home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0654>
- <link 93TG0137>
- <link 91TT1964>
- <link 90TT3140>
- <title>
- Mar. 25, 1991: Soviet Union:Boris vs. Mikhail
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 25, 1991 Boris Yeltsin:Russia's Maverick
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- COVER STORIES
- Boris Vs. Mikhail
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As the people vote on the Union's future, Gorbachev and Yeltsin
- war over the remains of the empire
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney and John Kohan/
- Moscow and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> They came by the tens of thousands, some bearing posters
- depicting the jubilant face of Boris Yeltsin, others holding
- placards demanding the removal of Mikhail Gorbachev. By noon
- on a chilly Sunday, more than 200,000 people filled the
- vastness of Manezh Square outside the crenellated walls of the
- Kremlin. As a speaker shouted out resolutions, the crowd voted
- overwhelmingly for authorities to stop persecuting Yeltsin,
- leader of the Russian republic, and for Gorbachev to resign as
- Soviet President. Addressing the throng, Moscow Mayor Gavril
- Popov asked, "Do we trust the leadership of the country?" The
- crowd roared back, "No!"
- </p>
- <p> The demonstration, perhaps the largest in the Soviet Union
- since the advent of perestroika five years ago, only served to
- sharpen the conflict between the country's two most prominent
- politicians. On one side is Mikhail Gorbachev, the father of
- perestroika and glasnost, the brilliant if testy infighter
- whose policies not only failed to put bread on the table but
- spurred most of the country's 15 republics to loosen if not
- actually break the ties that bind them to Moscow. On the other
- side is Boris Yeltsin, the Lazarus of Soviet politics, the
- blunt-spoken and somewhat erratic brawler of the streets who
- seems intent on leading a revolution against the Kremlin.
- </p>
- <p> The battle must be particularly frustrating for Gorbachev,
- who prides himself on opening up his country's political
- process to divergent voices, but surely never expected a voice
- as brash as Yeltsin's to carry so much popular weight. Nothing
- if not spontaneous, Yeltsin demanded on live television last
- month that Gorbachev resign. Only a few short years ago, he
- would have landed in the Gulag for such an attack on the leader
- of the Soviet Union. Today a verbal assault on Yeltsin by
- Gorbachev's allies only seems to increase the Russian leader's
- standing among the people.
- </p>
- <p> The latest battleground between the two men is the 28-word
- question put to the country in a referendum held on Sunday
- asking Soviet citizens whether the nation should be preserved
- as a "renewed federation of equal sovereign republics." The
- referendum, the first in the nation's history, had to be voted
- upon by a majority of the country's roughly 200 million
- eligible voters for the result to be valid; even then, the
- outcome has only symbolic meaning, since the details of the new
- federation must still be worked out in bargaining between the
- republics and Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> But to hear the government's spokesmen tell it, the vote
- would determine nothing less than the future of the world.
- EITHER UNION OR CHAOS, a Pravda headline blared. "The
- disappearance of the Soviet Union from the world map," a TASS
- commentator pointed out, would "result in the disruption of the
- world's political and strategic balance." Certainly true, but
- whatever results the referendum might accomplish, eradication
- of the Soviet Union is not one of them.
- </p>
- <p> Though Yeltsin never actually urged people to vote nyet, his
- refusal to endorse the measure irked Gorbachev. The day before
- the massive rally outside the Kremlin, Yeltsin had called upon
- the people to "declare war on the leadership of the country,
- which has led us into this quagmire." In true Yeltsin style,
- the Russian leader admitted several days later that perhaps he
- should not have used the word war, but the damage was done.
- Soviet officials would give Yeltsin TV time only under
- restrictive conditions, so the ever resourceful Russian leader
- took calls from citizens at the office of the liberal daily
- Komsomolskaya Pravda, which then published a transcript.
- </p>
- <p> Complete results of the balloting were not expected until
- the end of this week, and even then, in spite of official
- predictions, it might be difficult to interpret them. Six of
- the Soviet Union's 15 republics--the Baltic states of
- Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, plus Georgia, Armenia and
- Moldavia--have refused to participate, though some of their
- residents, mostly Russians, will vote anyway. Special polling
- places have been set up in ethnic-Russian areas in non-Russian
- republics. For voters in the armed forces, 6,827 military
- polling districts have been set up.
- </p>
- <p> While the voting is only an expression of public opinion,
- and will have no effect on the independence of republics, most
- politicians see it as a referendum on Gorbachev's leadership.
- It is possible he sees it that way himself. The Soviet
- President put his personal authority on the line last week in
- a nationally televised plea for a yes vote. "The point at
- issue," he said, "is the fate of the country, the fate of our
- homeland, our common home, how we and our grandchildren shall
- live."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev announced the referendum last December as part of
- his plan to push and pull the rebellious republics into signing
- a new treaty of union. The treaty, to replace one that created
- the U.S.S.R. in 1922, would redefine and somewhat loosen the
- relationship between member republics and the central
- government in Moscow. Because leaders of several
- independence-minded republics resisted the idea, Gorbachev
- decided to go over their heads to the voters. He was confident
- the majority would vote his way; those republics that balked
- still would not be allowed to secede.
- </p>
- <p> As head of the largest and richest republic, Yeltsin was not
- prepared to fall into line until his demands for less control
- by the central government and more extensive sovereignty for
- Russia had been met. He objected to the first draft of the
- treaty and last week said he still had problems with the new
- version, which provides for sharing economic power and even for
- changing the name of the country (to what is artfully fudged
- in the text). At issue, said Yeltsin, was not simply whether
- to preserve the Union, but how to improve it. "If we preserve
- it in its present form," he said, "then we are preserving not
- the country but the system that is ruining the country today."
- </p>
- <p> Like Gorbachev, Yeltsin hopes to bend the referendum to his
- own purposes. The second question on the ballot in Russia is
- whether the republic should establish a directly elected
- presidency. Voters are likely to say they do want to choose
- their own leader, and Yeltsin is likely to win an election. He
- will then be ready to do battle with Gorbachev on a more equal
- footing. With a huge power base and an electoral mandate,
- Yeltsin will face a national leader who has never been popularly
- elected but has massive institutional power at his command.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev will portray a yes vote in the referendum as
- evidence that Yeltsin is defying the will of the people by
- obstructing the Union treaty. Though conservative deputies have
- forced a vote of confidence in the Russian parliament for March
- 28 to threaten Yeltsin's hold on the chairmanship, his position
- will be greatly strengthened if Yeltsin becomes an elected
- president. The stalemate could then be prolonged. Yeltsin,
- however, has limited administrative and no police power and
- cannot enforce Russian laws on radical economic reform, for
- example, if they conflict with the Supreme Soviet's legislation.
- </p>
- <p> Ideally, Yeltsin would like to see the Soviet President and
- his Cabinet cede power to the Federation Council, a
- policymaking body that includes the leaders of all 15
- constituent republics, though some of them are boycotting it.
- To force out the powerholders, who uniformly despise him,
- Yeltsin may be thinking of something like Czechoslovakia's
- "velvet revolution," street demonstrations fueled by an
- overwhelming wave of people power. But no matter how great his
- popularity, even Yeltsin will be hard put to mobilize the
- Russian masses in large enough numbers. They are mostly
- anti-Gorbachev and antigovernment, but their political inertia
- has been ingrained over centuries. Already their initial
- excitement and interest in the open politics of Gorbachev's
- demokratizatsiya have given way to apathy, cynicism and
- exhaustion.
- </p>
- <p> Even worse, the fledgling democrats cannot seem to pull
- themselves together. Yeltsin last week urged the splintered,
- squabbling opposition factions to form a single, pro-democracy
- party. But Yuri Afanasyev, a leader of the liberal
- Inter-Regional Group of Deputies in the Parliament, opposed the
- idea. Putting everyone into the same party, he argued, was a
- Bolshevik approach. "It is better for us to agree on something
- fundamental," he said, "rather than join something anonymous
- and faceless."
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin has positioned himself in the role Gorbachev
- formerly played so well: supporter of the common folk. When
- thousands of coal miners went on strike in 1989, Gorbachev
- associated himself with their fight against management and
- emerged as a hero to the working class. Miners are striking in
- parts of the Ukraine and Siberia once again, but their leaders
- have turned to Yeltsin. Last week the Russian leader met with
- strike coordinators, who declared their full support for
- Yeltsin's political position and "readiness to support it with
- all possible nonviolent methods." Most miners are asking for
- higher wages, but some say their demand is purely political:
- the resignation of Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> Why is the creator of perestroika and glasnost so hated in
- the country he freed from fear? To some extent, statistics
- explain why. A report by the Soviet State Planning Committee
- predicts that Soviet GNP will fall 11.6% in 1991; it declined
- 3% last year. Industrial production this year will drop more
- than 15%, and agricultural output 5%. One state economic
- planner said he feared a return to "the horrible times we lived
- through in the past," referring to "the famine of the 1930s,
- the repressions of 1937." A poll published last week by the
- Soviet National Public Opinion Studies Center asked, "What does
- the Soviet Union offer its citizens?" The response given by 65%
- of those interviewed: "Shortages, waiting in lines and a
- miserable existence."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev's tentative domestic reforms have so far succeeded
- only in disabling the old centrally planned economy without
- providing an effective replacement. He took over the Communist
- Party in 1985 thinking he could energize and modernize the
- existing machinery. He was neither a democrat nor a
- free-marketeer and described himself as a dedicated Communist.
- But in time he discovered that the party bureaucrats were
- blocking him because they oppose change in general and treasure
- their power and privileges. Gorbachev then decided to try to
- blast the party out of its executive positions and transfer
- power to a reconstructed government. Still, he said, he remained
- a Leninist.
- </p>
- <p> His efforts failed, and the glasnost that accompanied them
- set loose ethnic strife, rampant nationalism and separatist
- movements in the republics. In March 1990 Lithuania declared
- its independence, and Moscow was faced with the possible
- breakup of the Soviet Union. This threat changed the entire
- debate about the country's economic and political future, for
- Gorbachev was not prepared to endorse the dissolution of the
- Union.
- </p>
- <p> Restoration of order became the slogan of the day, and
- Gorbachev seems to believe in it as much as the party, the army
- and the KGB. "In some ways," says a U.S. State Department
- official, "it was the resurgence of nationalism that justified
- the resurgence of the right." Gorbachev has replaced his
- original team of reformers with hacks from the party Central
- Committee. He has shown the fist to separatists in the Baltics,
- and he has put joint army and police patrols onto the streets
- of the cities.
- </p>
- <p> Such visible hardening has increased speculation that a
- military coup might be in the offing. Some Western experts and
- even some Soviets argue that a de facto coup has taken place.
- The reactionaries were shocked when radicals took control of
- city councils in Moscow, Leningrad and Sverdlovsk and several
- republics began talking of secession. Those developments
- apparently mobilized the army and its allies in the giant
- military-industrial production network. After 46 representatives
- of eight defense-related ministries signed an open letter last
- September warning that new laws threatened to destroy the
- defense industry, Gorbachev changed course. He dropped the
- radical 500-day economic reform plan he had praised earlier and
- adopted still another muddled plan for piecemeal changes.
- </p>
- <p> A series of unexplained military maneuvers around Moscow
- last fall fueled rumors that the army had used scare tactics
- to pressure Gorbachev. A much repeated story speaks of a tense
- meeting of the Communist Party Politburo at which the President
- was forced to back away from economic reform and crack down on
- separatism.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev's two liberal economic advisers, Stanislav
- Shatalin and Nikolai Petrakov, who were among the chief
- architects of the 500-Day Plan, say their handiwork "horrified"
- and "galvanized" the conservatives and led to a crisis session
- of the party leadership. According to Shatalin, one of the
- strongest opponents of his plan was Valentin Pavlov, who was
- then Finance Minister. It was Pavlov, recently appointed Prime
- Minister, who last month cast a chill on investors from abroad
- by accusing Westerners of plotting to flood the Soviet market
- with billions of rubles, wreck the economy and ultimately
- overthrow Gorbachev. Two weeks ago, the daily Moskovsky
- Komsomolets reported that Moscow party chief Yuri Prokofiev had
- said, "Gorbachev was forced to refuse the [radical reform]
- program at nighttime sessions of the Politburo."
- </p>
- <p> Those stories might be true, but they are not necessary to
- explain Gorbachev's retreat. He is a conservative, and all his
- instincts must have warned him that if he swapped his
- stop-and-go style of reform for a plunge into a free market,
- there was no way to know what might happen. He could not bring
- himself to risk everything, including the destruction of
- communism.
- </p>
- <p> Oleg Bogomolov, director of Moscow's Institute of
- International Economic and Political Research, speculates that
- Gorbachev then took a new look at the central bureaucracy.
- Bogomolov says, "Gorbachev probably recognized that the old
- system still showed signs of life, that it could be preserved
- and reformed." In other words, it was a strategic retreat into
- a renewed alliance with the party, the military and the
- economic masters of the country.
- </p>
- <p> However it happened, says Peter Frank, a Soviet expert at
- Britain's University of Essex, "the reactionaries' interests
- and Gorbachev's are now in harmony." As evidence, Frank points
- to the composition of the new policymaking Security Council
- announced recently in Moscow. In addition to the President, its
- members are Vice President Gennadi Yanayev and Prime Minister
- Pavlov, both hidebound bureaucrats; Foreign Minister Alexander
- Bessmertnykh, a professional diplomat with little political
- clout; Interior Minister Boris Pugo, Defense Minister Dmitri
- Yazov and KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov, all hard-liners; and two
- token moderates, former Interior Minister Vadim Bakatin and
- Yevgeni Primakov, a Gorbachev adviser.
- </p>
- <p> In the new Cabinet of Ministers, the Prime Minister has four
- First Deputies; all of them have links with the
- military-industrial complex. When Gorbachev's economic advisers
- Shatalin and Petrakov resigned after the military crackdown in
- the Baltics in January, he replaced them with two apparatchiks
- from the staff of the party Central Committee. Says Bogomolov:
- "Gorbachev is less the President nowadays than the Communist
- Party General Secretary, carrying out the decisions of the
- Politburo and the party plenum."
- </p>
- <p> Many Western experts have been speculating that when the
- time came for a crackdown, Gorbachev would lead it. While he
- is a relatively benevolent dictator--more Peter the Great
- than Stalin--and his powers to rule by decree have been
- handed to him legally, he remains a dictator. His idea of
- democracy is a reasonable amount of public debate and a limited
- devolution of authority to the republics, but a clear
- concentration of power at the center.
- </p>
- <p> A man whose every move is tactical, Gorbachev is intent on
- one overriding goal, stability, for the country and himself.
- In a speech last month in Minsk, he told workers, "I am
- decisively in favor of political and economic stabilization,
- for strengthening order, so that authority is authority and not
- jelly." He now favors a "stable political coalition of centrist
- forces" that will include more than the Communist Party but
- exclude radical democratic groups. He apparently envisions
- parliament and national politics as Communist-dominated but
- co-opting enough dissent to keep the comrades on their toes.
- "It is necessary to turn the Communist Party into the
- integrating factor of all centrist forces," he says.
- </p>
- <p> "He is in a holding operation at home and abroad," says
- Dimitri Simes, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for
- International Peace in Washington. "His stated purpose is
- stability," agrees a State Department expert, "but the
- situation is likely to get worse. We have to be prepared for
- an expanding cycle of repression."
- </p>
- <p> That prediction is almost a certainty because neither of
- Gorbachev's crushing problems is about to go away. The
- referendum will do nothing to force the separatist republics
- to relent, and without basic reform the economy can only
- deteriorate. After withdrawing 50- and 100-ruble notes from
- circulation and setting the KGB to examining the books of
- offices with foreign connections, the government's next "reform"
- will be to raise prices on consumer goods an average 60%.
- </p>
- <p> When Gorbachev summons the republics back to work on the
- revised Union treaty, officially titled the Treaty of the Union
- of Sovereign Republics, he will find them as reluctant as ever.
- One provision of the treaty, however, is that those republics
- that refuse to sign will be governed by "existing legislation
- of the U.S.S.R., mutual obligations and agreements." So the
- breakaway states that thought they could opt out of the Union
- by not joining the new one will still be held hostage.
- Undeterred, Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis says he
- will negotiate with Moscow only if the end result is Lithuanian
- independence. Rukh, the anti-Union movement in the western
- Ukraine, advises its supporters, "It is necessary to be
- independent to get rich."
- </p>
- <p> Few in the Soviet Union are going to rise to riches under
- the Gorbachev plan, which has already shown it has no answers
- to the country's problems. The requirements for a better
- national life are a free economy and a democratic system.
- Without both, the future can only offer a cycle of unrest and
- repression. The more violence the state uses to preserve
- itself, the worse the economy will become and the less help the
- rest of the world will be willing to offer. As Gorbachev moves
- to the conservative camp, his course does not lead toward
- stability, but crisis.
- </p>
- <p>WHAT THEY VOTED ON:
- </p>
- <p> "Do you consider it necessary to preserve the Union of
- Soviet Socialist Republics as a renewed federation of equal
- sovereign republics in which the human rights and freedoms of
- people of any nationality will be fully guaranteed?"
- </p>
- <p> Republics voting on referendum as written:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>-- Belorussia (pop. 10,200,000)</l>
- <l>-- Turkmenistan (3,534,000)</l>
- <l>-- Tadzhikistan (5,112,000)</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Republics with a second ballot question setting more
- specific terms for remaining in the union:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>-- Azerbaijan (7,029,000)</l>
- <l>-- Uzbekistan (19,906,000)</l>
- <l>-- Kirghizia (4,291,000)</l>
- <l>-- Ukraine (51,704,000)</l>
- </qt>
- <p> (In addition to the second question, voters in western
- regions were asked: "Do you want the Ukraine to become an
- independent state, independently solve all domestic and
- international issues, and ensure equal rights to citizens
- regardless of their nationality or religious belief?")
- </p>
- <p>-- Kazakhstan (16,538,000)
- </p>
- <p> (Altered referendum question: "Do you consider it necessary
- to preserve the U.S.S.R. as a Union of equal sovereign
- states?")
- </p>
- <p>-- Russian S.R.S.R. (147,386,000)
- </p>
- <p> (Voters were also asked: "Do you consider it necessary to
- establish the post of president of the R.S.F.S.R. to be
- elected by popluar vote?")
- </p>
- <p> Six republic governments that refused to participate:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>-- Estonia (1,573,000)</l>
- <l>-- Latvia (2,681,000)</l>
- <l>-- Lithuania (3,690,000)</l>
- <l>-- Moldavia (4,341,000)</l>
- <l>-- Georgia (5,449,000)</l>
- <l>-- Armenia (3,283,000)</l>
- </qt>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-