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- <text id=90TT1358>
- <title>
- May 28, 1990: Soviet Union:Playing For Keeps
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 28, 1990 Emergency!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 30
- SOVIET UNION
- Playing for Keeps
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Ever the master politician, Gorbachev copes with challenges from
- a onetime ally and the Baltic republics on the eve of his U.S.
- visit
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Paul Hofheinz and John
- Kohan/Moscow and J.F.O. McAllister/with Baker
- </p>
- <p> Moving backward down the carpeted corridor, a squad of
- television cameramen scythed through onlookers who were craning
- their necks for a better look. Flanking the cameras and
- electric cables came the men with microphones and blazing
- lights. In the middle of it all strode the politician they were
- focusing on, trailing a small group of aides. Had the scene
- been set in the U.S. Capitol, it would have been
- run-of-the-mill stuff. But this was the Kremlin, and the man
- doing the politicking was President Mikhail Gorbachev. As he
- moved along, he buttonholed Deputies of the new parliament of
- the Russian federation, urging them to preserve national unity
- by electing his candidate to the post of chairman.
- </p>
- <p> Even in the surprising era of demokratizatsiya, the sight
- of the head of government lobbying in the corridors of the
- Grand Kremlin Palace is an extraordinary spectacle. But these
- are extraordinary times for Gorbachev: at stake are not only
- his reforms and his own political health but also the survival
- of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Gorbachev spent considerable time trying to head
- off the election of his most influential critic, former
- Politburo member Boris Yeltsin, as president of the Russian
- federation. He met with Lithuanian Prime Minister Kazimiera
- Prunskiene for nearly two hours in an attempt to persuade her
- that, at a minimum, her republic must suspend its two-month-old
- declaration of independence. It may be a measure of his
- domestic difficulties that Gorbachev's most solid
- accomplishment came in foreign affairs. After four days of talks
- between U.S. Secretary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign
- Minister Eduard Shevardnadze in Moscow, the two sides made
- substantial progress on a new arms-control treaty, making it
- likely that Gorbachev and George Bush can announce a basic
- agreement at next week's summit in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> Under the circumstances, Gorbachev's flashes of frustration
- as he stalked the Kremlin anterooms in the glare of TV lights
- were understandable. "In politics," he grumbled, "the public
- doesn't accept pluralism. Perestroika depends on public
- opinion, and it is conservative." But Gorbachev's candidate for
- the presidency of the Russian federation, Alexander Vlasov, a
- nonvoting member of the Politburo and prime minister of the
- federation, hardly seems the stirring leader needed to carry
- out his boss's vision. When Vlasov delivered an hour-long report
- last week, it was so plodding that not even Gorbachev seemed
- to be listening. He sat in a VIP box and conferred with his
- senior advisers.
- </p>
- <p> What Gorbachev really wants to do is defeat Yeltsin, 59, a
- onetime ally who was fired from the Politburo 2 1/2 years ago,
- after he delivered a stinging denunciation of foot dragging by
- some of his conservative colleagues. But Yeltsin rose from the
- political dead by urging even greater and faster reforms than
- Gorbachev proposed. A Yeltsin victory could mark the beginning
- of the end for Gorbachev's brand of perestroika. Russia
- contains 75% of the Soviet Union's land, half of its people and
- most of its natural resources, which many Russians complain
- are being used to develop the other 14 republics. If Yeltsin
- and his radical supporters take over, they pledge to wrest
- control of those resources from the central government. While
- they do not favor actual secession, they take a literal stand
- on Russia's claim to sovereignty. Said Yeltsin: "Russia is a
- state, not a republic, with all the rights that entails,
- including its own ministries and its own foreign policy."
- </p>
- <p> Head counters in the Russian parliament say the 1,050
- attending Deputies are divided almost evenly into three groups:
- Yeltsin supporters, Vlasov loyalists and the undecided. Even
- the reformers have mixed feelings about the erratic, boastful
- populism of Yeltsin. He is, however, a vivid alternative to
- Vlasov, an organization man who is considered a Gorbachev
- puppet. "Yeltsin is a man of many contradictions," says Nikolai
- Yershov, a Deputy from Borovichovsky, "but a vote for him is
- the only guarantee that there will be no returning to the past.
- He's the only guy who can look Gorbachev in the eye and tell
- him the truth."
- </p>
- <p> The leaders of the Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia and
- Lithuania also pressed ahead with their challenge to Gorbachev,
- possibly hoping to make their case an issue at the summit. The
- presidents of the three republics met on May 12 in Tallinn, the
- Estonian capital, to form a united front by reviving the Baltic
- Council, a policy-coordinating body that dates from before
- World War II. They sent a letter to Gorbachev asking for joint
- negotiations on independence. Gorbachev responded last week
- with two decrees that said the Baltic states were violating the
- Soviet constitution.
- </p>
- <p> The following afternoon some 5,000 demonstrators filled the
- tiny square in front of Tallinn's pink-and-white Toompea
- Palace, the Estonian seat of government. It was a
- Russian-speaking crowd, carrying banners calling on workers to
- DEFEND SOVIET POWER and demanding the resignation of President
- Arnold Ruutel. When the protesters broke through a locked gate
- into the palace courtyard, Prime Minister Edgar Savisaar put
- out a radio call for help, crying, "We are being assaulted. This
- is a coup attempt." Crowds of Estonians rushed to the square
- and pushed the Russians out.
- </p>
- <p> In Riga that same day, Russian military officers and cadets
- in civilian clothes marched in front of the Latvian parliament.
- President Anatolijs Gorbunovs agreed to accept a petition from
- the Russians and to set up a commission to deal with their
- grievances. Most Baltic nationalists assume, however, that the
- demonstrators' real intention is to maintain Moscow's control
- rather than protect the rights of ethnic Russians.
- </p>
- <p> Lithuania quickly shifted toward flexibility. Seizing on an
- idea floated last month by French President Francois Mitterrand
- and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Vilnius offered, in
- return for negotiations, to suspend all legislation it had
- passed since declaring independence. Prime Minister Prunskiene
- flew to Moscow to present the offer to Gorbachev. While she was
- still in the air, Gorbachev called the Lithuanian mission
- asking to see her as soon as she arrived. This was a gesture of
- compromise on his part, since he had insisted no talks were
- possible until the Lithuanians canceled their declaration of
- independence.
- </p>
- <p> After her session with Gorbachev, Prunskiene said she felt
- that "significant steps toward agreement" had been taken. But
- by the next day it was clear the basic issue had still not been
- resolved. TASS observed that Lithuania had failed to repeal the
- act of independence. Soviet officials later added that at least
- a "suspension" of the declaration was required. Baker tried to
- keep the pressure on by urging Prunskiene to consider
- suspending the independence declaration as a way to open a
- dialogue.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev did not find good news last week even in the
- Moscow district where he ran for a seat at this July's
- Communist Party congress. Though he won 61% of the vote, he
- encountered surprisingly vigorous opposition from a
- watch-factory foreman and his pro-democracy supporters. The
- irony cannot have escaped Gorbachev: he is now facing his
- strongest challenges from those who have taken his message of
- reform most to heart.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-