- certain degree of ambiguity in its structure and prospects."
- That is not all bad, since the alternative to ambiguity at this
- stage could be war.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, Yeltsin has been one of history's blunt
- instruments. He tried to bull his way into the Oval Office
- during a visit to Washington in 1989, stormed out of the
- Communist Party in 1990, shook his fist at the putschists from
- atop a tank last August and poked his finger in Mikhail
- Gorbachev's face a few days later. But now Yeltsin is showing
- himself capable of something like finesse. He has already become
- the first democratically elected Russian leader. If his
- countrymen, his neighbors and the outside world will give him
- time and room to maneuver, he may yet prove to be the first
- nonimperial one as well.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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