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- <text id=94TT0979>
- <title>
- Jul. 25, 1994: FSU:Struggling with Imperial Debris
- </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 42
- Struggling with Imperial Debris
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Eduard Shevardnadze, Islam Karimov
- </p>
- <p> Amid aftershocks still emanating from the collapse of the former
- Soviet Union, TIME editors recently toured the region, where
- they spoke with the leaders of two newly independent states.
- </p>
- <p> EDUARD SHEVARDNADZE, Chairman of the Georgian Supreme Soviet
- </p>
- <p> On the danger of Russian imperialism: It's impossible to restore
- the empire. This isn't the 19th century. All states of the world
- are now interdependent. In spite of very painful local processes,
- there is one big universal logic ((of independence)). The disintegration
- of the Soviet Union was a manifestation of this logic. It could
- have occurred in a different form or at a different pace, but
- it had to happen. This process is irreversible. Georgia may
- lose out on some things. There will be difficulties. But ultimately,
- a new relationship will be built among these countries, probably
- the kind of relationship that exists in Europe, where there
- is positive cooperation in economics, science and so on. Russia
- must understand that its empire will never be restored and must
- encourage and support the building of the new independent states.
- A belt of democratic states around Russia will help Russia build
- its own democracy. Russia has to build this kind of society.
- Then it could have a good relationship with Ukraine, Kazakhstan,
- Uzbekistan and others. Russia is in the best position of all
- of these countries to do this. One thing must not happen, though.
- No new confrontation should emerge between Russia and the West.
- </p>
- <p> On prospects for Russian democracy: I still believe it is going
- the way it should. Real democracy cannot be born without serious
- struggle. How can a viable democracy be created in a militarist
- country overnight? Yeltsin is trying to form democratic institutions
- by using a certain kind of authoritarianism. This is necessary
- in a transitional period.
- </p>
- <p> On Zhirinovsky: If his name were not Zhirinovsky, it could be
- Ivanov, Petrov or Sokolov. For a huge country like Russia, it's
- almost impossible not to have someone like Zhirinovsky emerge
- in a transitional period. I know Russia very well. Unless something
- totally unforeseen occurs, Zhirinovsky won't be able to control
- Russian society completely. How can Zhirinovsky dominate the
- thinking of Russia's intellectuals?
- </p>
- <p> On Georgia's predicament: Here, the people who came to power
- were democratically inclined, but they came off the street.
- They destroyed everything because it had been built by Communists--factories, railroads and hydroelectric plants. But the situation
- is better today than it was yesterday or a year or two ago.
- People are still hungry. The Abkhazian issue has not been resolved.
- But it's much quieter now. There is a greater understanding
- that we have to build this country with our hands--certainly
- with the help of our friends, but mostly by ourselves. No miracles
- will occur. It's only by work and struggle that we can build
- real democracy and real independence.
- </p>
- <p> On his personal philosophy: What motivates me is the survival
- of my people. I believe in my people. Nobody will be surprised
- if I say I love them. They are a small but splendid nation and
- have a huge potential. One should not spare his own life to
- save his people. Now, we are standing at the threshold. We either
- survive or we perish. I want to be with my people at this most
- difficult time.
- </p>
- <p> Uzbekistan's President ISLAM KARIMOV
- </p>
- <p> On the problems of independence: We have so many, you couldn't
- list them all. The basic problem is how to change the mind-set
- of people. This is really the key to establishing a truly independent
- state. When the U.S.S.R. ceased to exist, all the newly emerged
- countries, including Russia, experienced a certain euphoria.
- But it soon became clear that political independence was not
- the most important goal for people. Economic independence has
- proved to be much more important.
- </p>
- <p> On human rights: We favor an American presence in Uzbekistan
- and Central Asia as a guarantor of our democratic development,
- but you've got to help us, rather than assume moralistic poses.
- We will build democratic institutions--but keeping in mind
- our own special circumstances. Do you think it was possible
- to create other political parties in a state long-dominated
- by the Communist Party? We aligned ourselves by the stars atop
- the Kremlin, and you suddenly expect us to have a democratic
- state in only two years? Why should this issue become a stumbling
- block in relations with Uzbekistan?
- </p>
- <p> On nostalgia for the old empire: Once the people in Russia,
- Ukraine and Belarus experienced crisis and hardships, they started
- to have doubts about whether they needed independence at all.
- The more hardships crop up on the way of reform, the more ground
- Bolshevik forces gain. A major danger for us in Uzbekistan is
- the possible re-emergence of the Communist Party. We are going
- through the same crisis that everybody else is, but our people
- have not attained the level of political sophistication of Europe
- or even of Russia. Should a Bolshevik show up at a street corner
- again and promise to give the people back everything they used
- to have, they might be tempted to follow him. But we will see
- that it never happens here. An important factor is that we have
- rejected shock therapy. We have protected the young, the old
- and the poor. Ask anyone in the streets. They will tell you
- that no one has been left out.
- </p>
- <p> On Zhirinovsky: I'm less concerned about Zhirinovsky than I
- am about the kind of environment that produces him. Zhirinovsky
- only says in public what's on the mind of many politicians and
- government officials in Russia. What really concerns me is that
- Zhirinovsky meets no ((official)) opposition, nobody opposes
- him in the legislative branch. I have asked Yeltsin to take
- a stand against these xenophobic and anti-Semitic statements.
- I must know where the state stands on this issue. Zhirinovsky's
- maniacal concepts reflect, in fact, the traditional goal of
- Russian imperialists to reach the Indian Ocean. As far as they
- are concerned, we are just some gray mass that happens to be
- in their way and has no value of its own.
- </p>
- <p> On the danger of Islamic fundamentalism: Aggressive developments
- in Algeria, Libya and Iran are all links of the same chain of
- extremism. The ideology of this extremism is expansionism. When
- ((fundamentalism)) is viewed geographically, it presents a very
- serious threat. Back in 1990-1991, the threat here was serious
- and too real to be ignored. Things went so far that we had to
- apply authoritarian measures. You may blame me for them, but
- no other options were available to me. The war in Tajikistan
- worked as a real eye-opener for many of our people. More than
- 50,000 people have died in the four years of strife in Tajikistan.
- Only then did people start to understand what kind of medieval
- horror was re-emerging on our borders. It had a sobering effect.
- Now the time has passed when this kind of mood could gain the
- upper hand here.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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