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- <text id=90TT1706>
- <title>
- July 02, 1990: Soviet Union:Key Players In A New Game
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 02, 1990 Nelson Mandela:A Hero In America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 31
- SOVIET UNION
- Key Players in a New Game
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As perestroika comes to politics, and democratic institutions
- begin to replace rule by secrecy and dictatorship, the old
- party is breaking up
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney/Moscow and Brigid
- O'Hara-Forster/New York
- </p>
- <p> Mikhail Gorbachev's revolution is about to sweep away what
- is left of monolithic communism. When 4,750 delegates convene
- next week for the Communist Party's 28th Congress, they are
- expected to approve a measure that will bloat the once
- omnipotent twelve-member Politburo into an unwieldy national
- committee by adding to the top party officials representatives
- of all 15 republics, workers and intellectuals. The delegates
- are also likely to approve a proposal to reduce the head of the
- party to a mere chairman of the committee. Gorbachev may not
- even want to keep the job. He told the Russian Federation's
- party congress last week, "There could be another General
- Secretary or chairman of the party."
- </p>
- <p> In power terms, Gorbachev has already moved on. With the
- formal abolition of the party's leading role last March, the
- Communists lost their monopoly on political action. The
- Politburo, which once decided all vital issues, now meets only
- about once a month instead of weekly and deals exclusively with
- party business, not matters of state. Gorbachev is the
- Executive President of the U.S.S.R., and decisions lie with
- him, his government and the parliament. To replace the counsel
- formerly provided by the Politburo, he has created a
- Presidential Council with 16 members.
- </p>
- <p> This political perestroika is far more than organizational
- tinkering. It is opening up a range of ideas and influences no
- one could have imagined under the old ways. Even a year ago,
- an analysis of the policy debate in Moscow would have focused
- almost exclusively on party leaders, the well-known Gorbachev
- allies like Politburo member Eduard Shevardnadze and equally
- prominent opponents like Politburo member Yegor Ligachev and
- former Moscow party chief Boris Yeltsin. Today new approaches
- and fledgling political parties are emerging across the
- spectrum, from Gorbachev's left to his far right, reshaping
- Soviet politics. Some of the most influential advocates of the
- new approaches:
- </p>
- <p>LOYALISTS
- </p>
- <p>-- ALEXANDER YAKOVLEV
- </p>
- <p> [A former think-tank director, diplomat and history
- professor who is often called Gorbachev's alter ego]
- </p>
- <p> As a member of both the Politburo and the new Presidential
- Council, Yakovlev, 66, provides a bridge as power is shifted
- from one to the other. In 1983 he was named head of the
- influential Institute of World Economics and International
- Relations (IMEMO). From 1970-73 he was acting chief of the
- party propaganda department, where he won favor with liberal
- intellectuals. In 1985 Gorbachev put him back in charge of that
- department. He has been the President's closest adviser for
- years, responsible for much of the philosophic theory
- underpinning glasnost and perestroika. Gorbachev, claims
- Yakovlev, is not power hungry and sometimes finds his job a
- burden. He says that Gorbachev resisted his repeated urgings
- to take the position of Executive President until he concluded
- that it was what the country needed. Because--or in spite--of his year as an exchange student at Columbia University in
- 1959, Yakovlev dislikes and distrusts the U.S. and considers
- it dominated by right-wing thinking. Sovietologist Dimitri
- Simes says he is "unusually intellectually curious, a person
- with imagination, with vision."
- </p>
- <p>-- YEVGENI PRIMAKOV
- </p>
- <p> [One of the architects of the new Soviet foreign policy, who
- favors nonintervention and no export of revolution]
- </p>
- <p> An Arabist and former journalist, Primakov, 60, is a member
- of the new Presidential Council and one of Gorbachev's top
- foreign policy advisers. Like Yakovlev, he once headed IMEMO.
- As a member of the Supreme Soviet, he has impressed no one with
- his debating, but his record as a privy councilor is brilliant.
- He has outlined the rationale for a nonthreatening foreign
- policy, de-emphasis of military power, negotiated settlement
- of regional conflicts, and cuts in the defense budget. In
- recent months Gorbachev has enlisted his aid in dealing with
- separatists in the Caucasus.
- </p>
- <p>-- NIKOLAI PETRAKOV
- </p>
- <p> [Gorbachev's personal adviser on economics, who says central
- planning does not work and never has]
- </p>
- <p> An academic economist and member of parliament, Petrakov,
- 53, was named special assistant to Gorbachev last January. He
- has been critical of the centrally planned economy for 20
- years, and argues for immediate transition to a market-oriented
- system integrated into the world economy. He thinks the
- economic reforms presented in May by Prime Minister Nikolai
- Ryzhkov are too timid, but he says a Polish-style shock
- treatment would not succeed. The Poles voted for it, but the
- Soviet people, he believes, would not. He suggests creating a
- stock market and turning state property into publicly held
- stock companies. Citizens should be allowed to buy their own
- apartments, he says, "and to invest in production by buying
- shares and setting up small-scale businesses."
- </p>
- <p>-- STANISLAV SHATALIN
- </p>
- <p> [The maverick economist in the inner circle, who claims he
- is not a communist but a social democrat]
- </p>
- <p> Warning against performing "neurosurgery with an ax," the
- economist says that building a market economy will require "big
- credits from the West." But, he adds, a relatively rapid
- transition to a "regulated market" is still possible. A member
- of the Presidential Council and an academician, Shatalin, 55,
- has argued since the 1960s against Moscow's tight
- centralization of economic planning. He supports the
- introduction of private property, private enterprise and direct
- foreign investment, as long as strong social protection
- measures are deployed to soften the impact. He has derided the
- Ryzhkov economic-reform plan and says he and others are
- preparing "much more radical measures."
- </p>
- <p>-- GEORGI SHAKHNAZAROV
- </p>
- <p> [A lawyer, political scientist and part-time science-fiction
- writer who pushes basic reforms in domestic and foreign
- affairs]
- </p>
- <p> Shakhnazarov, 65, is a member of Gorbachev's personal staff
- and with Primakov has authored much of the "new thinking" on
- foreign policy, mutual security and arms control. He has been
- an advocate of wide-ranging reforms and decentralization for
- most of his life. While an official at the Central Committee
- in 1972, he praised Western social democracy and proposed
- splitting party and government functions in the Soviet Union.
- Earlier this year he announced that power would be taken from
- the Politburo and placed "in the hands of a legitimate state
- authority...as in any democratic country." He predicted the
- evolution of a multiparty system.
- </p>
- <p>-- VADIM BAKATIN
- </p>
- <p> [The diligent and able Interior Minister, who could turn
- into a law-and-order candidate in future elections]
- </p>
- <p> A member of the Presidential Council as well as a minister,
- Bakatin, 53, is the country's chief policeman. Though he was
- trained as a civil engineer, he is in charge of combatting
- crime, corruption and ethnic violence, all of which he handles
- well enough to earn praise from conservatives and liberals
- alike. He is businesslike but personable, articulate,
- impressive on television. Conservative Supreme Soviet Deputies
- offered to nominate him for President in the election last
- March. He declined, but next time he might not, especially if
- Gorbachev is not a candidate then.
- </p>
- <p>RIVALS
- </p>
- <p>-- GAVRIL POPOV
- </p>
- <p> [Yet another radical economist who hopes to turn Moscow into
- a laboratory for market-based reforms]
- </p>
- <p> A short, impish professor of Greek extraction, Popov, 53,
- was elected mayor of Moscow last April. He and his reformist
- colleagues plan to open a computerized apartment-rental service
- and launch an industrial-commodities exchange to barter needed
- items among enterprises. They have also called for soup
- kitchens to help cushion the transition to a market economy.
- Popov and his city council have not managed basic reforms, but
- they represent a challenge to Gorbachev simply by being in a
- position to experiment. Popov is one of the founders of the
- progressive Interregional Group in parliament, and he has
- criticized Ryzhkov's reform plan as a "fiction" that would
- leave "the same whip and fist" in charge. He advocates
- eliminating most of the huge Moscow-based industrial
- ministries, along with large slices of the bureaucracy.
- </p>
- <p>-- ANATOLI SOBCHAK
- </p>
- <p> [One of parliament's leading Deputies and a scholar of law
- who questions the Communist Party's legal standing]
- </p>
- <p> Sobchak, 53, was elected Mayor of Leningrad in May after
- reformers there mounted a draft. An expert on economic
- legislation, he is an influential member of the Supreme Soviet,
- where he has clashed bitterly with Prime Minister Ryzhkov.
- Yegor Ligachev is also one of his targets. Sobchak said of him
- last week that "yesterday his word was law; today it is
- nonsense." Sobchak belongs to the Interregional Group and is
- considered a radical, but a measured one. He argues that KGB
- leaders should be barred from political leadership and, perhaps
- tongue in cheek, that the party might have to be refused
- registration because it advocates a dictatorship (of the
- proletariat), which is illegal. But he has spoken up for
- Gorbachev, saying "Let's not hinder the efforts of this
- President who pursues a policy of democratic renewal."
- </p>
- <p>LOOSE CANNONS
- </p>
- <p>-- VALENTIN RASPUTIN
- </p>
- <p> [A literary figure of real standing who brings a whiff of
- hard-core Russian nationalism into the Presidential Council]
- </p>
- <p> The name of the Siberian Rasputin, 53, has been famous for
- more than a decade because of his sensitive depiction of the
- ravages of industrialization at the expense of the countryside,
- its villages and churches. Writers and poets have a special
- standing in the Soviet Union, and Raisa Gorbachev is reportedly
- one of his fans. He rails against the decline of "human
- values," and as an outspoken supporter of the nascent Green
- environmental movement, he is active in the campaign to save the
- purity of Lake Baikal. In light of his anti-Western,
- nationalist and anti-Semitic views, his appointment to the
- Presidential Council surprised many. Though Rasputin is not a
- member of the Communist Party, Gorbachev may view him as a
- communications link to an important segment of the population.
- </p>
- <p>-- VENIAMIN YARIN
- </p>
- <p> [A blue-collar right-winger who says the working class
- opposes radical reform but demands a higher standard of living]
- </p>
- <p> Another surprise addition to the Presidential Council,
- Yarin, 50, is co-chairman of the United Workers' Front, formed
- last year in 29 cities to oppose free-market reforms and defend
- fellow Russians against attacks by ethnic movements in
- far-flung Soviet republics. A construction worker with a high
- school education, he is a member of the Supreme Soviet and is
- on record as blaming the bureaucracy for the misery of workers'
- lives, food shortages, infant mortality and pollution.
- Conservatives have been attracted by his strong personality and
- persuasive public speaking. The Front claims that Gorbachev is
- dividing the society into rich and poor and that the workers
- are getting poorer. But the Front has not been successful in
- elections so far, and to redress the balance, it demands a
- fixed percentage of parliamentary seats for workers.
- </p>
- <p>-- BORIS GROMOV
- </p>
- <p> [A popular military hero who might be the man on horseback
- if reforms fail and the system collapses]
- </p>
- <p> The commander of the Kiev military district, Lieut. General
- Gromov, 46, is one of the most famous and admired officers in
- the country. A major general at 39, a Hero of the Soviet Union,
- he served three tours in Afghanistan and was overall Soviet
- commander there from 1984 until the pullout last year.
- Typically, he was the last soldier to cross the bridge back
- into the U.S.S.R., in February 1989. There is no tradition of
- Bonapartism in Russian history, and Gromov denies rumors that
- he is contemplating a coup, but he says the army "cannot be
- kept outside politics." His political views are unknown, but he
- is a conservative on military matters who nevertheless
- acknowledges that change is inevitable. If the government
- flounders and chaos threatens, Sovietologist Simes says Gromov
- "would be the man to watch."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-