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- <text id=93TT1361>
- <title>
- Apr. 05, 1993: A Friend In Need
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 05, 1993 The Generation That Forgot God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 22
- A Friend In Need
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In peril at home, Yeltsin heads for a summit with Clinton, hoping
- it will save his reforms
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by James Carney and Yuri
- Zarakhovich/Moscow and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The cold war offered few grander pageants than summit
- meetings between the leader of the free world and the ruler of
- the Soviet empire. Whether the venue was Vienna, Washington,
- Moscow or a brooding house by the sea in Reykjavik, the sessions
- carried an air of high history, a sense that the fate of the
- earth depended on how these two men got along. As the leaders
- greeted each other, TV cameras carried the handshake around the
- world and commentators tried to read far-ranging implications
- in this smile or that frown.
- </p>
- <p> All that was supposed to change when the Soviet Union
- imploded. Meetings between the presidents of the U.S. and Russia
- would become routine affairs, the participants no longer meeting
- as adversaries and their decisions no longer worth banner
- headlines. When Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin meet in Vancouver
- this weekend, the tensions between the two countries indeed
- will be gone. Instead of bickering over missile throw weights
- and Third World hot spots, Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin will
- spend most of their seven hours together poring over loan
- schedules, monetary policy and investment strategies as they map
- out a program of aid from the West for the East.
- </p>
- <p> The Vancouver summit, however, will be as momentous as any
- get-together conducted during the chilliest days of the cold
- war. If the U.S. does not succeed in helping Moscow stay on the
- path of economic and democratic reforms and Yeltsin is ousted,
- the West will almost certainly face a leader in the Kremlin far
- less friendly to its interests. Yeltsin's ongoing tussle with a
- naysaying parliament keeps reminding nervous Western leaders
- just how big a stake they have in the success of his leadership
- and reforms. Moscow without Yeltsin could decide to withdraw its
- support of sanctions in Yugoslavia and instead back the Serbs
- in their bloody campaign for territory. A new regime could
- decide to re annex the Baltic states, repair relations with Iraq
- or refuse to honor approval of the START 2 disarmament treaty.
- The specter of renewed confrontation with a conservative,
- nationalist Russia that might attempt to revive the ways of the
- Soviet empire--forcing the U.S. to give up the defense savings
- it had meant to use to finance domestic economic recovery--helped make the case with the American people for why an old
- enemy needs help now.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow's feuding politicians could hardly have set the
- summit stage more dramatically if they had planned it that way.
- On Saturday an attempt to put the question of impeaching
- Yeltsin on the agenda failed by a vote of 475 to 337. However,
- when Yeltsin returned to the Kremlin and took the podium, his
- performance was so poor that it emboldened conservatives to try
- for impeachment again on Sunday. After nightlong negotiations
- between Yeltsin and his arch rival, parliamentary chairman
- Ruslan Khasbulatov, the two sides agreed on a compromise in
- which Yeltsin offered to yield on his quest for an April 25
- referendum in favor of Nov. 21 elections for President and
- parliament. Presented with a backroom deal that also included
- scrapping the existing Congress for a smaller, bicameral
- parliament, the Deputies erupted in fury. The plan was rejected,
- and resolutions to consider the impeachment of Yeltsin and the
- removal of Khasbulatov as chairman of the parliament both
- passed. In a Red Square speech to 70,000 supporters, Yel tsin
- vowed not to step down, whatever the outcome. Then, in a
- historic secret ballot, the Deputies swung back in support of
- both men; the resolutions for their removal were defeated.
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton came to Washington on a promise to do more to
- promote democracy in Russia; a summit with Yeltsin was one way
- to do it. The U.S. President hardly expected to find the issue
- dominating his agenda so abruptly, but faced with a possible
- collapse in Moscow, he plunged in. He gave his first formal
- press conference last week, knowing Russia would be the main
- topic. Spokesmen for the Administration hewed to a consistent
- theme, articulated first two weeks ago and repeated by Clinton
- in an opening statement, that placed Washington firmly behind
- the Yeltsin program. "The U.S.," he said, "supports the historic
- movement toward democratic political reform in Russia. President
- Yeltsin is the leader of that process."
- </p>
- <p> Administration officials explained that they were trying
- to register support for reform and the popularly elected
- President without giving their imprimatur to the positions he
- took in his constitutional dispute with parliament. Many
- Russians, including Khasbulatov, expressed resentment. "Why
- should they pin the label of antireformers on us?" he demanded.
- Pravda commentator Viktor Linnik wrote that because the U.S.
- wanted to keep Russia weak, "no substantial aid to Russia has
- been delivered over the past 18 months."
- </p>
- <p> Providing more aid is the second, harder part of
- Washington's plan to bolster Yeltsin. How much and what kind of
- assistance will be the centerpiece of the summit talks. Topic
- A will be direct financial aid from the U.S. and the ways
- Washington can increase the flow of private trade and
- investment. The Administration has concluded, says a White House
- official, that "the best way for us to keep reform going is to
- make sure we're engaged economically." Since two-way trade last
- year totaled a modest $3.8 billion and Americans invested only
- $400 million in Russia, there is room for growth. In Vancouver,
- Clinton will announce an expansion of government services to
- make such trans actions easier for American traders and
- investors.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton is convinced that to help Yel tsin strengthen his
- hold on power, the U.S. must deliver visible, practical
- assistance to Russia quickly. He will offer an aid package
- weighted toward outright grants rather than more loans, which
- Russia is already finding hard to repay. The plan will put
- together $417 million now available and another $286 million
- Clinton is requesting from Congress for humanitarian and
- technical aid.
- </p>
- <p> The $703 million total is a relatively small amount,
- planners admit, but much of it can be spent right away and will
- go to projects the Russians have urgently asked for. "We've done
- a lot of work with the Russians," says the White House
- official, "talked to them about what's most important." That
- could include money to build housing for former army officers,
- modernize Russia's oil industry, expand private efforts like the
- Salvation Army's Moscow soup kitchens and expedite the delivery
- of critical medical supplies. Administration aides know that
- even this size program will not be popular with American voters,
- but say the President will go to bat for it publicly and may
- even ask for more. "Clinton's not afraid of this one," says a
- senior official.
- </p>
- <p> The big-ticket items on Yeltsin's list will require
- larger, multilateral, long-term assistance. Decisions on those
- programs will be worked out after Vancouver, at a preparatory
- meeting of the Group of Seven industrial democracies in
- mid-April and at their summit in July.
- </p>
- <p> Washington believes that the $24 billion multilateral aid
- package announced by the West a year ago was not carried through
- because Western governments did not respond with enough energy
- and imagination when Russia's faltering economy made it
- impossible to meet various conditions for receiving the money.
- Still, the Russians cannot honestly claim they have received
- nothing. Between 1990 and 1992, the world pledged $81 billion
- to the former U.S.S.R., and $57 billion has been paid or is on
- its way, though most of that money was in loans.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton is pushing the G-7 hard to do more, starting with
- rescheduling Russia's foreign debt of around $80 billion--even
- though Moscow may never repay some of the loans. The U.S. is
- urging the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to
- find ways to help stabilize the Russian economy and the ruble
- and to ease some of their restrictions. The Administration says
- the World Bank is taking too much time to design its assistance
- programs. "The priority," says a White House official, "should
- be getting resources on the ground and doing something in 1993."
- </p>
- <p> Economics is also at the root of the Russian parliament's
- challenge to Yeltsin. For months, lawmakers have been trying to
- rein in his liberalized prices and his plans to privatize land
- and modernize industry. They say reforms that have produced
- painful side effects like 2,500% annual inflation, a 19% drop
- in gross domestic product last year and the threat of vastly
- increased unemployment are more than the Russian people can
- bear. Since December, the parliament, led by Khasbu latov, has
- been hacking away at Yeltsin's powers, determined to stall or
- divert the President's efforts to turn Russia's subsidized,
- militarized economy into a free market. One form of unemployment
- the Deputies particularly oppose is their own; they have no
- enthusiasm for new elections in which they might lose their
- seats.
- </p>
- <p> The hot word in the political debate remains impichment,
- impeachment, an imported term that Russians were using to mean
- "vote Yeltsin out." That is a mistranslation of the long legal
- process by which the U.S. can dismiss a President, but Russian
- parliamentarians are also vague about the concepts of
- demokratiya, konstitutsiya and zakonnost (legality). Despite
- much ostentatious talk of legality, post-Soviet Russia is still
- a place where the law and its institutions are in flux.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, Khasbulatov insisted as last week began that
- Yeltsin had violated the constitution when he claimed "special
- rule" over the country pending a national referendum on April
- 25. Khasbulatov, a former professor of economics, demanded a
- judgment by the Constitutional Court. Even though the decree
- Yeltsin said he had signed had not been published, the court
- obliged, ruling that the President could not legally declare
- one-man rule or call a referendum, though he could ask the
- nation for a vote of confidence.
- </p>
- <p> The court's Chief Justice Valeri Zorkin did not use the
- word impichment in his advisory opinion, but that did not slow
- down Khasbulatov. "It's absolutely clear," he insisted, "that
- there are grounds for initiating the impeachment process."
- Members of the parliament weren't all as sure. Khasbu latov
- settled the debate by ramming through a summons to the
- parliament's parent body, the 1,033-member Congress of People's
- Deputies, to meet on Friday to consider removing Yeltsin from
- office.
- </p>
- <p> Anxious Deputies milled in the corridors. "My conscience
- tells me to vote for impeachment," said a well-dressed Moscow
- representative, "but I have my managerial position to consider."
- Another claimed, "The majority is on our side." But, the Deputy
- wondered, "how can our thousand-member Congress rule Russia?"
- Surveying the scene, a Russian journalist observed, "It's scary.
- If they vote in favor of impeachment, how are they going to
- enforce it? Secondly, they are not sure of the people's
- support." In Paris, Pierre Hassner, research director of the
- University of Paris Political Science Foundation, put it more
- sharply: "Everyone was scared of doing something irreversible
- and ending up with another Yugoslavia or Lebanon."
- </p>
- <p> The mood of crisis began to cool temporarily when the
- missing Yeltsin decree was finally distributed, four days late.
- Surprisingly, the text, dated March 20, did not contain the
- words declaring "special rule" that the court found
- impermissible, nor did it declare that parliamentary action
- against Yeltsin's decrees would be automatically invalid, as he
- had threatened.
- </p>
- <p> On the eve of Friday's full Congress session, Yeltsin
- urged the Deputies not to press ahead with the vote to remove
- him, warning that it could "plunge the people into the abyss of
- confrontation." Whether Khasbulatov was responding to that or
- had just counted heads and found he could not muster the
- two-thirds vote necessary, he too stepped back. Conceding that
- he may have overreacted to Yeltsin's "special rule" speech, he
- withdrew his demand for impeachment. "Frankly," he said, "I am
- not a supporter of impeachment."
- </p>
- <p> By the time the third session of the Congress in three
- months gathered in the Grand Kremlin Palace on Friday, the
- impeachment drive seemed to be losing its momentum. Although the
- Kremlin rang with bitter invective, the hard-liners did not have
- the votes to depose Yeltsin. Zor kin, the Chief Justice who had
- set the impeachment bandwagon in motion, instead offered a
- 10-point plan for national reconciliation similar to Yeltsin's
- own program, including a referendum on a new constitution and
- a law abolishing the Congress in favor of a bicameral
- parliament.
- </p>
- <p> At the Saturday session, Khasbulatov, true to his earlier
- recantation, tried to head off the vote on the motion to
- consider sacking Yeltsin. "Impeachment, impeachment! What is
- this word impeachment?" he said, mocking the use of the foreign
- term. He was clearly relieved when the motion did not attract
- enough support to be placed on the agenda.
- </p>
- <p> In a weary, rambling speech Saturday afternoon, Yeltsin
- suggested that in a week of compromise talks with Khasbula tov,
- Zorkin and Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, he could produce
- an agreement that might end the power struggle. The President's
- face looked puffy, and he paused often, setting off mutters
- among his foes that he was drunk. Maria Sorokina, a Deputy from
- Lipetsk, her voice almost breaking, went to the podium to say
- she had been a Yeltsin loyalist and had worked for his election
- in 1991. No longer, she said. With heavy sighs, referring to the
- President's speech, she asked, "How long will we put up with
- this disgrace?" Yeltsin's aides later explained that he had not
- slept for three nights and was exhausted. "These are difficult
- days," Yeltsin told reporters, citing the death of his mother
- two weeks ago. "I spent 10 difficult years living with her in
- a small hut, and it is hard for me to bear this loss."
- </p>
- <p> The compromise proposed on Sunday met strong and immediate
- rejection. The nine-point plan had offered a sop to the
- Congress, later described as an attempted "bribe," by letting
- them keep their privileges and salaries until their term ends
- in 1995. The Deputies condemned the plan as a cynical attempt
- to circumvent the Congress. "Only cynical people could have come
- up with this," raged conservative Deputy Gennadi Benov. "We
- could accept this only if we are a Congress of political
- suicides." Opposition Deputy Vladimir Isakov immediately
- proposed an impeachment motion and said to Khasbulatov, "We are
- sick and tired of your unscrupulousness, of your ploys. The
- President and the speaker are the two people here who have led
- us and the country into this dead end." Isakov then moved that
- Khasbulatov be sacked by secret ballot.
- </p>
- <p> Awaiting the ballot, Yeltsin told a mass rally in Red
- Square how good it was to see 70,000 supporters. "We are half
- a million!" someone corrected him from the crowd.
- </p>
- <p> "No, Boris Nikolayevich, you have 150 million supporters--all of Russia!" shouted a second demonstrator. "You have
- come just in time," Yeltsin told the crowd. "Today will decide
- the fate of the President, your fate, the fate of Russia."
- Impeaching Yeltsin would have required a two-thirds majority,
- or 689 votes--the actual vote was 617. Khasbulatov, who could
- have been removed by a simple majority, was saved by a 558-339
- vote in his favor.
- </p>
- <p> Asked who ultimately would win the struggle, Yeltsin
- replied, "There will be no winners." It seemed likely that his
- parliamentary foes would continue to sit belligerently in the
- Russian White House thinking up new ways to thwart the
- President, while Yeltsin remained in the Kremlin, issuing orders
- that officials who really make or break reform often ignore. As
- long as these rivals remain at odds, the government and its
- reforms will be stalemated.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-