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- <text id=91TT0449>
- <link 91TT1975>
- <link 91TT1970>
- <link 90TT1358>
- <title>
- Mar. 04, 1991: Soviet Union:A Call To Civil War?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 04, 1991 Into Kuwait!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 54
- SOVIET UNION
- A Call to Civil War?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>"Resign," Yeltsin tells Gorbachev, plunging the two rivals into
- a political struggle that only one of them can survive
- </p>
- <p>By David Aikman/Moscow--With reporting by James Carney/Moscow
- and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The long, tense interview was nearly at an end when the
- subject suddenly started to stray from the script. As the
- television commentator kept trying to interrupt, Boris Yeltsin,
- the president of the Russian republic, plunged the politics of
- the U.S.S.R. into turmoil by taking on the President of the
- Soviet Union himself. "I separate myself from the position and
- policies of Mikhail Gorbachev," he read in a slow, deep
- baritone, "and I call for his immediate resignation."
- </p>
- <p> The challenge was not Yeltsin's first, but it was surely his
- strongest, and timed to coincide with a period of severe
- domestic disarray. As the economy worsens, the republics are
- growing more restive, the forces of order more demanding and
- the left more fractious. In the face of such pressure,
- Gorbachev's efforts to govern look increasingly feeble.
- Moreover, he has linked his fate to those who retain power but
- who most resist real change: Communist Party apparatchiks,
- industrial managers, army generals, KGB colonels.
- </p>
- <p> Under the circumstances, Yeltsin's decision to step forward
- as the champion of reform should have surprised no one. The two
- men have been on a collision course ever since Yeltsin quit the
- party last July and emerged as the rallying point for the
- forces of democracy in the Soviet Union. His television
- statements marked the definitive split between the nation's two
- most powerful politicians. Yeltsin accused Gorbachev of
- "deceiving" the people by failing to enact the radical economic
- reforms he had promised and by accumulating enough personal
- power to create a dictatorship. "I have made my choice,"
- Yeltsin said. "I believe in the support of the peoples of
- Russia, and I hope for it."
- </p>
- <p> He will certainly need it. The opening of the breach with
- Gorbachev plunged the two men into a bruising struggle for
- political survival from which only one of them is likely to
- emerge. Conservatives struck back quickly. Mobilizing the full
- force of the Soviet media under their control, they unleashed
- a barrage of charges against Yeltsin. A Pravda editorial
- denounced the Russian leader for "resorting to all possible
- means to pursue his own personal ambitions and pretensions."
- One evening, the main television news program, Vremya, devoted
- its entire 17-minute opening segment to anti-Yeltsin diatribes.
- Soviet television even aired unusual live coverage of the
- Supreme Soviet as lawmakers voted to censure Yeltsin, 292 to
- 29, with 27 abstentions. His TV statement, said hard-line
- parliamentarian Anatoli Chekhoyev, "was tantamount to a
- declaration of civil war."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps. But with or without Yeltsin, the Soviet ship of
- state has been foundering. As Gorbachev has turned away from
- reform and sought to squelch ethnic unrest with strong-arm
- tactics, Yeltsin's voice has been one of the few public ones
- consistently opposing him. Yeltsin has said he has no desire
- to replace Gorbachev, but the President clearly does not trust
- him. After Soviet paratroops shot their way into the television
- tower in Lithuania last month, killing 15 demonstrators,
- Yeltsin flew off to neighboring Estonia and publicly condemned
- the deployment of soldiers against civilians. He then signed
- a mutual security treaty between the Russian federation and the
- three Baltic republics.
- </p>
- <p> Who is this man who dares to challenge the Soviet President?
- Their rivalry has fascinated Soviets and foreigners alike ever
- since Yeltsin criticized Gorbachev at a Politburo meeting in
- 1987 and was forced to resign as party secretary for Moscow.
- Once regarded as a bombastic buffoon, Yeltsin has come to be
- seen as a serious contender for supreme power, the man most
- likely to win a free election for President.
- </p>
- <p> In the Stalinist era, Yeltsin would probably have been shot
- for his insubordination. Under perestroika, though, he made an
- astonishing political comeback, running as Moscow's at-large
- candidate for the newly created Congress of People's Deputies
- in March 1989 and winning 89% of the city's 6 million votes.
- From that political base, he sniped constantly at Gorbachev for
- his "half-measures" and indecisiveness, and called for direct
- presidential elections.
- </p>
- <p> Born within 30 days of each other in 1931, the two men could
- scarcely be more different in background and personality.
- Yeltsin's childhood was a grim struggle for survival in a
- one-room communal hut in the Ural industrial town of
- Sverdlovsk. At six, he was looking after his two siblings,
- boiling potatoes and washing dishes. "It was a fairly joyless
- time," he recalls, possibly also because his father frequently
- thrashed him with a leather belt.
- </p>
- <p> Young Boris clashed often with school authorities, but his
- classmates regularly elected him class leader anyway. An
- aptitude for construction work and a province-wide reputation
- as an excellent volleyball player helped secure him admission
- to the department of civil engineering at Sverdlovsk's Ural
- Polytechnic Institute in 1950. In the summer of 1952, Yeltsin
- hitchhiked and worked his way around the Soviet Union, sleeping
- where he could and stowing away on trains. "It taught me a
- lot," he says, "when I spent the night in sheds with poor and
- homeless people." Yeltsin's empathy for ordinary folk is one
- of his most remarkable political gifts. A woman construction
- worker sporting a Yeltsin button in Moscow's Pushkin Square
- said, "He's the first Russian leader I can understand. He
- speaks in a way that simple people can grasp."
- </p>
- <p> That skill undoubtedly helped him during his hardscrabble
- rise through Sverdlovsk's construction industry in the 1950s.
- His relentless drive against pilfering and wage padding angered
- some fellow workers but eventually attracted the attention of
- Communist Party recruiters. Yeltsin became an ordinary member
- in 1961, at the age of 30, and did not join the party hierarchy
- full time until seven years later.
- </p>
- <p> Once in, Yeltsin rose rapidly. A vigorous, workaholic
- leader, he spared neither himself nor his subordinates. In 1976
- Leonid Brezhnev unexpectedly promoted him over the heads of
- more senior officials to the post of Sverdlovsk provincial
- first secretary. He soon met and became friends with Gorbachev,
- by now his opposite number in Stavropol. "When I entered
- Gorbachev's office," Yeltsin wrote in his autobiography, "we
- would embrace warmly. The relationship was a good one."
- </p>
- <p> It remained so for a while after Gorbachev became the
- party's General Secretary in March 1985. Yeltsin soon arrived
- in Moscow as Central Committee Secretary for Construction, and
- Gorbachev later selected him for the tough task of cleaning up
- the corrupt Moscow party apparatus. With that job came
- candidate membership in the Politburo and such perquisites as
- a marble-lined dacha, a small army of servants and access to
- special Kremlin consumer stores. Far from being seduced by such
- luxury, Yeltsin was repelled, and that led to his wildly
- popular denunciations of high living by Soviet leaders.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin toiled diligently to bring the capital's food supply
- and distribution system under control. He traveled the city by
- subway--unheard of for a Politburo member--and commuted
- from distant suburbs to check on transportation conditions for
- workers. He would even barge into meat stores to find out who
- was getting the best cuts. These shock tactics delighted
- ordinary Muscovites but infuriated the party "Mafia," an
- old-boy network of distribution officials and real-life
- gangsters.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin's hard-charging approach also displeased Gorbachev,
- who disliked confrontation. Not until Yeltsin began to
- criticize Gorbachev in 1987, however, did the two former
- friends find themselves seriously at odds. "There can be no
- doubt," Yeltsin wrote, "that at that moment, Gorbachev simply
- hated me."
- </p>
- <p> There is an air of semipermanent melodrama to Yeltsin's life
- and career that his own actions sometimes do little to quell.
- During a 10-day visit to the U.S. in 1989, Yeltsin marred an
- otherwise impressive performance with a gauche display of his
- erratic nature: his speech was badly slurred at a breakfast
- meeting in Baltimore, the combined result of Jack Daniel's and
- jet lag. That episode prompted Soviet analysts at the White
- House to dismiss Yeltsin as a lightweight and to underrate his
- political skills.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. officials today say Yeltsin has matured, though they
- wonder whether he has a serious strategy for building a
- political opposition to Gorbachev. His ability to muster
- popular outrage against the privileged center is unrivaled: the
- masses are drawn to him as the personification of
- anti-incumbent sentiment.
- </p>
- <p> Now he needs to show how he would translate that public
- support into a concrete way of putting reforms into action, or
- even unseating Gorbachev. As the economy worsens, says Dimitri
- Simes, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for
- International Peace, Yeltsin must do more than agitate to throw
- the bums out. "While people still like him, will still vote for
- him," says Simes, "they're losing confidence that he can make
- a difference." But Michael Mandelbaum, a Soviet expert at the
- Council on Foreign Relations in New York City, maintains that
- though Yeltsin's reform ideas may not be detailed, he has as
- much of a program as anyone in Soviet politics, including
- Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> State Department experts believe Yeltsin has come a long way
- from that disastrous visit in 1989. "He seems to be quite
- impassioned in talking about democratic and market reform,"
- says an official. "He's surrounded himself with a very talented
- stable of advisers who seem to think he's genuine. He has
- attained a certain credibility as principal opposition leader."
- </p>
- <p> But Yeltsin's vulnerabilities remain larger than life. He
- retains a strain of manic eccentricity that could derail him
- over the long haul. People worry about his relentless energy,
- his tendency to work himself to the brink of exhaustion, his
- vision of politics as mortal combat. Yeltsin himself admits,
- "I am constantly having a fight with someone."
- </p>
- <p> More important, perhaps, he lacks an institutional base
- beyond his power to bring people into the streets. With no real
- sovereignty of its own, the Russian parliament has few real
- powers, and within it Yeltsin has many opponents. He is
- thoroughly despised by the nomenklatura, the great sea of 18
- million bureaucrats, party officials and managers who still
- have power and must be either persuaded, co-opted or replaced
- if reform is to succeed.
- </p>
- <p> Nor is it clear what Yeltsin can do to counter the
- relentless pressure being placed on him by Gorbachev. He has
- declined to oppose publicly the March 17 national referendum
- on the future of the Soviet Union that Gorbachev has insisted
- on holding--and will probably win. But Yeltsin has managed
- to tack on a question for Russian voters asking whether the
- republic's president should be chosen by direct election. If
- he pulls it off, he will have a clear public mandate, something
- Gorbachev sorely lacks. Soviets are wondering if that deadlock
- might not lead to civil war.
- </p>
- <p> Or total disaffection. No doubt former Foreign Minister
- Eduard Shevardnadze spoke for many Soviets when he denounced
- further confrontation last week. "I think this war of
- parliaments, of laws, and now of Presidents must be ended," he
- said. "Everybody should think about the country, about the
- people, about the fate of democracy in the Soviet Union."
- </p>
- <p> If Yeltsin has a strategy for that, he hasn't revealed it.
- For his part, Gorbachev seems determined to discredit Yeltsin
- and his allies so completely that they can no longer serve as
- a focus for opposition to the Kremlin's growing
- authoritarianism. With any other man, that tactic might
- succeed. But perhaps not with Yeltsin, whose principal
- political genius may be sheer survival. Says Simes: "Yeltsin is
- at his best not when he's governing, but when he's at the head
- of an angry crowd."
- </p>
- <p> For Gorbachev, to use his own words, that will be "something
- to think about." For the Soviet Union, it could bring violence
- and chaos. For the rest of the world, the outcome of the
- Yeltsin-Gorbachev struggle could shape the next era of
- East-West relations.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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