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- <text id=91TT1958>
- <link 93XV0035>
- <link 93TO0074>
- <link 91TT1970>
- <title>
- Sep. 02, 1991: The Russian Revolution
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, Page 18
- The Russian Revolution
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By LANCE MORROW -- Reported by John Kohan/Moscow and J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> An abyss opened for a moment, and black bats flew out. They
- filled the air with old nightmares, throwbacks to a style of
- history that the world had been forgetting. The Soviet Union was
- seized by a sinister anachronism: its dying self. Men with faces
- the color of a sidewalk talked about a "state of emergency." They
- rolled in tanks and told stolid lies. The world imagined another
- totalitarian dusk, cold war again, and probably Soviet civil war
- as well. If Gorbachev was under arrest, who had possession of the
- nuclear codes?
- </p>
- <p> Three days: then the bats of history abruptly turned, flew
- back and vanished into the past. By act of will and absence of
- fear, the Russian people accomplished a kind of miracle, the
- reversal of a thousand years of autocracy.
- </p>
- <p> Nadezhda Mandelstam, the brilliant, bitter memoirist of the
- Stalin era, wrote in the early '70s: "Evil has great momentum,
- but the forces of good are inert. The masses . . . have no fight
- in them, and will acquiesce in whatever happens." Until last week
- the Russian character was judged to be politically passive, even
- receptive to brutal rule. At first the coup seemed to confirm the
- norm. The news administered a dark shock, followed immediately by
- a depressed sense of resignation: of course, of course, the
- Russians must revert to their essential selves, to their own
- history. Gorbachev and glasnost were the aberration; now we are
- back to fatal normality. "Every country has the government it
- deserves," Joseph de Maistre wrote in 1811.
- </p>
- <p> Now, after 74 years of communist dictatorship and, centuries
- before that, of czarist autocracy, the Russians may get a
- government they have earned -- a democracy. For the first time,
- they did not subside into an acceptance of overlords. Instead
- they turned last week's reactionary coup into a transforming rite
- of passage, an epochal event that forced even Gorbachev to
- re-examine his most basic beliefs and resign his post as head of
- the Communist Party.
- </p>
- <p> Citizens poured into the streets, determined, methodical and
- -- the biggest change in a Russian experience suffused with a
- genius for official terror -- astonishingly unafraid. They defied
- the junta's curfew, built barricades around the Russian
- Parliament Building, where Boris Yeltsin had organized his
- resistance. They had absorbed something about people power from
- Prague, Berlin, even Vilnius. A crowd of Muscovites brought a
- column of armored personnel carriers (APCs) to a halt, stuffing
- rosebuds and wildflowers into gun barrels. A line of women stood
- ready to face down troops with a single banner: SOLDIERS: DON'T
- SHOOT MOTHERS AND SISTERS. Clearly the soldiers had orders not to
- use force. One of a dozen soldiers who marched to the central
- telegraph office on Tverskaya Street, when confronted by outraged
- Muscovites, showed them that the clip of his automatic weapon was
- empty. When the tanks did move, people were ready with gasoline-
- filled bottles (named, of course, after the old Stalinist V.M.
- Molotov). Tank drivers, even paratroop commanders, defected to
- the resistance. Miners went on strike.
- </p>
- <p> With all of that, the people of Russia last week purchased
- their freedom and citizenship. They abolished serfdom in Soviet
- political life. The event is one of the turning points of world
- history, proclaiming the end of a totalitarianism that has
- destroyed so much of the 20th century.
- </p>
- <p> The course of the coup was surreal. Has television, which
- helped unravel the putsch, come to enforce its own brief
- attention span upon history? Recent great events -- the breakup
- of Eastern Europe, the Persian Gulf war, the failure of the coup
- -- seem to be enacting themselves in shorter and shorter time
- frames. Three days last week undid 10 centuries of civic
- dormancy. It is possible that the world is dividing between blood
- feuders and channel changers. The blood feuders, like zealots in
- Ireland or the Middle East, cannot forget revenge, even over many
- years; the impatient channel changers of the electronic age favor
- fast-paced, variable and possibly shallow new realities. The old
- communists are blood feuders. The new Russians are channel
- changers.
- </p>
- <p> The Gang of Eight was caught between the feud and the change.
- Its coup looked like Stalin's ruthlessness written on the fifth
- carbon, a smudgy, illegible piece of work. It was fitting that
- stupidity should be a prevailing theme. An oafish brainlessness
- has for decades hung over the Soviet communist venture like one
- of Nikita Khrushchev's suits. Its secret has never been
- intelligence but rather ruthlessness. The cardinal rule of
- coupmaking, says Edward Luttwak of Washington's Center for
- Strategic and International Studies, is "to seize control of all
- the centers of power in one fell swoop, to paralyze the
- situation." Even banana republics know this. The Gang of Eight
- was inexplicably though mercifully inept. Perhaps the
- conspirators picked up some debilitatingly humane manners during
- the Gorbachev era. They did not launch a coup but proffered a
- sort of half-coup, saying complimentary things about Gorbachev
- and holding out the possibility of working with him again. The
- Gang was a bit like an assassin named Karakozov, who tried to
- shoot Czar Alexander II in 1866, missed, and is said to have
- shouted to bystanders as the police led him away, "Fools! I did
- it for you!"
- </p>
- <p> The biggest mistake the Emergency Committee made was not to
- kill both Gorbachev and Yeltsin. But the plotters craved
- constitutional legitimacy for their illegitimate act and could
- not bring themselves to be ruthless about it. "They may have had
- Leninist nostalgia," says Luttwak, "but they didn't have a
- Leninist temperament -- which is to shoot the bastards."
- </p>
- <p> Many ineptitudes: tyranny does its best work in the dark, and
- information is often more powerful than guns. But the committee
- did not grasp that rudiment either. It did not shut down the
- country's television, telephones and other communications with
- the rest of the world. Or maybe it could not have done so anyway,
- so pervasive, adaptable and versatile are the electronic
- instruments of our age.
- </p>
- <p> More broadly, the cabal failed because it was an old-style
- coup in a new-style society. The Russian people have been
- transformed over a period of years. They are not the Russians
- whom Bertrand Russell was talking about when he justified
- Bolshevik despotism by saying "If you ask yourself how
- Dostoyevsky's characters should be governed, you will
- understand." The new Soviets owe much of their transformation
- and fearlessness to Gorbachev -- and by last week they were
- using that freedom to outgrow him.
- </p>
- <p> Independent power centers have taken hold in the new Soviet
- Union. There are republic leaders, legitimately elected mayors,
- legislators, independent journalists. The society is too various
- and too well educated for rulers to control in the old Stalinist
- way. Russians are not, as Marx called them, "rude Asiatics."
- Blair Ruble, director of the Kennan Institute of Advanced Russian
- Studies at the Woodrow Wilson Center, has observed, "There has
- been a general trend throughout the postwar period toward
- increasing education, urbanization and professionalization of the
- labor force. Those trends bring with them different attitudes
- toward authority and a greater desire to control one's destiny.
- It's not the same society it was a generation ago."
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet military-security apparatus tried to use ominously
- rumbling, fume-belching columns of tanks and APCs to bring Moscow
- to submission, but proved no more potent than the Wizard of Oz.
- The communist system by last week had reached such an advanced
- state of debility that the brain was no longer capable of sending
- commands to the limbs. What most Soviets will remember about
- "Acting President" Gennadi Yanayev is his trembling hands as he
- tried to explain himself on television.
- </p>
- <p> The coup was not necessarily doomed to failure. Many millions
- of Soviet citizens did not demonstrate against the takeover, but
- sat back, awaiting the outcome. If other conspirators try again
- to overthrow the government, they will have learned some lessons
- from August 1991. They will not make the same mistakes. Suppose
- the plotters had killed Gorbachev and Yeltsin, found army units
- to invade the Parliament Building, locked up the country's media,
- communications, airports and roads . . . The outcome might have
- been infinitely messier and more dangerous, both for the Soviets
- and for the world. And a spirit of vindictiveness against all
- communists may still come to haunt the land.
- </p>
- <p> But the event is probably irrevocable. Russian history is a
- progression of false dawns, from Catherine the Great to Peter the
- Great to the Bolshevik Revolution to the Khrushchev thaw. Last
- week's looked like the real thing.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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