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- <text id=89TT1491>
- <title>
- June 05, 1989: Fighting The Founders
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 05, 1989 People Power:Beijing-Moscow
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 16
- COVER STORIES: Fighting The Founders
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The two giants of Communism cope with an explosion of people
- power
- </p>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> Of all the conceits of Communism, none is more pervasive,
- and none more dubious, than its claim to serve the interests
- and fulfill the aspirations of the people. Marxist states are
- given to calling themselves "people's republics." The largest
- represents 1.1 billion men, women and children, nearly a fifth
- of humanity. The Chinese are supposed to read the People's
- Daily, entrust their security to the People's Liberation Army
- and obey laws passed by the National People's Congress, which
- convenes in the Great Hall of the People, situated, as it
- happens, on Tiananmen Square.
- </p>
- <p> But something quite extraordinary is happening. The people
- who live under Communism are rising up and asserting themselves
- against the party. In China they have done so in defiance of
- their rulers. In the Soviet Union they are doing so with the
- help of their leader. While his Chinese counterparts were
- intriguing against one another last week, Mikhail Gorbachev
- officiated at the opening of a new government body called the
- Congress of People's Deputies. For once the name was not
- entirely a mockery of the political reality.
- </p>
- <p> For these two events to be occurring at the same time was
- remarkable but not coincidental. The interaction between what
- has been happening in Beijing and Moscow may lead future
- historians to look back on May 1989 as the most momentous month
- in the second half of the 20th century. Forces of epochal
- transformation are bubbling up from below in China, while they
- are being marshaled from above in the Soviet Union. But in both
- cases these changes are driven by a recognition that Communism
- has failed its subjects, the people, and that the only solution
- is far-reaching reform of the entire system. In China it is the
- demonstrators in Tiananmen Square who personify that
- realization. In the Soviet Union it is Gorbachev himself.
- </p>
- <p> No less an authority than Karl Marx asserted that the
- political order of a country derives from the economic relations
- among its citizens (although Adam Smith had figured out the same
- thing in the previous century). The leaders of the Russian and
- Chinese revolutions imposed on the people a totalitarian form
- of the social compact: You give up your freedom, and we'll make
- sure you live decently. Bread was one of the most common words
- on the banners that the workers carried through the streets of
- Petrograd in 1917, and the promise of food was an important
- theme in the propaganda of the Communists as they swept to
- victory in China in 1949. The police state would also be a
- welfare state. For 71 years in the Soviet Union and for 40 years
- in China, the state has failed to deliver on its end of the
- bargain. It has provided plenty of police but not much welfare.
- </p>
- <p> At first, the leader of the Great Counterrevolution was
- Deng Xiaoping. He dismantled the vastly inefficient system of
- communes. Farms were turned over to families. The results were
- almost immediate -- and impressive. Grain output increased 44%
- over eight years. Soviet economists looked to China with envy
- and emulation. Kulaks -- rich peasants -- came back into
- fashion.
- </p>
- <p> Deng clinched his reputation as a reformer with a witty
- aphorism dismissing the value of ideology: "It doesn't matter
- whether a cat is black or white as long as it catches mice."
- Catching mice meant putting food on the table -- meeting the
- material needs of the people. The color of the cat meant the
- degree to which the economy relies on private incentive and
- market forces rather than subsidies and quotas -- Adam Smith's
- recommended mechanisms rather than Karl Marx's.
- </p>
- <p> Revolutionary true believers used to call Deng a
- "capitalist roader." They were right in their accusation, but
- he was right in his perception that the Communist road was a
- dead end.
- </p>
- <p> But while Deng subordinated ideology to the goal of
- "modernization," he did not downgrade the role or diffuse the
- power of the Communist Party. Quite the contrary; he has
- remained an absolutist in defense of the institution that Marx
- and Engels aptly called the "dictatorship of the proletariat."
- Farmers could work their own plots and profit from the sale of
- their produce at market, but under Deng, the People's Daily
- remained very much an organ of instruction rather than
- information, to say nothing of debate. The doors of the Great
- Hall of the People were shut, figuratively and often literally
- as well, to the people themselves. Deng thought that China could
- have a closed Communist Party that would preside over an open
- economy.
- </p>
- <p> He was wrong. In all Communist societies, the principal
- purpose of the party -- and the only thing it does well -- has
- always been the preservation and enforcement of its own power.
- But that naked truth has traditionally been disguised with
- Marxist economics and ideology. To the extent that he
- de-Communized the economy and discredited ideology, Deng
- diminished the party's claim to legitimacy. He left the party
- all the more vulnerable to the flood of discontent that has so
- stunned the world in recent days. An improvement in living
- standards is not enough to meet the needs of the people. As a
- student banner in Tiananmen Square put it, WE LOVE RICE, BUT WE
- LOVE DEMOCRACY MORE.
- </p>
- <p> Deng also made himself vulnerable to the supreme, and
- probably final, irony of his roller-coaster career. He
- carefully, patiently, skillfully set the scene for Gorbachev to
- visit China two weeks ago. The Soviet leader was coming on
- Deng's terms to end the 30-year schism between the Communist
- giants. Yet not only was this diplomatic triumph overshadowed
- by the more spectacular events in Tiananmen Square, but the
- demonstrators there carried banners in Russian demanding
- glasnost and saying IN THE SOVIET UNION THEY HAVE GORBACHEV. IN
- CHINA, WE HAVE WHOM?
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev has not always been a champion of the kind of
- people power on display in Tiananmen Square. Early in his tenure
- as General Secretary, his understanding of democracy was closer
- to Deng's concept of limited managerial and entrepreneurial
- liberalization. However, the Soviet leader grew to realize that
- as long as the Communist Party maintains its grip on all aspects
- of society, significant reform is nearly impossible. The party
- is too conservative, too resistant to change. At the time of the
- 1917 Revolution, the party was the agent of cataclysmic change
- -- but on behalf of a conspiratorial elite, not, as it claimed,
- on behalf of the people. Over the decades, the self-professed
- vanguard of the proletariat became adept at fighting rearguard
- actions against innovation.
- </p>
- <p> In a word used by a number of his own advisers, Gorbachev
- was "radicalized" by the experience of trying to improve the
- system. The result, two months ago, was a genuine choice for
- voters in the election to the new Congress of People's Deputies.
- Numerous standard-bearers of the old order were defeated,
- including some who ran unopposed (they gathered too few votes
- to qualify for election). A prominent Soviet historian, Leonid
- Batkin, asserts that "the Communist Party lost as an
- institution. Communists won not because they were Communists but
- despite being Communists." The insurgents suffered a setback in
- last week's election of a new parliament, or Supreme Soviet, but
- Gorbachev still intends that body, over time, to serve as a
- counterweight to the party. He is pulling off an amazing,
- perhaps unprecedented, feat in the history of statesmanship: he
- is simultaneously the leader of the entrenched power structure
- and the leader of the opposition.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev also has the satisfaction of knowing that he has
- re-established the pre-eminence of the top man in the Kremlin
- as the leader of world Communism -- but with a twist. He is now
- the leader of the Communist reformation. It is as though Martin
- Luther had returned in triumph to Rome to be installed as Pope.
- </p>
- <p> Deng Xiaoping's predecessor Mao Zedong split with
- Gorbachev's predecessor Nikita Khrushchev partly on the grounds
- that Khrushchev was a "revisionist." Gorbachev has gone a long
- way toward healing the rift, but not by returning to orthodoxy.
- He has carried revisionism to a level unimagined by either Mao
- or Khrushchev, and as a result his picture and slogans are on
- the posters of Chinese demonstrators.
- </p>
- <p> The tumult in China can be used by both sides in the debate
- taking place in the Soviet Union. Reformers can draw the lesson
- that perestroika must be accompanied by glasnost and
- demokratizatsiya or sooner or later the people will take to the
- streets. The conservatives can argue that glasnost and
- demokratizatsiya unleash anarchy and are a threat to the powers
- that be, notably including the General Secretary of the party.
- </p>
- <p> Despite its current troubles, China has an immense
- advantage over the Soviet Union, and it gives Chinese reformers
- an immense advantage over their Soviet counterparts. There
- really is a Chinese people; 94% belong to one ethnic group, Han
- Chinese. By contrast, Russians make up only 51% of the
- population of the U.S.S.R.; they are one of more than 100 ethnic
- groups. Those non-Russian nationalities -- in the Caucasus, in
- Central Asia, along the Baltic, in the Ukraine -- are already
- straining at the ties that bind them to Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> There has been a patriotic fervor to the demonstrations in
- Beijing. The protesters sang the national anthem and saluted
- the country's flag. It is all but impossible to imagine
- something similar happening if Latvians took over the main
- square in Riga or Ukrainians mobbed downtown Kiev. They would
- be singing songs and waving flags that would symbolize their
- dreams of independence and their resentment of Russian
- domination. Gorbachev's picture might be on their posters too.
- However, that would be because the demonstrators would see him
- as not just a reformer but a liberator. That is one role that
- Mikhail Gorbachev does not want, since it could make him the
- protagonist in a tragedy. If glasnost and democratizatsiya seem
- to be tearing the Soviet Union apart, Gorbachev may be in the
- position of having either to order a crackdown himself or to
- yield to a successor who would do so. He, like Deng, may yet
- discover that starting a counterrevolution is far easier than
- determining where it leads.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-