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- <text id=94TT0978>
- <title>
- Jul. 25, 1994: Former Soviet Union:Back to the USSR?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 25, 1994 The Strange New World of the Internet
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FORMER SOVIET UNION, Page 40
- Back to the USSR?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Not really, but election results in Belarus and Ukraine reflect
- a desire to move closer to Moscow
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly, John Kohan and Yuri Zarakhovich/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> As a presidential candidate, Alexander Lukashenko was not what
- one would call timid. A dark horse with little experience in
- domestic or international politics, the former collective-farm
- boss launched his bid for the presidency of Belarus by pledging
- that his first official act, if elected, would be to throw the
- Prime Minister in jail. Then he promised to ban private property,
- purge the government and squelch free enterprise. Finally, in
- a televised debate, he named Felix Dzerzhinsky, the ghoulish
- founder of the Soviet secret police, one of his most admired
- heroes.
- </p>
- <p> Lukashenko's temerity paid off handsomely. Last week he swept
- up a smashing 80% of the vote to become the first elected President
- of this Kansas-size country sandwiched between Poland and Russia.
- Key to his victory was a program of reform that would have been
- unthinkable three years ago, when Belarus was sprinting off
- in the direction of independence. Instead of turning his back
- on Moscow, as most in the former Soviet Union did in 1991, Lukashenko
- proposed that salvation lay in closer links with Russia.
- </p>
- <p> His win, along with that of Leonid Kuchma in neighboring Ukraine,
- was a measure of the deep disillusionment bedeviling many of
- the 15 republics that used to make up the U.S.S.R. Since the
- giddy days of 1991, when the republics scattered like schoolchildren
- at recess, independent life in what Russians call the "near
- abroad" has proved tougher than anticipated. Euphoria has slowly
- been replaced by disgust at the hardships of post-Soviet life:
- ethnic strife, political instability and government corruption.
- In the face of these problems, incompetent nationalist leaders,
- while touting the trappings of independence, have failed to
- deliver on essentials, such as economic prosperity and domestic
- tranquillity. The West, to which many of these new nations optimistically
- looked for salvation, has been both parsimonious and sanctimonious--long-winded on advice about the ABC's of capitalism, short
- on change when it came to providing financial support. The disenchantment
- has altered the national demeanor of these prodigal states.
- After taking a new look at their Soviet past, some have tempered
- their defiance and long for the economic stability--though
- not the Russification and political repression--of U.S.S.R.
- days. Perhaps the most dramatic evidence of new thinking about
- the old union came last week, when voters in both Belarus and
- Ukraine tossed out those who had led them after independence
- and replaced them with men who promise deliverance from economic
- chaos through closer ties with Russia.
- </p>
- <p> Such offers were bound to strike a chord in Belarus, a country
- suffering from 500% inflation, whose national currency, adorned
- with the image of a hare, is derisively referred to as the "bunny
- rabbit." Says Moscow economist Stanislav Zhukov: "The Belarussian
- economy is so unreformed, it has nowhere to go. It continues
- to produce goods that are so bad that even Russians don't want
- them."
- </p>
- <p> Lukashenko, with a Reaganesque promise of "simple answers to
- complicated questions," asked Belarussians whether they could
- possibly imagine being worse off than they are today. When crowds
- answered him with the inevitable no, the flamboyant populist
- declared, "Without Russia's help, we don't have a way out of
- the current crisis. Ruptured economic relations between the
- former Soviet republics must be restored."
- </p>
- <p> That message worked equally well in Ukraine, where Soviet mismanagement
- and a failure to begin privatization have left this country
- of 52 million saddled with unemployment and underemployment
- unofficially estimated at 40%. As bad off as Russians are, their
- average income is 10 times as high as that of Ukrainians. Ukraine's
- industrial production has dropped as much as 80%, and energy
- has become so expensive that the heat is turned off--even
- in elementary schools--during the winter.
- </p>
- <p> Amid this fiscal rubble, Ukrainians are eager to turn to Russia
- for help. And to make that rapprochement, they are looking to
- Kuchma, a former director of the world's largest missile factory,
- whose production lines once cranked out giant nuclear-delivery
- systems "like sausages," as Nikita Khrushchev boasted in the
- 1950s. The erstwhile industrialist won 52% of the vote, inflicting
- a shocking defeat on Leonid Kravchuk, who led Ukraine in breaking
- ties with Moscow, then spent the next three years quarreling
- with Russia, thwarting reform and cultivating ties with the
- West.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the objections of nationalist critics who fear that
- Ukraine will lose control of its destiny if it reconciles with
- its longtime master, Kuchma emphatically told voters that the
- country has no other viable market and no other realistic source
- of oil and other resources. Without an "economic union" with
- Moscow, he declared, "there will be no Ukraine."
- </p>
- <p> Such statements are disturbingly compatible with the views of
- imperialists in Russia, who are bent on restoring Moscow's control
- over the former Soviet empire. "The borders of the U.S.S.R.
- will be restored peacefully," Russia's firebrand politician
- Vladimir Zhirinovsky recently told TIME. "Ukraine and Belarus
- will be the first to rejoin Russia. Tajikistan, Armenia and
- Abkhazia are begging to be taken back as Russian provinces.
- As for the Baltics, they are welcome to their independence--if they have sufficient resources to sustain it after we cut
- short all energy supplies. Sure, they'll be independent, but
- they'll fall ages behind. In fact, independence has not given
- anything to anyone."
- </p>
- <p> That is a conclusion to which several of the former satellite
- republics of the old U.S.S.R. seem resigned. Nationalist movements
- that led sovereignty campaigns against Moscow have suffered
- election defeats in republics as diverse as Moldova and Lithuania.
- Georgia, once a leader in the struggle for independence, has
- swallowed hard and invited Russian peacekeeping forces into
- its breakaway region of Abkhazia. And Moscow's troops have intervened
- in Tajikistan to stop a bloody civil war.
- </p>
- <p> Russian neoimperialists like Zhirinovsky will be making a major
- mistake, however, if they try to project the election returns
- from Ukraine and Belarus onto all the former Soviet republics.
- The picture is far too complicated for that. Despite their economic
- problems, many republics continue--with good reason--to
- fear ethnic and military interference from their former Russian
- masters. Some, like Uzbekistan, have established authoritarian
- governments and are no longer willing to cede control back to
- Moscow. Other states, such as Estonia, Latvia, Kazakhstan and
- Moldova, view the large minority of ethnic Russians living in
- their midst as a fifth-column challenge to their sovereignty.
- </p>
- <p> Paradoxically, the ambitions of the Russian imperialists have
- collided with a harsh economic reality at home: Russia simply
- cannot afford to revive the old Soviet Union, where Moscow called
- the shots and the republics were given economic support in exchange
- for obedience. "Any Russian who talks about restoring the Soviet
- Union has no respect for his own country," says former Vice
- President Alexander Rutskoi. "We've had enough of a milk-cow-style
- union, where the head is in Russia grazing, and the milking
- goes on in other republics."
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of suckling at Mother Russia's breast may have
- been a successful campaign promise for Lukashenko and Kuchma,
- but now they must deliver. Only hours after winning their respective
- elections, both leaders inexplicably disappeared from public
- view: Lukashenko reportedly holed up in his office on the corner
- of Lenin and Marx Streets in Minsk, while Kuchma told aides
- he was going to lay flowers on his mother's grave. Perhaps victory
- brought them face to face with the enormousness of their tasks,
- and both felt the need to take a deep breath, in solitude.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-