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- <text id=91TT1179>
- <title>
- June 03, 1991: Who's That Man With the Tin Cup?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 03, 1991 Date Rape
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- SOVIET UNION
- Who's That Man With the Tin Cup?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>It's Mikhail Gorbachev, accomplished master of the delicate
- balancing act, who is making his biggest play yet for Western
- aid to help bail out his embattled perestroika
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by John Kohan and Yuri Zarakovich/
- Moscow and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Integrating back into the world is a priority issue for
- the U.S.S.R. Today it is also a necessary issue, due to the
- economic straits of this country.
- </p>
- <p>-- Soviet economist Grigori Yavlinsky
- </p>
- <p> Yavlinsky, who advises both Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris
- Yeltsin, sounded what is rapidly becoming the predominant theme
- of Soviet policy. The nation needs enormous sums of Western aid
- to overhaul its collapsing economy. But it has no chance if it
- maintains a society largely walled off from the outside world.
- So Moscow is maneuvering to open the country to foreign
- influence in ways that might make not only Lenin and Stalin but
- also some of the czars spin in their graves.
- </p>
- <p> For openers, Gorbachev is in effect applying for
- membership in that exclusive capitalist club, the G-7 (the Group
- of Seven major industrial and financial powers--the U.S.,
- Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan). After
- dropping some heavy hints, the Soviet President last week came
- right out and asked for an invitation to the G-7 summit meeting
- to be held in London in July. There he could make his pitch in
- person to the leaders of the countries that could supply the
- grants, loans and credits he seeks and try to reassure them that
- the money would be put to good use rather than disappearing into
- the maw of the chaotic Soviet economy.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet President began by indirectly asking the West
- to help him plan an economic makeover. He gave his blessing to a
- mission by Yavlinsky to seek the advice of government and
- private economists from the capitalist world in drafting a
- coordinated program of foreign aid and internal Soviet reforms.
- The idea is to use the aid to finance the creation of a true
- market system in the U.S.S.R., which would inevitably open the
- economy to the influence of foreign governments and such
- aid-granting and -monitoring institutions as the World Bank and
- the International Monetary Fund. Yavlinsky spent last week
- meeting with academics at Harvard. This week he will join
- Yevgeni Primakov, one of Gorbachev's top troubleshooters, in
- Washington for talks with government experts.
- </p>
- <p> Most dramatic of all, the Supreme Soviet, the nation's
- parliament, enacted a law granting all citizens--as of Jan.
- 1, 1993--the right to travel freely overseas and even to leave
- the country for good and settle abroad. The statute is a major
- step in converting the U.S.S.R. from a dictatorship governed by
- its leaders' whims to what reformers call a law-based society.
- But at least the timing of passage was undoubtedly affected by
- the government's hunger for American dollars. Only a week
- earlier, the measure seemed to be sidetracked, probably for many
- months. But it was revived with Gorbachev's strong support after
- telephone conversations between the Soviet leader and George
- Bush. Free emigration is a precondition for a lowering of very
- high U.S. tariffs on Soviet goods and for the granting of
- Export-Import Bank credits to finance the purchase of American
- products.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet Union previously had not had an emigration, or
- even an anti-emigration, law. Policy was set by a series of
- decrees, some secret; in practice the government arbitrarily
- opened the gates or slammed them shut as it pleased. Jewish
- emigration, for example, has ranged from a low of fewer than
- 1,000 in 1986 to a high of 200,000 in 1990. Most of the time the
- policy was extremely restrictive, in line with a tradition of
- suspicion and fear of the outside world that goes back to
- czarist times and was carried to terrifying heights by Joseph
- Stalin. During his reign, not a few Soviet citizens were
- imprisoned or even shot because of unauthorized contacts with
- foreigners.
- </p>
- <p> Traces of that attitude linger. During the parliamentary
- debate, Deputy Leonid Sukhov, a taxi driver from the Ukraine,
- warned that free movement of citizens in and out would open the
- Soviet borders to AIDS. Officers of the KGB border guards
- mounted an exhibit of guns and drugs seized by customs agents
- as a warning of what could be expected if the frontiers are
- opened. Nonetheless, the law stoutly declares that "each citizen
- of the U.S.S.R. has the right to exit and enter the Soviet
- Union" and that this right "cannot be arbitrarily denied." Full
- implementation was put off supposedly to give the government
- time to set up the customs, transportation and passport-issuing
- machinery necessary to deal with the many more people leaving.
- But Soviet citizens joining relatives abroad or accepting job
- offers from foreign employers are allowed to leave at once.
- </p>
- <p> Though Gorbachev has reportedly expressed private worry
- about a brain drain that would leave too few educated citizens
- at home to build perestroika, emigration seems unlikely to take
- any great leap. Fyodor Burlatsky, a prime parliamentary
- advocate of the new law, estimates that 1.5 million people will
- leave for good during the first three years that the law is
- fully effective, not a major annual increase over the 450,000
- expected to emigrate this year alone. Other estimates are that
- 2 million or more may leave quickly after the law takes full
- effect, but once they are gone, the outflow will dwindle. One
- reason is that the U.S. and European nations are unlikely to
- admit many more immigrants from the U.S.S.R. than they do now.
- Also, foreign tourism costs more money than most Soviet citizens
- can spare. But the knowledge that citizens can leave if they
- wish and the insights into other ways of living and thinking
- brought back by people who do travel overseas are likely to have
- major effects on Soviet psychology.
- </p>
- <p> Under U.S. law, Bush may now authorize tariff and credit
- concessions. The White House has been noncommittal, on that
- subject and on the possibility of Gorbachev's attending the G-7
- summit. Among the other G-7 members, Germany is strongly in
- favor of inviting Gorbachev and of doing anything else that
- might prop up the Kremlin leader; it trusts Gorbachev far more
- than any potential successor to carry through the barely begun
- pullout of 380,000 Soviet troops from what used to be East
- Germany. But the summit hosts in Britain are divided. Prime
- Minister John Major has spoken in favor of inviting Gorbachev,
- but Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd is known to be strongly
- opposed.
- </p>
- <p> One reason for hesitancy is that the Western powers are a
- long way from agreeing on an answer to Gorbachev's pleas for
- aid. Though Gorbachev has not mentioned a precise sum (he did
- say last week that if the West could spend $100 billion on the
- Persian Gulf war, substantial funds should be found to save
- perestroika), aid on a scale large enough to be effective would
- be very expensive: $30 billion over five years is an often
- mentioned figure. The Western nations are by no means sure they
- either can or should spare the money. "Why give pennies to a man
- with a hole in his pocket?" asks a top British official. The
- return to favor of Yavlinsky, an author of last year's drastic
- 500-day reform plan, is encouraging, but the memory of how
- abruptly Gorbachev reversed himself and spurned that plan after
- first accepting it is sobering.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S., in addition, would like to see how many
- political concessions it can squeeze out of Moscow--on
- subjects ranging from help in settling the Cambodian civil war
- to final agreement on arms-control treaties--before coming up
- with an aid package. Washington also is talking in effect of
- trying to help Gorbachev sell economic overhaul by expanding
- contacts with Soviet hard-liners and trying to persuade them not
- to see reform as a threat.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev dispatched Soviet Chief of Staff Mikhail
- Moiseyev to Washington last week to try to iron out the last
- issues blocking ratification of the treaty reducing non-nuclear
- forces in Europe that was signed last fall. Some progress was
- made, but at week's end there was still no agreement. The U.S.
- is determined not to let the Soviets cheat by failing to make
- some troop withdrawals that Washington believes the treaty
- demands. But the numbers involved are so small that U.S.
- negotiators cannot believe a desire to keep those forces in
- place is the real Soviet motive for recalcitrance. They think
- the Soviet military is stalling in order to test its influence
- with the Gorbachev government. U.S. officials thought Moiseyev
- was negotiating as much with Gorbachev as with them.
- </p>
- <p> Dangling aid before Moscow as an inducement to reform can
- work: witness the passage of the emigration bill. But it can
- also backfire if the Kremlin gets the idea that each concession
- is answered only by a demand for more concessions. At some
- point the Western powers need to work out a specific position:
- we offer so-and-so-many dollars in return for this or that
- reform. Given Gorbachev's penchant for zigzags between the
- authoritarian hard-liners who seemed to be in ascendancy as
- recently as mid-April and the democratic reformers who again are
- gaining strength now, that agreement ought to come sooner rather
- than later.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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