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- <text id=91TT1362>
- <title>
- June 24, 1991: Soviet Union:Boris Looks Westward
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 24, 1991 Thelma & Louise
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- SOVIET UNION
- Boris Looks Westward
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Yeltsin arrives in the U.S., his landslide win creates a
- dilemma: How to deal with him and other leaders who want to
- bypass Gorbachev?
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by David Aikman and John Kohan/
- Moscow and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> He did not say "Read my lips." In fact, his wording was
- rather pedestrian. But the substance of Boris Yeltsin's campaign
- promise was quite as bold, and may be every bit as difficult to
- fulfill, as George Bush's 1988 vow not to raise taxes. Under his
- "program of immediate economic stabilization" for the Russian
- Federation, said Yeltsin, "there will be the beginning of an
- improvement in living standards toward the end of 1992." In
- other words, he would not just stop but reverse the calamitous
- economic plunge that is the legacy of more than 70 years of
- communist mismanagement. And he would do it in only a year and
- a half. And while the main levers of economic power--to the
- extent that there are any left in the chaotic
- production-and-distribution system--are not in his hands but
- in those of Mikhail Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> The impetuous optimism, however, was quintessential
- Yeltsin, and it has helped make him the first popularly elected
- head of government in Russia's 1,000-year history. The eventual
- outcome of last week's presidential election was never in doubt,
- but there was some question whether Yeltsin would win the
- 50%-plus majority--against five other candidates--necessary
- to avoid a runoff. Those doubts dissolved almost as soon as
- voters began entering polling places stretching across the
- Russian republic's eleven time zones. Though the official count
- of more than 70 million mostly paper ballots will not be
- announced until late this week, informal tallies indicated he
- had won in a landslide with about 60% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> So now Yeltsin will have to produce results rather than
- just carp about the Kremlin. The future of nascent democracy
- not only in Russia but in many of the other 14 Soviet republics
- may ride on his success. His demonstrated popularity may boost
- his chances of negotiating with the Kremlin and the other
- republics a new union treaty that would give his government
- greater autonomy. That in turn might increase Yeltsin's ability
- to actually create the private-property, free-market economy he
- envisions, and to strip away most of the authority still
- exercised by Communist Party bureaucrats. Even then, however,
- Yeltsin will have to stop relying entirely on his personal
- popularity and begin building a genuine political movement and
- an efficient bureaucracy of his own.
- </p>
- <p> But before even beginning to tackle those problems,
- Yeltsin prepared for a visit to the U.S. that underscored his
- growing clout. He was initially invited by congressional
- leaders, but once the election returns were in, President Bush
- lost no time asking Yeltsin to drop by the White House also as
- long as he was in town. They plan to chat in the Oval Office
- this Thursday. Simultaneously, some Administration officials
- began hinting that Bush's twice-postponed summit with Gorbachev
- may be held off until fall, though others continued to say late
- July. The hang-up is lack of progress on a nuclear
- arms-reduction treaty that Bush has identified as a precondition
- for the summit.
- </p>
- <p> Coincidental or not, the timing symbolized a foreign
- policy conundrum. Eager to prop up Gorbachev, the Bush
- Administration previously had pretty much ignored Yeltsin. Now,
- the U.S. and other Western powers can no longer put off
- cultivating contacts with him and other rising leaders of a
- rapidly decentralizing Soviet Union. Yet they must try to do so
- without alienating Gorbachev, who still determines Soviet
- foreign policy. The question of how far to go is already causing
- some dissent in the West. British diplomats last week were
- privately but sharply critical of the White House invitation to
- Yeltsin; one called it a "needless slap in the face to
- Gorbachev."
- </p>
- <p> The dilemma is likely to worsen, because while it is
- Gorbachev who is pleading for tens or even hundreds of billions
- of dollars in economic aid from the West, it is Yeltsin who is
- pushing the sweeping reforms that in Western eyes are needed to
- make any such aid effective. That divergence will be pointed up
- at the conclusion of the summit conference of the G-7 (the
- Group of Seven major industrial and financial powers) in London
- on July 15-17. The group last week formally invited Gorbachev
- to meet with them immediately afterward. He will then make his
- pitch for massive aid, and the seven undoubtedly will press him
- for assurances of fundamental change. They probably will get
- unsatisfactory answers--except in the unlikely event that they
- can persuade him to adopt Yeltsin's program.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin has promised to resurrect private farming on a
- grand scale, making land available to every peasant who wants
- to till his own fields rather than toil for a collective or
- state farm. Russia already has a private-property law on the
- books, though Gorbachev gags at endorsing one for the whole
- Soviet Union. Yeltsin promises to strengthen it and to bring
- about the "rebirth of entrepreneurship," promoting the formation
- and expansion of privately owned companies in "any business."
- Further, he proposes departizatsiya, or departification, meaning
- that the ubiquitous Communist Party committees should have
- nothing to do with running factories, the army, the KGB or any
- other Russian institution.
- </p>
- <p> This program is so frightening to communist hard-liners as
- to spur speculation--some of it inside Yeltsin's entourage--that they might attempt a military coup to prevent anything like
- it from being carried out, in Russia or the other republics.
- Actually, though, the greater danger might be that Yeltsin will
- simply be unable to deliver, and his failure will sour a
- disillusioned populace not only on him but on democracy itself.
- Yeltsin takes office considerably overpromised. For example, he
- has pledged a hefty increase in pensions without offering any
- idea of how he proposes to raise the money. He runs pretty much
- a one-man show: he has made little attempt to organize his
- legions of admirers into a political party, and his staff of
- advisers and idea people, though excellent, is stretched very
- thin. Ironically, in fact, Yeltsin can carry out his program
- only with the cooperation of at least part of the very Communist
- Party bureaucracy and central Soviet administration he assails
- so vigorously.
- </p>
- <p> Though on paper Yeltsin now has considerably more legal
- powers than he did as chairman of the Russian parliament, it is
- an open question whether he will be able to deploy them. He is
- heavily dependent on the negotiations between Gorbachev's
- central government and nine of the 15 Soviet republics for a new
- treaty replacing the one that formed the Soviet Union in 1922.
- In those talks, says Georgi Shakhnazarov, an adviser to
- Gorbachev, "we are encountering the same problems the Americans
- faced 200 years ago"--and occasionally seeking guidance from
- the same sources. At one point, addressing representatives of
- the republics, Gorbachev read excerpts from an Alexander
- Hamilton essay in The Federalist Papers to back up his advocacy
- of a federal tax system under which the central government would
- collect at least some revenues directly. He was trying to steer
- them away from proposals, primarily from Yeltsin, for a plan in
- which the republics collect all the money and pass on a portion
- to the Kremlin.
- </p>
- <p> The negotiations are making enough progress to give
- Yeltsin and some others hope for a completed draft by next
- month. But that will not solve all problems even if it happens.
- For example, the current draft calls for dual administration of
- defense plants, with organization, planning and design bureaus
- under central control and factory management within each
- republic's jurisdiction. That seems less a clear division of
- authority than a formula for chaotic conflict.
- </p>
- <p> Six of the 15 republics have refused even to participate
- in the negotiations for a new union treaty, and are shaping
- programs that look toward total independence. In the rebellious
- Baltics, Estonia is offering, in effect, to buy its freedom for
- $1 billion in hard currency delivered to Moscow. Latvia plans
- to introduce its own currency, the lat, in the next 12 to 18
- months, and has already lined up a Dutch company to print the
- banknotes. Lithuania has adopted a budget totally separate from
- the union budget. It proposes to keep all taxes and revenues
- collected on its territory and use the funds to administer
- agencies--the Interior Ministry, the public prosecutor's
- office--formerly financed by and run from Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> In the south, Armenia has scheduled a referendum on
- independence for Sept. 21, the first step in the five-year
- process decreed by Moscow for formal secession. Meanwhile,
- though torn by violent ethnic clashes, Armenia is actually
- carrying out one of the reforms proposed by Yeltsin. The
- republic has sold 65% of its agricultural land to private
- farmers. Georgia and Moldavia have been too preoccupied by their
- own ethnic conflicts to do much in the way of economic reform,
- but they have made it clear that they also want out of the Union--and in a lot less than five years.
- </p>
- <p> The Baltics, in addition, are making a strong pitch for
- more foreign investment, and they may soon be joined by most or
- all of the nine republics that want autonomy rather than
- independence. Article VII of the draft union treaty authorizes
- the republics to "establish direct diplomatic, consular, trade
- and other ties with foreign governments." Shakhnazarov insists
- this does not mean they can set up their own embassies and
- conduct their own foreign policy. But, he says, republics can
- and probably will station representatives at various Soviet
- embassies to deal directly with foreign governments about the
- republics' special interests. Those interests are heavily
- economic; the republics can be expected to strike their own
- trade and investment deals with foreign countries and, in
- particular, to angle for a chunk of whatever grants, loans or
- credits the Western powers decide to make available to the
- U.S.S.R.
- </p>
- <p> That would please some Sovietologists who have been
- arguing for years that the West should stop dealing exclusively
- with Gorbachev and the center, which they view as declining
- forces, and cultivate contacts with Yeltsin and other republic
- leaders. Some American experts argue in addition that aid
- funneled to the republics would do more to promote economic
- reform and democracy than would assistance through Moscow's
- bureaucracy. One idea: set up an international superagency to
- hold all money the Western governments put up for Soviet
- economic aid; then have the central government, republics,
- cities and enterprises bid for the funds; a multinational board
- of experts would weigh their claims.
- </p>
- <p> "It's a mistake to go through the central government,
- which has only a 14% acceptance rating in its own country," says
- James Billington, Librarian of Congress and a scholar of Soviet
- affairs. "That tends to reinforce precisely the old, essentially
- declining but still strong [Communist] Party system."
- Alexander Motyl, a Columbia University Sovietologist, concurs:
- "There is too much going on in the Soviet Union to have a Soviet
- policy that is essentially a Gorbachev policy. It misses the
- variety, the contradictions and the complexity of the
- situation."
- </p>
- <p> Such talk sounds foolish to many diplomats. British
- experts insist that the West must continue to deal primarily
- with Gorbachev because he still holds the power in foreign
- affairs: Washington can hardly negotiate a reduction in nuclear
- missiles or Soviet support for the war against Iraq with
- Yeltsin. Western officials whose prime interest is stability are
- afraid that bypassing Gorbachev, especially to deal with the six
- breakaway republics, might encourage a splitting up of the
- Soviet Union or even civil war, with unpredictable consequences.
- Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger goes so far as
- to talk about a "situation akin to 1914," when the breakdown of
- the Austro-Hungarian Empire into savagely feuding fiefdoms
- helped trigger World War I.
- </p>
- <p> What is needed is to strike a balance between dealing more
- with Yeltsin and other republic leaders on economic affairs
- while continuing to negotiate with Gorbachev on foreign policy.
- That is a tricky job, and there is no assurance the West will
- get it right, but Yeltsin has simply put on too much political
- weight to be ignored. In March he could not get Secretary of
- State James Baker, who was visiting Moscow, to come to his
- office for a private meeting; Baker did not want to give
- Gorbachev's rival special treatment. Now the doors of the White
- House are about to swing open for Yeltsin. Next year who knows
- how much power he will exercise and what reception he might
- deserve? But it would be unwise to bet against the man's
- potential--and a horseshoe-pitching session between Boris and
- George at Camp David.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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