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- <text id=91TT1873>
- <title>
- Aug. 26, 1991: Soviet Union:Agents of Intimidation
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 30
- SOVIET UNION
- Agents of Intimidation
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Black Berets have taken charge of perpetuating Soviet rule,
- but fears grow that Moscow has lost control of them
- </p>
- <p>By James Carney/Vilnius
- </p>
- <p> Protected by a sandbag bunker, Anatoli Seryak peers down
- the barrel of his rifle, scanning passing cars in the
- Lithuanian capital of Vilnius for drive-by snipers. He is one
- of two men on forward sentry duty for OMON, a paramilitary unit
- of the Soviet Interior Ministry. Nearby, an armored personnel
- carrier stands guard in front of the unit's fortified
- headquarters. Two more sentries pace the roof. "If they try
- anything, there won't be a problem," says Seryak, 33, his
- trademark black beret tilted high on his forehead. "We're always
- ready to fight."
- </p>
- <p> The OMON base was the Lithuanian police academy until
- soldiers loyal to Moscow took it by force in January. Now the
- building looks like a command post in a war zone, and those who
- inhabit it view themselves as besieged defenders of the Soviet
- empire. In its unofficial role as armed protector of the
- republic's non-Lithuanian minorities, many of whom fear Baltic
- independence, the OMON unit has become a kind of partisan
- brigade determined to prevent Lithuania's secession at all
- costs. "We are drawn together by our attitude to the future of
- Lithuania and the Soviet Union," says Major Boleslav
- Makutinovich, commander of the unit. "When others talk to us of
- independence, we say people are only independent in the
- graveyard."
- </p>
- <p> To a majority of Lithuanians, though, Seryak and his
- colleagues are not hero-protectors but agents of repression. One
- newspaper has dubbed them "angels of death in black berets."
- Ever since Soviet army paratroopers stormed the television tower
- in Vilnius in January, killing 15 unarmed civilian
- demonstrators, OMON has been waging a campaign of intimidation
- against the democratically elected leadership of the republic.
- The same is true in neighboring Latvia, where Black Berets
- raided the republic's interior ministry in Riga, leaving five
- people dead. In their zeal to enforce the Soviet constitution
- and the presidential decrees of Mikhail Gorbachev, OMON forces
- have subsequently carried out a series of surprise attacks,
- seizing buildings, ransacking customs posts and, on several
- occasions, shooting at people who got in their way.
- </p>
- <p> The first OMON (standing for Special Assignment Militia
- Detachment) unit was created in 1987 to fight the rise in
- organized crime across the country. The following year, it took
- on the task of policing large demonstrations, ostensibly to
- provide riot control. Today there are 35 OMON units in the
- U.S.S.R., representing a total force of about 10,000 men, all
- of them answering to local authorities. The exceptions are the
- units in Lithuania and Latvia, which are supposedly commanded
- directly by Moscow as well as by the Soviet Interior Ministry
- forces stationed in the Baltics.
- </p>
- <p> The Kremlin has frequently denied authorizing violent or
- disruptive OMON operations, fueling speculation that OMON units
- are really taking orders from Communist Party hard-liners and
- secret conservative groups in the Baltics. When Black Berets
- seized the Lithuanian telephone exchange in early July, cutting
- off external communications for more than two hours, Gorbachev's
- spokesman suggested that "someone was trying to spoil" the
- Soviet President's visit to London for the G-7 summit. Accepting
- responsibility, Makutinovich said the operation was aimed at the
- confiscation of illegally held weapons. In a sign of official
- displeasure, the major was promptly summoned to Moscow for a
- conference with his superiors. But he is now back at his post.
- </p>
- <p> Inside OMON headquarters, Makutinovich's men go on
- preparing for a showdown. Some train in hand-to-hand combat and
- martial arts while others nap in cots, their black berets
- hanging from posts at their feet. They call each other by
- nicknames drawn from American action and horror movies: Rambo,
- Ninja, Krueger. Lieut. Vitali Belkin, commander of one of the
- five squads that make up the 150-strong unit, says the struggle
- with the Lithuanian government has already passed the point of
- compromise. "I don't doubt there will be bloodshed," he says.
- "Civil war is inevitable."
- </p>
- <p> After a winter of violent confrontation, the atmosphere
- had begun to calm as spring turned into summer. Then, on July
- 31, eight Lithuanians manning a customs post on the border with
- Belorussia were shot in the head. Seven died; the eighth is
- still fighting for his life in a hospital. The Lithuanian
- government immediately blamed the Black Berets, who have been
- accused of attacking and burning down more than 20 Baltic
- customs posts this year. In a law passed last March, the Soviet
- parliament banned the establishment of independent border posts,
- making them convenient targets in OMON's campaign to enforce
- Soviet law.
- </p>
- <p> The executions near the village of Medininkai did not bear
- the stamp of a Black Beret operation; in previous assaults on
- customs posts, OMON units had been accused of roughing up people
- but never of killing anyone. Makutinovich, as well as Soviet
- Interior Minister Boris Pugo, quickly condemned the massacre and
- denied responsibility. After a preliminary investigation, a
- reform group within the Soviet army suggested that the KGB had
- done the actual killing, albeit with the complicity of OMON
- commanders. The KGB denied involvement.
- </p>
- <p> In the wake of the murders, Lithuanians staged a three-day
- demonstration, pitching tents in a field next to the Vilnius
- OMON base and demanding that the unit either disband or leave
- the republic. Dressed in fatigues and cradling automatic
- weapons, the Black Berets mocked the protesters. One of their
- own signs near the barbed wire separating the demonstration site
- from the OMON base read, THE SOVIET ARMY AND OMON: THE LAST
- DEFENDERS OF NATIONAL MINORITIES IN LITHUANIA.
- </p>
- <p> Though most of the Black Berets in Vilnius are Russian,
- Belorussian or Polish, almost all were born in Lithuania or in
- a neighboring Baltic state. They have homes and families on
- Lithuanian soil, giving them a personal stake in preventing the
- republic's secession from the union. Nor do all Lithuanians
- despise OMON. A handful actually serve as Black Berets
- themselves to block secession. One 25-year-old named Vitas says
- he wants nothing to do with independence. "The Soviet Union is
- the world I was born in and the world I grew up in," he
- explains. "It's the only world I know, and I will defend it to
- the end."
- </p>
- <p> Independence-minded Lithuanians fear that the Kremlin,
- paralyzed by its own political battles, has lost control of the
- Black Berets. Some Soviet officials say that Gorbachev is
- pressuring the Interior Ministry to rein in or disband the
- Baltic OMON units. "There are certain [Communist] Party
- circles controlling OMON in the Baltics and in Moscow," claims
- one official. They have warned the Black Berets to keep a lower
- profile, he says, but still "to gather information and recruit
- agents" in preparation for a future "battle."
- </p>
- <p> The field units show little patience for the conflicting
- signals from the center. Says Lieut. Belkin: "In Moscow they sit
- in armchairs all day. They don't understand what's going on
- here, and they don't want to." The Black Berets in Vilnius boast
- that they have enough support in Lithuania to fight on without
- Soviet help. Says Belkin: "If Moscow cuts support, we will
- continue on our own. We are preparing for victory."
- </p>
- <p> The use of violence and intimidation by those trying to
- perpetuate Soviet control over the Baltics continues to
- undermine Gorbachev's credibility as the Soviet President
- presses forward with democratic reform. Though he still clings
- to the notion that he can persuade the Balts to join a new
- union, Gorbachev has pledged to the West that he will make his
- case peacefully. That leaves the Black Berets unsure of their
- future. Already they complain of Moscow's betrayal. But the real
- test will come if Gorbachev does order the OMON units in the
- Baltics to disband. If they refuse, the Black Berets will become
- true renegades--heroes to some, villains to many others--fighting to preserve the past.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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