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- <text id=90TT0859>
- <link 91TT0274>
- <link 90TT3358>
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- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Soviet Union:Red Army Blues
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 46
- SOVIET UNION
- Red Army Blues
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The secession crisis in Lithuania adds to the military's
- unhappiness over cuts in manpower, money and hardware
- </p>
- <p> In the frigid darkness between midnight and dawn, two troop
- carriers pulled up in front of a psychiatric hospital outside
- Vilnius and a phalanx of Soviet paratroopers in battle dress
- leaped out. The soldiers dashed up the stairs to the third
- floor, smashed doors and windows and dragged out about two
- dozen Lithuanian deserters who had been hiding in the ward.
- Some of the youths resisted, and were clubbed with rifle butts,
- leaving splashes of blood on the steps. The commander in chief
- of Soviet ground forces, General Valentin Varennikov, vowed
- that the army would round up all of the 1,500 Lithuanians who
- have fled its ranks over the past few months.
- </p>
- <p> After 18 days of growing tensions between Moscow and
- Lithuania, the two sides seemed at first to be inching toward
- de-escalation last week. Lithuanian President Vytautas
- Landsbergis conceded that he was willing to hold a popular
- referendum on independence, and Soviet army officials offered
- amnesty to Lithuanian deserters who turned themselves in.
- </p>
- <p> But then Moscow's fist clenched again. Soviet troops, which
- had occupied Communist Party buildings earlier, seized
- government offices in Vilnius and installed a new chief
- prosecutor charged with enforcing Soviet, not Lithuanian, laws.
- Meanwhile, a senior military officer in Moscow said no offer
- of amnesty had been authorized and criminal cases had been
- opened against all deserters. While Mikhail Gorbachev had not
- cracked down on the nationalist movement, Sajudis, or the
- separatist parliament, his power play had rendered Lithuania's
- declaration of independence null and void.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the crisis continued to underscore the
- difficult role that the army must play in Gorbachev's Soviet
- Union. As ethnic conflicts and secessionist movements boil over
- in at least half a dozen republics, the military is
- increasingly being called upon to quell violence and to police
- disputes between citizens and their leaders. Faced with troop
- withdrawals in Eastern Europe, budget cuts at home and
- increasing criticism in the press, the 4 million-man armed
- forces have been plunging rapidly in both public esteem and
- institutional authority. Meeting with TIME's editors in New
- York City last week, Vitali Korotich, editor of the weekly
- magazine Ogonyok and a member of parliament, observed, "After
- the party bureaucrats, the military is the most unhappy part
- of our society."
- </p>
- <p> A hint of the army's coming demotion should have been
- visible in February 1986, when the 27th Communist Party
- Congress adopted the doctrine of "sufficient defense," a clear
- departure from the long-held Soviet view that the best defense
- was an overwhelming offense. The military budget, which had
- regularly been increased as national income grew, was frozen
- in 1987. Gorbachev's intentions became clearer in December
- 1988, when he told the United Nations he would unilaterally cut
- his military by 500,000 men and his arsenal of tanks by 10,000.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev coupled his strategic changes with a purge of his
- top commanders. He replaced the Defense Minister, the Chief of
- Staff and his deputy, the Warsaw Pact commander and his deputy,
- and the commanders of all the Soviet military districts, and
- he retired all the Marshals of the Soviet Union. He announced
- a 14.2% reduction in the defense budget by the end of 1991.
- Production of military hardware will drop by 19.5%. His plan
- is to save some 30 billion rubles ($49 billion) over the coming
- five years. He is also determined to convert defense plants to
- civilian use. Some 400 of them are now being retooled. An
- article in the daily Trud argued last week that the threat of
- fiscal collapse is far more real than any potential attack from
- abroad and "makes a huge conscript armed force not only
- obsolete but an economic burden we can no longer afford."
- </p>
- <p> Despite misgivings among more tradition-bound senior
- officers, the military leadership generally accepted the logic
- of Gorbachev's argument for restructuring. If the economy was
- to be repaired, the defense budget would have to be trimmed.
- In the process, the high command hoped, the armed forces could
- be streamlined and modernized. As it turns out, the process is
- far rougher and more disruptive than anticipated. The top brass
- now claims that Gorbachev's reforms are damaging the military
- and undermining discipline and order in Soviet society as a
- whole.
- </p>
- <p> Defense Minister Dimitri Yazov charged last month that
- "nationalist, extremist" groups in the Baltics, the
- Transcaucasian republics, Moldavia and some parts of the
- Ukraine "are trying to obstruct and wreck the draft." In many
- of those areas, the army is denounced as an "occupation force,"
- induction notices have been burned and war memorials dismantled.
- Last year, Yazov said, 6,500 of the roughly 1 million young
- men drafted failed to appear for induction.
- </p>
- <p> Military leaders were offended when the Supreme Soviet, with
- Gorbachev's blessing, exempted 176,000 university students from
- the draft in July. "Instead of some university-qualified
- recruits," says Dale Herspring, an author and former analyst
- at the State Department, "the military had to settle for still
- more peasants from Azerbaijan." Since more than half of
- draftees are non-Russian, ethnic and social tensions have been
- replicated inside the army. Conscripts from the Baltics have
- reported beatings and sexual abuse. The crime rate in the armed
- forces went up 14.5% last year; 59 officers were murdered, in
- contrast to two in 1988 and one in 1987. Colonel General
- Vladislav Achalov, the commander of the elite airborne troops,
- complained that last year more than 1,500 of his recruits had
- criminal records and 500 were known drug users.
- </p>
- <p> Defense chiefs are also irked by Gorbachev's reliance on
- civilian think tanks for advice on sophisticated strategic and
- operational issues. "There's deep resentment among the military
- leadership over what is considered amateur hour by these
- civilians," says Edward Warner, a senior analyst at the Rand
- Corporation.
- </p>
- <p> The end of the cold war adds new pressures. In spite of
- Gorbachev's insistence that there are no military solutions to
- East-West relations, his high command still tends to believe
- it is a zero-sum contest, a question of who prevails over whom.
- When Moscow loses the West wins, and vice versa. These days the
- Soviet Union is losing Eastern Europe and digging in hard to
- keep from losing one of its own republics. The U.S. is not only
- winning, many senior Soviet commanders feel, but gloating about
- the Soviet decline. "The American invasion of Panama was a gift
- for the generals in Moscow," Ogonyok's Korotich said last week,
- because they can use it as evidence that the Soviet Union must
- not lower its guard.
- </p>
- <p> General Mikhail Moiseyev, the Chief of the General Staff,
- puts the number of troops pulling out of Hungary and
- Czechoslovakia this year at 35,000, plus 30,000 family members.
- About the same number will leave East Germany and Poland in
- 1990. Eventually, all the approximately half a million Soviet
- soldiers stationed in the Warsaw Pact countries may be
- withdrawn. "We will bring the troops home," said Moiseyev, "but
- no one has clearly thought what it will cost. Families will
- find themselves without apartments or work, children without
- schools."
- </p>
- <p> "Soviet officers who have lived relatively well abroad are
- coming back to nothing," confirms a senior Western military
- attache in Moscow. Some soldiers are faring even worse; several
- thousand are reportedly living in tents in the Odessa area. A
- poll of army personnel taken last fall, even before the influx
- from Eastern Europe began, found that 91% considered their
- quality of life "almost unbearable." Such a mood, said
- Izvestia, was "creating a crisis in the army."
- </p>
- <p> In an implicit criticism of Gorbachev, Defense Minister
- Yazov has counter-attacked on the issue of budget cuts. "It is
- economically groundless and politically shortsighted," he said
- recently, "to try to make the reduction of defense expenditures
- the sole method of liquidating the budget deficit and the
- resolution of all of today's social problems." He went further,
- arguing that a modernization that would shift the emphasis from
- mass-conscript armies to smaller forces with high-tech weaponry
- would cost more, not less. The idea of eventually dropping the
- draft and adopting a volunteer professional army is still
- opposed by most of the senior commanders, but if it were ever
- tried, it would require more money.
- </p>
- <p> Western Sovietologists warn against assuming that discontent
- within the military means that a coup is in the offing. There
- is no example of Bonapartism in Russian history, and the Soviet
- army has always been firmly under civilian control. "A lot of
- military people are distressed," says retired U.S. General
- William Odom, former chief of the National Security Agency who
- is now at the Hudson Institute, "but it would be a mistake to
- see the friction as evidence of coup thinking." In any case,
- he says, the brass is snapping back at its civilian critics
- with Gorbachev's permission, in order to release some of the
- tensions.
- </p>
- <p> Stephen Meyer, a Soviet expert at M.I.T., says flatly that
- the Soviet armed forces are "not capable of a coup." What is
- possible, he and other analysts suggest, is that the military
- might one day support a power shift in the Kremlin organized
- by civilians. It might then step in to support either a new,
- tougher defense policy forced from Gorbachev or a promising
- candidate to replace him. But first, says Meyer, the generals
- would have to "find a patron," because no such alternative is
- in sight.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with low morale in the uniformed ranks, Gorbachev
- seems to have developed a keener appreciation of the military's
- worth. Last summer Gorbachev defended his proposed reductions
- by saying that the 101 divisions cut had become "feeding
- troughs" for officers. Then, after Soviet soldiers restored
- order in the Azerbaijan capital of Baku in January, Gorbachev
- warned the press against "antiarmy propaganda" and put through
- an increase in officers' salaries and allowances that will cost
- about $2 billion. Unlike some of his predecessors, Gorbachev
- never served in the military. But if his problems persist,
- Gorbachev may find himself treating his generals like old army
- buddies.
- </p>
- <p>-- Reported by Ann Blackman/Moscow and Bruce van Voorst/
- Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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