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- <text id=90TT1496>
- <link 91TT1970>
- <link 91TT0449>
- <link 90TT1912>
- <title>
- June 11, 1990: Soviet Union:But Back Home. . .
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 11, 1990 Scott Turow:Making Crime Pay
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- SOVIET UNION
- But Back Home...</hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Challenging Gorbachev, Yeltsin wins power in Russia and sets a
- course for sovereignty that would reduce the Soviet Union to
- an alliance
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by David Aikman/Washington and
- Paul Hofheinz/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly, there is an alternative to Mikhail Gorbachev. For
- five years, the Soviet President has been putting on a
- political magic show. His reforms dazzled the world but
- produced nothing to improve the miserable daily lot of his
- people. He granted greater freedoms, but those liberties added
- fuel to the militant nationalism now threatening the fabric of
- the state. Yet in the midst of his failure to invigorate the
- economic system, Gorbachev's own grip on power grew stronger
- after every test. There was, everyone said, no alternative to
- Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> Now there is. He is Boris Yeltsin, 59, the Soviet Union's
- most important democratically elected politician.
- </p>
- <p> As Gorbachev grinned confidently through the summit last
- week, he suffered his first major political loss at home. In
- spite of Gorbachev's stop-Yeltsin efforts, the roughhewn
- Siberian populist was elected chairman of the Russian
- Federation's parliament. The two leaders are public antagonists
- and private enemies. Yeltsin calls Gorbachev indecisive and
- accuses him of "continuous compromise and half measures."
- Gorbachev calls Yeltsin "politically illiterate." As de facto
- president of Russia, by far the largest and most important of
- the 15 Soviet republics, Yeltsin can help either sabotage or
- salvage Gorbachev's economic and political programs. In a year
- or two he may challenge him for national leadership.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin's proposals--and they are still no more than that--include the creation of a confederation of "sovereign"
- republics that would grant only limited powers to the central
- government. When Gorbachev charges that this amounts to "a call
- for the breakup of the Soviet Union," he does not overstate the
- case by much. Under the Yeltsin concept, every republic's laws
- would supersede Soviet statutes, and the republics would
- regulate relations among themselves and with the Kremlin by
- formal treaties. Private property would be restored, and
- republics would have total control of their own economies,
- finances and resources.
- </p>
- <p> Russia, which produces 90% of the country's oil and 70% of
- its gas, would sell to domestic customers at world prices,
- which are about five times higher than those now charged to
- other republics. Yeltsin says signing agreements with the
- Baltic states would be a top priority, hinting that he might
- help Lithuania bypass the economic blockade that Gorbachev has
- enforced to halt its drive for independence. These ideas are
- radical by any Soviet definition and put Yeltsin directly on
- a collision course with Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> While there are questions in Washington and elsewhere about
- Yeltsin's intellectual depth and stability, he is undoubtedly
- the most popular politician in the Soviet Union. Gorbachev's
- prestige has been dropping steadily, and his approval rating
- in the polls has now dipped below 40%. Although Yeltsin remains
- a communist, he calls himself a social democrat and has emerged
- as one of the recognized leaders of the country's nascent
- democratic forces. He won that position by taking on the ruling
- establishment before it was the fashionable thing to do,
- denouncing corruption and privilege while demanding the return
- of political power to the people. Along the way, Yeltsin
- turned himself into a genuine blue-collar hero.
- </p>
- <p> Although Gorbachev is not a member of the Russian republic's
- parliament, he threw himself into a few weeks of campaigning
- before the vote took place. He strode the corridors of the
- Grand Kremlin Palace, buttonholing Deputies and urging them to
- vote for "unity." Translation: elect anybody but Yeltsin. He
- listened to campaign speeches and even gave one, a bitter blast
- in which he accused Yeltsin of "trying to excommunicate Russia
- from socialism." Yeltsin's intention to grant local district
- councils the authority to override a republic's laws could
- carry the theory of sovereignty to the point of absurdity and
- </p>
- <p> If it was clear who Gorbachev was against, it was less
- certain who he was for. Russian prime minister Alexander
- Vlasov, the party candidate, was withdrawn before the first
- round of balloting, after his inept delivery of an annual
- report. His replacement, Ivan Polozkov, was so hard-line that
- many Gorbachev supporters could not vote for him, and he lost
- twice. Vlasov was trotted out again for the third round. On the
- night before he left for the summit, Gorbachev called a meeting
- of some 400 Deputies at the party Central Committee
- headquarters and suggested that they vote for Vlasov.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the Deputies obeyed, but enough bucked Gorbachev to
- elect Yeltsin by a four-vote margin in the 1,060-member
- parliament. "Electing Yeltsin was the only way to preserve the
- trust of the people," said Moscow Deputy Viktor Shinkaretsky.
- "This buys us some time." Others blamed Gorbachev for bungling
- the campaign by attacking Yeltsin so much. "We're responsible
- to the voters, not to Gorbachev," said Vladimir Ispravnikov,
- a Deputy from Omsk. "When the party apparatus leans on Yeltsin,
- it only helps him."
- </p>
- <p> It is one of the richer ironies of Soviet political life
- that Gorbachev initially served as Yeltsin's patron and mentor.
- During the 1970s, Yeltsin was party secretary of Sverdlovsk
- (pop. 1.4 million), 850 miles east of Moscow, and thus came to
- know Gorbachev, his counterpart in the city of Stavropol. When
- Gorbachev became party secretary in charge of agriculture in
- 1978, the friendship blossomed; whenever the two met, Yeltsin
- later related, "we would embrace warmly." In 1985 Gorbachev
- tapped him to be the clean broom needed to sweep out the
- corruption in the Moscow city party organization. Yeltsin
- handled the task with such verve, poking into the corners of
- public services and firing hacks by the hundreds, that he was
- appointed a nonvoting member of the party Politburo in 1986.
- </p>
- <p> The enmity started when Yeltsin began to display a
- calculated indifference to protocol at Politburo meetings. As
- a candidate member, he was expected to show proper respect for
- his superiors, especially General Secretary Gorbachev. Instead
- he chose to treat the ritualized meetings as a setting for
- serious debate. In the summer of 1987 he boldly offered a long
- list of objections to a report Gorbachev planned to present on
- the 70th anniversary of the October Revolution. The party chief
- stormed out and left the other members sitting silently for
- half an hour before he returned. At that moment, Yeltsin said,
- "Gorbachev simply hated me."
- </p>
- <p> In October Yeltsin told a Central Committee plenum that he
- was resigning from the Politburo and went on to denounce the
- slow pace of economic reform under perestroika. Particularly
- galling to Gorbachev must have been Yeltsin's observation that
- there was still not a "good atmosphere" at the top of the
- party. Yeltsin disapproved, he said, of the "increase in what
- I can only call adulation of the General Secretary by certain
- full members of the Politburo."
- </p>
- <p> With Gorbachev leading the assault, Yeltsin was savaged at
- that meeting and at a later session of the Moscow party
- committee. In his book Against the Grain, Yeltsin reports that
- Gorbachev phoned later to offer him the deputy chairmanship of
- the State Construction Committee, which he accepted. Gorbachev
- then told him he would permanently be barred from politics.
- Writes Yeltsin: "It did not occur to him that he had created
- and put in motion a set of democratic processes under which his
- word as General Secretary ceased to be the word of a dictator."
- </p>
- <p> His reputation as a daring maverick secured, Yeltsin was
- invited to speak at hundreds of the political, cultural and
- labor clubs that had sprung up. His continued popularity turned
- into ballots at the March 1989 elections for the new Soviet
- parliament. In spite of the party's attempt to keep him out,
- he won his seat with 89% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> After winning the leadership of the Russian Federation last
- week, Yeltsin said he intended to set aside personal
- animosities and build relations with Gorbachev, "not on
- confrontation but on a businesslike basis." Already in Canada,
- Gorbachev responded that he thought he could work with Yeltsin
- if he was willing to cooperate. But if "he is indeed playing
- a political game, then we may be in for a difficult time." The
- next day at a press conference, Yeltsin elaborated on the
- details of his program of sovereignty and economic reform, thus
- ensuring further clashes with Gorbachev. He increased the
- tension another notch by meeting with Lithuanian President
- Vytautas Landsbergis and promising to "cooperate fully with the
- Baltic republics."
- </p>
- <p> As chairman of the Russian parliament, Yeltsin is not an
- executive president, and with only a four-seat majority, he
- will have to bargain and compromise in order to pass
- legislation. On the eve of his election, in a shrewd move to
- broaden his appeal, he promised to form a power-sharing
- coalition with the more conservative factions. He said he had
- learned the "value and importance of political compromise." As
- a result, he will have to be diplomatic and conciliatory, which
- is not his natural style. His radical reform package,
- therefore, is not likely to become reality anytime soon.
- </p>
- <p> But Yeltsin has thought beyond that. As a central element
- of his campaign, he vowed to push for a law establishing a true
- presidency in Russia and to run for the office in a popular
- election with multiple candidates. That was surely one factor
- in his victory: Deputies were impressed by his willingness to
- submit to an early ballot-box referendum on his leadership. If
- he runs, his fellow Russian politicians say, there is no doubt
- that he will be elected.
- </p>
- <p> They also note that Yeltsin's election pledge contrasts with
- Gorbachev's approach to the Soviet presidency, where he opted
- out of popular election in favor of approval for a five-year
- term by the Soviet parliament. He has never been elected to
- anything by popular ballot. If he is still President come 1995
- and he wants another term, Gorbachev will have to face a
- general election. He may also have to face Yeltsin. If that
- happens, the man whom Gorbachev helped create and then tried to
- destroy could become his successor.
- </p>
- <p>YELTSIN/GORBACHEV
- </p>
- <p> ECONOMIC REFORM:
- </p>
- <p> YELTSIN
- </p>
- <p> Favors moving quickly away from a tightly centralized
- economy to a more market-oriented one, but still wants to keep
- many industries in state hands. He opposes the interim price
- increases announced last month and says Prime Minister Nikolai
- Ryzhkov should resign.
- </p>
- <p> GORBACHEV
- </p>
- <p> Advocates a slower, step-by-step move toward a market
- economy. Limited ownership of property is now permitted. The
- government has called for the eventual transfer of 60% of state
- enterprises to the private sector, but intends to retain
- wide-scale regulatory powers.
- </p>
- <p> SOVEREIGNTY FOR RUSSIA:
- </p>
- <p> YELTSIN
- </p>
- <p> Backs a form of autonomy for the Russian republic that would
- give it absolute control of its own resources and finance,
- including issuing its own currency. He insists that Russian
- laws should take precedence over those of the Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p> GORBACHEV
- </p>
- <p> Has proposed a new charter redefining the Kremlin's
- relationship with the 15 republics, but one in which the center
- would retain the balance of power.
- </p>
- <p> THE BALTICS:
- </p>
- <p> YELTSIN
- </p>
- <p> Supports Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia in their attempts to
- secede from the union, but has called on them to suspend their
- independence drives so that negotiations with Moscow can take
- place.
- </p>
- <p> GORBACHEV
- </p>
- <p> Grudgingly concedes that the three republics have the right
- to secede but says they must do so only under a new Soviet law
- that requires a referendum, a lengthy negotiation period and
- final approval by the Soviet parliament.
- </p>
- <p> COMMUNISM'S FUTURE:
- </p>
- <p> YELTSIN
- </p>
- <p> Refers to himself as a social democrat. "There are many
- models of socialism: Swedish, Soviet and others. The quality
- of socialism does not depend on the number of times you mention
- it" in speeches.
- </p>
- <p> GORBACHEV
- </p>
- <p> "I am a communist, a convinced communist," he acknowledges.
- He has criticized Yeltsin for failing to talk about socialism
- in his speeches.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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