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- <text id=93TT1238>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: Who Rules Russia?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE KREMLIN, Page 30
- WHO RULES RUSSIA?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In a brutal struggle for power, parliament reins in Yeltsin
- and imperils the course of his economic and political reforms
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by John Kohan and Yuri
- Zarakhovich/Moscow, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Boris Yeltsin and Ruslan Khasbulatov stared each other
- down in the Kremlin last week, and Yeltsin blinked. More to the
- point, he abruptly rose from his chair and walked off the stage.
- Russia's President and the chairman of its parliament, the
- Supreme Soviet, have been in direct confrontation for months
- over the course and pace of economic reforms--and more
- fundamentally, over who should rule Russia. Yeltsin, who stands
- higher in public esteem than the legislature, has managed to
- hold his own through compromises and concessions, including the
- sacrifice of some of his key planners. But after four days of
- shouting, an emergency session of the Congress of People's
- Deputies jammed the brakes on so hard that the future of reform
- and the presidency are now in doubt.
- </p>
- <p> The struggle for power between President and parliament is
- not just a battle between two ambitious men or between
- reformers and hard-liners or even between rival ideologies. What
- Yeltsin has been trying to do with Russia may not be possible.
- Never before has a nation with such a despotic history as
- Russia's transformed itself into a multiparty democracy with a
- market economy. Yeltsin and his team of shock therapists have
- been at the task since the Soviet Union collapsed in December
- 1991, producing few successes and much turmoil, hardship and
- anxiety. As the pain mounted, Khasbulatov and the President's
- other conservative antimarket, anti-Western rivals muttered and
- threatened, then finally struck.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin was preparing for two events in April--a summit
- meeting with Bill Clinton and a national referendum on whether
- Russians favored a parliamentary or presidential republic--that he hoped would strengthen his hand against the opponents
- of change. Khasbulatov pre-empted him by calling in the
- 1,033-member Congress, a mainly naysaying group elected back in
- March 1990 when communism was still the power in the land. The
- parliamentary leader was determined to establish once and for
- all that the legislators, not the President, were
- constitutionally empowered to run the country.
- </p>
- <p> Assembled in the ornately pilastered hall of the Great
- Kremlin Palace, the Deputies unhesitatingly voted by large
- majorities to cancel all previous power-sharing compromises with
- Yeltsin, ban the April referendum, strip away the President's
- power to issue decrees and put the Cabinet under parliamentary
- control. In effect, the executive branch was neutralized and
- parliament took over as arbiter of personnel and policy. On
- Friday, when the President's proposed amendments were rejected
- overwhelmingly, a grim-faced Yeltsin strode out of the hall.
- </p>
- <p> Presidential aides immediately insisted that if the April
- referendum were not held, Yeltsin would go ahead with a
- nonbinding plebiscite asking Russian citizens to choose between
- the executive and the parliament. On Saturday, Yeltsin refused
- to return for the closing session but sent the Congress two new
- proposals: water down the limitations it had voted on
- presidential power and agree to hold his referendum on April 25.
- The deputies dismissed the first request as "inappropriate" and
- cautioned Yeltsin that it would be unconstitutional for him to
- try to hold a plebiscite on his own.
- </p>
- <p> Thus the question of who really rules Russia remains
- unresolved. The Congress is in no position to take over
- management of the government's daily affairs, and the President
- is unlikely to accept such humiliating defeat. The Congress's
- actions, warned his press secretary, Vyacheslav Kostikov,
- indicate a "slide back to Soviet communist power." That warning
- was not entirely verbiage, since most of the Congress Deputies
- were originally bureaucrats from the Communist Party,
- trade-union functionaries and directors of state factories and
- collective farms. They are opposed to basic reform partly out
- of nostalgia for the old days and partly because they are
- determined to cling to the power and the privilege they still
- hold as parliamentarians.
- </p>
- <p> The quarrel among the politicians has left the machinery
- of government so damaged it is hard to see how it can be made
- to work again soon. Yeltsin's referendum was intended to settle
- whether Russians wanted a parliamentary or presidential
- republic, but even if he won he would have found it hard to
- enforce the outcome. Any decision on a new constitution would
- have to come from the Congress's unwilling legislators. In any
- case, as long as this power struggle continues and the two
- leaders are engaged in personal combat, the real loser is the
- reform program, which has already been much diluted by
- compromise.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin does not have many options left. He told the
- Deputies that he would go ahead with his own kind of referendum
- on power sharing and was also ready to take "additional measures
- to preserve the balance of power in the country." Whether he
- goes to the people with a referendum or a nonbinding plebiscite,
- he will again face the problem of enforcing the result if he
- wins. In a telephone call, Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev
- assured U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher that Yeltsin
- was determined to carry out the poll, possibly by April 25, and
- would then try to find a way to hold new elections. If he is
- able to fulfill that plan, especially new elections, it could
- be the best possible outcome for the crisis. Many of the
- communist hacks would be sure to lose their seats.
- </p>
- <p> For months, Yeltsin had tried repeatedly to negotiate an
- accord on power sharing between the executive and legislative
- branches, but Khasbulatov, once a Yeltsin protege and advocate
- of reform, paid no attention. Even on the eve of last week's
- Congress, the presidential team gave fifty-fifty odds that a
- compromise could be reached. They were hopelessly optimistic.
- congressional Deputies who filed into the hall were so sour
- about reform that they refused even to consider a motion to
- remove Karl Marx's rallying cry, "Workers of the World, Unite,"
- from the Russian Federation's national emblem. In the face of
- such hostility, Yeltsin's conciliatory appeal for "honest and
- equal cooperation" went unheard. Deputies yawned and chatted as
- the President's supporters pleaded for strong powers to
- "guarantee" reforms. When that pitch failed, Yeltsin warned that
- if they could not find a way to agree, a referendum "will remain
- the only means of resolving the conflict."
- </p>
- <p> In recent weeks, Yeltsin has hinted that if the Deputies
- try to curb his authority, he might mount a presidential coup
- d'etat, dissolving the Congress and ruling by decree. It would
- be illegal, and it could be carried out only with the help of
- the armed forces and police. They had carefully declared
- themselves to be outside politics, and Defense Minister Pavel
- Grachev banned troop movements and exercises in the Moscow
- region during the Congress. Even so, rumors swept the session,
- and one Deputy dashed to the microphone to announce that 10
- truckloads of troops had just pulled up at the Kremlin. A
- quickly formed commission checked and four hours later reported
- that only snowplows had arrived. Correspondents asked a
- lieutenant on guard in the Kremlin's Ivanov Square about troop
- movement. "Are you fellows crazy?" he responded.
- </p>
- <p> In the euphoria that filled the hall after Congress voted
- to rein in Yeltsin, only a few parliamentarians were thinking
- about the consequences of putting the executive branch under
- control of the legislature. Deputy Yevgeni Kozhokin reflected
- that revolutionary France was the only country he knew that was
- ruled by a parliament: "If Khasbulatov emerges as our
- Robespierre, I will be sorry for my country." A commentator for
- the Russian Information Agency called the sessions a "slow
- strangulation of the President."
- </p>
- <p> The root of the conflict inside the government is Russia's
- attempt to function under the Brezhnev-era constitution. It has
- been amended hundreds of times over the past 15 years, but many
- of the additions contradict one another. Parliamentarians point
- to Article 104, which describes the Congress of People's
- Deputies as the highest organ of power, while presidential
- supporters cite four other articles that spell out a division
- of powers among the executive, legislative and judicial
- branches.
- </p>
- <p> None of these niceties made any difference during the
- Soviet era because all policies and power were in the hands of
- the Communist Party. The government, like everyone else, did
- what the party instructed it to do. Once the party was
- abolished in August 1991, the organs of government had to
- function on their own, and found they did not know how. The
- force that had bound them together was gone, and they began to
- fly apart.
- </p>
- <p> Russia needs a new constitution and democratic elections,
- but the existing parliament would have to approve them, and
- Khasbulatov thinks the present patchwork constitution is fine.
- Although congressional terms run until 1995 and Yeltsin's until
- 1996, both he and Khasbulatov have said they might favor earlier
- balloting. The Congress decided Saturday to refer the election
- issue to the Supreme Soviet, Russia's smaller standing
- parliament.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin is largely to blame for letting the conflict
- between the presidency and parliament grow into a crisis so
- severe it threatens his hold on power. After his heroic
- performance during the coup attempt in August 1991, his
- authority among the Russian people was at a peak. He could have
- arranged to dissolve the holdover Congress and call new
- elections. He did not do so, and ever since, at moments of
- confrontation with the legislators, Yeltsin has faltered and
- hedged, each time ending up with less room to maneuver.
- </p>
- <p> There was no sign last week that Yeltsin was in immediate
- danger of losing his post by impeachment or forced resignation.
- But his ability to ram through difficult economic decisions
- will continue to wane. "My best guess," says former Director of
- Central Intelligence Robert Gates, "is that the struggle will
- continue and that it will be a continuing drain on the reform
- process."
- </p>
- <p> In the interest of rallying support, the Yeltsin team
- often depicts his conflict with the Congress as a struggle
- between good and evil, pitting democrats against communists and
- fascists. In reality, most experts believe, there is little
- chance of a restoration of the old-style Soviet rule. But other
- forms of authoritarian rule or even a dictatorship bent on
- reversing the reform process are possible. It is obvious that
- Russia is not on the fast track to transformation into a
- democratic, free-market society. The unadventurous new Prime
- Minister, Victor Chernomyrdin, a veteran industrial manager,
- speaks of the need for a "pragmatic, down-to-earth" approach to
- change. That certainly means slowing, if not necessarily ending,
- reforms. Russia cannot be effectively governed in fits and
- starts. Sooner rather than later, Yeltsin and Khasbulatov will
- have to find a way out of the political stalemate they have
- created. They cannot continue to coexist like a divorced couple
- under the same roof for long.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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