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- <text id=91TT1967>
- <link 93XV0035>
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- <title>
- Sep. 02, 1991: Anatomy of a Coup
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, Page 32
- POSTMORTEM
- Anatomy of A Coup
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The dramatic tale of how a handful of party hacks hijacked Soviet
- democracy--until a popular revolt shattered their ill-hatched
- plans
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by James Carney and Ann M.
- Simmons/Moscow and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It might have been the most widely advertised coup in
- history. Rumors and warnings had begun as early as the summer of
- 1990. According to British intelligence, elements of the Soviet
- army and KGB actually rehearsed a coup (under the guise of a
- countercoup) in February of this year. June brought what was soon
- called the "constitutional-coup attempt." Prime Minister Valentin
- Pavlov asked the Supreme Soviet for the authority to issue
- decrees without Mikhail Gorbachev's knowledge, but was rebuffed.
- In late July hard-liners published an announcement appealing for
- "those who recognize the terrible plight into which our country
- has fallen" to support dramatic action to end disorder. They
- might as well have put up billboards shouting COUP!
- </p>
- <p> In hindsight, even the timing seems screamingly obvious.
- Gorbachev had designated Tuesday, Aug. 20, for the ceremonial
- signing of a new union treaty with the presidents of the Russian
- and Kazakh republics; other republics were expected to sign
- later. The treaty would transfer so many powers--over taxes,
- natural resources, even the state security apparatus--to the
- republics as to make restoring ironfisted Kremlin control of the
- whole country impossible. Moreover, a new national Cabinet would
- have been named by representatives of the republics. Some of the
- eventual coup leaders, including KGB chairman Vladimir Kryuchkov,
- Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov and Interior Minister Boris Pugo,
- would almost certainly have lost their jobs. The plotters could
- not afford to let that treaty go into effect.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Gorbachev by his own testimony was totally unprepared. To
- some scholars and Soviet officials that appears so odd as to
- suggest that the President himself had staged a Potemkin coup to
- win domestic and foreign sympathy. But that seems farfetched.
- More probably, the very volume and intensity of coup talk had
- dulled his political antennae; the cry of wolf was sounding old
- and tired. Alexander Yakovlev, a close adviser, claimed after it
- was all over that he had even given Gorbachev the names of some
- likely--and, as it turned out actual--plotters. The
- President, according to Yakovlev, had scoffed that they "lack the
- courage to stage a coup."
- </p>
- <p> As late as 4 p.m. Sunday, working at his Crimean vacation
- retreat at Foros on the speech he intended to give at the treaty
- signing, Gorbachev telephoned Georgi Shakhnazarov, an aide and
- friend, who was vacationing nearby. They chatted briefly;
- Shakhnazarov heard nothing to indicate that his boss was in any
- way troubled. Less than an hour later, however, at 10 minutes to
- 5, the head of Gorbachev's security guards entered the
- President's office and, as Gorbachev later recounted the story,
- announced that "a group of people" was demanding to see him. Who
- were they, asked Gorbachev, and why had they been let into the
- house? They were accompanied by Yuri Plekhanov, the chief of the
- state security-guard organization, said Gorbachev's man; that was
- all he knew. Gorbachev picked up a phone to call Moscow. "It
- didn't work. I lifted the second [phone], the third, the fourth,
- the fifth. Nothing." All his communications had been cut.
- </p>
- <p> Instantly realizing what might be up, Gorbachev went to
- another room, called in his wife, daughter and son-in-law and
- warned them that his visitors might "attempt to arrest me or take
- me away somewhere." Returning to his office, he found that the
- delegation had already bulled its way in. There were four besides
- Plekhanov. Gorbachev initially named only one: Valeri Boldin, his
- own chief of staff. It was as if John Sununu had joined a coup
- against George Bush. The others were finally identified as Oleg
- Baklanov, deputy chairman of the National Defense Council and in
- effect leader of the military-industrial complex; a Communist
- Party hack named Oleg Shenin; and General Valentin Varennikov. In
- the name of the so-called State Committee for the State of
- Emergency, the visitors demanded that Gorbachev sign a decree
- proclaiming an emergency and turning over all his powers to Vice
- President Gennadi Yanayev. Gorbachev's reply: "Go to hell."
- </p>
- <p> By then, a special detachment of KGB troops had surrounded
- his vacation house. Just in case Gorbachev somehow got out and
- tried to return to Moscow, KGB units drove tractors across the
- runway of the nearby airport to prevent Gorbachev's TU-134
- presidential jet from taking off.
- </p>
- <p> Roughly 12 hours passed before the outside world knew
- anything. But at 6 a.m. Monday, TASS, the Soviet news agency,
- reported falsely that Gorbachev was ill and had yielded his
- powers temporarily to Yanayev. An hour later, TASS announced the
- formation of the eight-member State Committee for the State of
- Emergency, ostensibly headed by Yanayev. Actually, this gray and
- ineffectual apparatchik was only a figurehead; the real power
- probably was held by Kryuchkov, Pugo and Yazov, plus possibly
- lesser-known figures. Some of Russian republic president Boris
- Yeltsin's aides later fingered Baklanov as the chief plotter.
- The committee announced that it would rule by decree for six
- months, and began setting up some of the machinery of
- dictatorship. All newspapers except for nine pro-coup sheets were
- ordered to stop publishing, political parties were suspended and
- protest demonstrations banned. Muscovites going to work or to
- shop Monday morning had to maneuver around troops, tanks and
- armored personnel carriers that were moving to cordon off or
- seize key installations.
- </p>
- <p> Yet it was obvious even that early that the coup was ill
- planned and curiously halfhearted. The plotters neglected to
- carry out that sine qua non of successful coups: the immediate
- arrest of popular potential enemies before they could begin
- organizing a resistance. In particular, the failure to make sure
- that Yeltsin was taken into custody (there were some reports that
- an attempt at an arrest was made, but botched) was fatal.
- Inexplicably, the putschists did not even pull the plug on the
- communications of anyone except Gorbachev. Bush and other foreign
- leaders were amazed at how easily they could get through by
- telephone to Yeltsin; he in turn seems to have had no difficulty
- coordinating action with other coup opponents across the country.
- </p>
- <p> Most successful coup organizers also begin by moving reliable
- troops into key positions. Yet U.S. intelligence analysts, poring
- early Monday over satellite pictures taken during the previous
- two days, detected no evidence of any unusual troop movements.
- The Soviet plotters used troops and equipment that happened to be
- on hand in Moscow and other cities and gave the soldiers only the
- vaguest idea of what they were supposed to be doing. In Moscow
- some seemed to think they were participating in an odd sort of
- parade or drill.
- </p>
- <p> Far from being prepared to crush opposition, the troops were
- obviously under orders to avoid confrontation if possible and
- above all not to shoot. Citizens shouted "Fascist!" or worse at
- the troops, scrawled swastikas in the dirt on tanks parked
- outside the Russian Parliament Building, climbed aboard armored
- personnel carriers to argue with the commanders and urge them to
- turn back--all with impunity. When the coup leaders decreed a
- curfew from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m., the soldiers made no attempt to
- enforce it.
- </p>
- <p> In Leningrad troops based inside the city stayed in their
- barracks throughout the coup. Armored assault units headquartered
- nearby at one point started moving on the old czarist capital,
- but reformist Mayor Anatoli Sobchak--another leader the coup
- conspirators foolishly left at large--persuaded the tankmen to
- halt outside the city.
- </p>
- <p> Why were the coup plotters so inept and halfhearted? Simple
- incompetence might be one answer; several were party or
- government hacks who had never displayed much imagination or
- initiative. They may have thought that the economic collapse that
- had made Gorbachev wildly unpopular, coupled with a long Russian
- tradition of submissiveness to authority, would win the populace
- to their side without any need for bloodshed. They may even have
- been corrupted, so to speak, by the new atmosphere of democracy
- and legalism--at least to the extent of feeling a need to give
- their coup a cloak of constitutionalism, which in turn prevented
- them from acting with the ruthlessness a successful coup
- generally requires. Alternatively, some American officials think
- the plotters were not so much inept as unable to round up enough
- support to flaunt any more muscle than they did.
- </p>
- <p> There were many indications that an early and decisive use of
- force might have carried the day. According to British sources,
- heads of government and foreign ministers of the major Western
- powers had agreed during a long series of very secret talks on a
- coordinated policy to oppose any Soviet coup attempt. But though
- all of them condemned the coup, some initially hinted that they
- might eventually live with it. On Monday morning Bush asserted
- that "coups can fail" but at the same time voiced hope that
- Yanayev too might turn out to be a reformer. French President
- Francois Mitterrand on Monday night treated the coup as a fait
- accompli.
- </p>
- <p> Within the U.S.S.R. many powerful figures who wound up
- opposing the coup were initially noncommittal, stayed
- conspicuously out of sight or played highly ambiguous roles.
- Alexander Dzasokhov, a secretary of the Central Committee of the
- Soviet Communist Party, tried to paint the party as a resolute
- opponent of the conspirators. "From the very beginning of the
- coup," he said, the committee secretariat "kept trying to get in
- touch with the state Emergency Committee and demanded that they
- see Gorbachev." In fact, though, Nursultan Nazarbayev, president
- of Kazakhstan, says the Central Committee on Monday secretly
- urged local party organizations to support the junta.
- </p>
- <p> Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmertnykh came down with
- a vaguely defined illness, one of several seeming cases of "coup
- flu." (Symptoms: cold feet and a weakening of the backbone.)
- After initially cabling Soviet ambassadors around the world to
- put a "good face" on the coup, Bessmertnykh climbed out of his
- sickbed to denounce the plot only after it was falling apart--too late, as it turned out, to keep from getting fired. General
- Mikhail Moiseyev, Chief of the Soviet General Staff, was perhaps
- conveniently on vacation in the Crimea when the coup began. But
- some of his subordinates claimed he wrote out the orders for the
- troops to occupy key points in Moscow--as well as the orders
- for them to go back to their barracks when the coup was palpably
- failing.
- </p>
- <p> Even the indomitable Yeltsin reportedly had a moment of
- irresolution. On Monday morning he hurried to the Russian
- republic headquarters--nicknamed the White House because of its
- marble facade--and was quickly joined by other coup opponents.
- One of them, former Soviet Interior Minister Vadim Bakhatin, says
- they urged Yeltsin to proclaim himself in command of all army and
- KGB units on Russian republic soil. Bakhatin recounts that
- Yeltsin was reluctant; he feared that such an order would split
- the army and perhaps start a bloody civil war. Bakhatin and
- others, however, convinced Yeltsin that if no one exercising
- constitutional authority was willing to countermand orders from
- the junta, the army might eventually if reluctantly invade the
- White House and arrest them all, and the coup would succeed.
- </p>
- <p> From then on, Yeltsin never wavered. At 12:30 p.m. Monday he
- clambered atop an armored truck outside the White House to
- announce the decree assuming command. He denounced the coup as
- illegal and unconstitutional and called for a general strike to
- thwart it. In retrospect, that was the first and perhaps the
- biggest turning point. Yeltsin had made it obvious that the coup
- would face determined resistance; his appearance helped inspire
- protest demonstrations throughout the country. At the time,
- however, its significance was not entirely apparent. No more
- than about 200 Muscovites had gathered outside the Russian
- republic building to see and hear his fiery performance. But as
- word spread, the crowd grew and grew until it eventually numbered
- in the tens of thousands.
- </p>
- <p> At 5 p.m. Monday the conspirators finally called a press
- conference to introduce themselves. Their performance was a
- disaster. Far from coming across as a take-charge group, they
- appeared nervous and half apologetic. They gave a preposterous
- excuse for assuming authority (Gorbachev was too tired and ill
- to retain command); stressed that the coup was a constitutional
- devolution of authority to Yanayev, although it clearly was not;
- and proclaimed a highly dubious devotion to continued reform.
- Junta member Vasili Starodubtsev sniffled continually, and
- Yanayev seemed twitchy. As Gorbachev later commented, "They said
- I was sick, but they were the ones whose hands were shaking."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev apparently was listening if not watching. His
- security guards stayed with him at the Foros dacha, scrounged up
- some old radio receivers that had been forgotten but not
- discarded, and set up a jury-rigged antenna so they could monitor
- foreign radio coverage of the coup. Gorbachev later praised the
- reporting of the British Broadcasting Corp., Radio Liberty and
- Voice of America--without seeming to recognize the irony that
- all three networks had been jammed by the Soviet government not
- so very long ago. Though he said he had been subjected to
- intense "psychological pressure," this apparently consisted of
- isolation rather than any actual interference with his
- activities. The President spent part of his time drafting an
- angry condemnation of the coup, and was so incensed at the
- reports of his illness that he made four videotapes of himself
- (he did not say how he got hold of a camera) to prove he was not
- sick at all. Fearing that the worst might happen to him, he also
- recorded his last will and testament. Gorbachev's wife Raisa was
- apparently quite shaken by the experience. She was later reported
- to have suffered some paralysis of her left hand and was said to
- be receiving medical treatment.
- </p>
- <p> In the outside world, the tide was beginning to turn. By
- Tuesday morning the Western powers had got their act together and
- unanimously, though separately, proclaimed a clear line: no
- normal relations with the Soviet Union until legitimate authority
- was restored, and a quick and indefinite cutoff of most of the
- economic aid that the U.S.S.R. desperately needs.
- </p>
- <p> Coal miners in Siberia and the far north left their pits.
- Resolutions condemning the Emergency Committee were passed in
- communities from Sakhalin Island in the far east to Petrozavodsk,
- near the border with Finland. In Leningrad tens of thousands
- gathered in front of the Winter Palace, which Lenin's forces had
- stormed to begin the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917.
- </p>
- <p> In Moscow resistance organizers had fanned out across the
- city Monday night to post leaflets in subway stations calling for
- a mass demonstration at noon Tuesday. From a second-floor balcony
- of the Russian republic building, speaker after speaker led a
- throng of up to 150,000 Muscovites in chants of "We will win!"
- Shouted Yeltsin: "We will hold out as long as we have to, to
- remove this junta from power." Bush telephoned on Tuesday morning
- to encourage that determination by making it clear that the
- putschists would get no foreign support.
- </p>
- <p> Tuesday afternoon brought one telltale indication that the
- junta was losing what grip it had established. After obediently
- reporting all the pronouncements of the so-called Emergency
- Committee and little else, TASS suddenly began interspersing them
- with reports of the burgeoning resistance. For example, it let
- Soviet citizens know that Aleksei II, Patriarch of the Russian
- Orthodox Church and a signer of a December appeal for a law-and-
- order crackdown, had come out against the coup.
- </p>
- <p> Tension nonetheless built toward a climax Tuesday night. It
- was obvious that the junta could no longer prevail unless it
- began using deadly force, starting with an armed assault on
- Yeltsin's White House. All afternoon and evening, loudspeakers
- blared warnings that tanks were rolling toward the building and
- 60 planes filled with paratroopers were preparing for an airborne
- assault. Thousands of people worked through the night building
- barricades to deter an attack, supplemented by human chains of
- unarmed protesters. At the foot of the main staircase, an
- organizer with a megaphone called, "All courageous men who are
- willing to defend the building, please come forward!" About 90
- men--the forerunners of many, many more--formed up in three
- rows on the stairs. An Orthodox priest in full regalia read the
- Lord's Prayer to them.
- </p>
- <p> Just before midnight, short bursts of gunfire did echo from
- nearby streets. It was not, however, the start of an assault but
- a confused scuffle between tanks and protesters around a
- trolleybus barricade. Three demonstrators were left dead--the
- only casualties in Moscow of the coup.
- </p>
- <p> Otherwise, nothing happened. During the daylight hours
- Tuesday, Ruslan Khasbulatov, first deputy chairman of the supreme
- soviet of the Russian Federation and a close Yeltsin adviser, was
- on the phone to KGB chief Kryuchkov and Defense Minister Yazov.
- He asked them point-blank if the junta planned to storm the White
- House. "Yazov did not deny it," he reported. Late Tuesday night
- and again Wednesday morning, Gennadi Burbulis, another Yeltsin
- aide, spoke twice more with Kryuchkov. Finally Kryuchkov
- promised, "You can sleep soundly." There would be no shoot-out.
- </p>
- <p> Why not? Reports within the Soviet Union and from Western
- intelligence sources differed in detail, but agreed in essence:
- the armed forces would not carry out any order to attack. One
- story was that senior army commanders had met secretly Tuesday
- night and decided they would not storm the White House or
- countenance any firing at civilians.
- </p>
- <p> Some troops sent to menace the Russian republic headquarters
- turned to defending it instead. By agreement with Yeltsin, Major
- General Alexander Lebed, a commander of airborne troops, on
- Tuesday afternoon ordered the tanks and armored personnel
- carriers from his Tula division parked around the building to
- turn their turrets around so that they could not fire at
- Yeltsin's headquarters; no ammunition was distributed to the
- vehicles' crews. In effect, the tanks and APCs became part of the
- barricades protecting the building. Some American officials
- believe that the junta did intend to storm the building but
- Lebed's virtual defection derailed its plans. Another version,
- not necessarily contradictory, was that Colonel General Gennadi
- Shaposhnikov, commander of the Soviet air force, and Lieut.
- General Pavel Grachev, chief of the airborne troops, flatly
- refused to order an attack on the White House. That story gained
- credence at week's end when Shaposhnikov was appointed Defense
- Minister, with Grachev his chief deputy.
- </p>
- <p> Wednesday morning there was a seemingly ominous flurry of
- military activity. Soviet troops in Lithuania and Estonia took
- control of several radio and TV stations; in Moscow paratroopers
- shut down an independent radio station that had resumed
- broadcasting the day before. But those actions quickly turned
- out to be the plotters' last gasp. The failure to storm the White
- House on Tuesday made clear that the junta would not or could not
- resort to the serious bloodshed that by then would have been
- necessary to crush resistance. By Wednesday the plotters
- evidently concluded that the jig was up, and the coup fell apart
- with astonishing speed.
- </p>
- <p> At 2:15 p.m., Yeltsin announced to the Russian parliament
- that some of the conspirators were running to Vnukovo Airport to
- get out of town. A delegation headed by Yeltsin's vice president,
- Alexander Rutskoi, chased after them to arrest them. One hour
- earlier, TASS announced that the Defense Ministry had ordered all
- troops to clear out of Moscow, and this order was happily obeyed.
- Bystanders cheered as soldiers, some waving prerevolutionary
- Russian flags, rode atop armored vehicles on their way back to
- bases. The order to clear out, in fact, came from Gorbachev. For
- two days he had demanded that his captors let him phone Moscow
- again and supply a plane so that he could return to the capital;
- his requests were ignored. But on Wednesday he was suddenly
- allowed to use the phone once more. He called General Moiseyev,
- who by then was back in Moscow, and Moiseyev passed on the order
- to the Defense Ministry.
- </p>
- <p> After two days of isolation, Gorbachev was suddenly again
- besieged by visitors from Moscow, this time competing for his
- favor. How many conspirators tried to flee the capital on
- Wednesday is still not entirely clear. Pugo, for example, was
- originally rumored to be aboard a plane headed for Central Asia,
- but in fact was soon admitted to a Moscow hospital with gunshot
- wounds, apparently self-inflicted, from which he died. Kryuchkov
- and Yazov, however, did get to Vnukovo Airport ahead of their
- pursuers from Yeltsin's headquarters, and hopped a plane for
- Gorbachev's resort. They were accompanied by Anatoli Lukyanov,
- chairman of the Soviet parliament. Though he is an old friend and
- law-school classmate of Gorbachev's, Lukyanov played at best an
- ambiguous role in the coup; he was not a member of the Emergency
- Committee but has been accused by some of Yeltsin's aides of
- being the mastermind behind the whole plot. Hard on their heels,
- Rutskoi and his avengers also took off for the Crimea--taking
- care to bring guns.
- </p>
- <p> Possibly Kryuchkov and Yazov hoped to negotiate with
- Gorbachev an end to the coup that would preserve some of their
- power. Or maybe they simply intended to beg for forgiveness and
- leniency. Rutskoi and his friends, however, feared they might
- want to kill the Soviet President. The thought that some of the
- plotters might try to execute him in a last attempt to save the
- coup occurred to Gorbachev as well. One of his first calls on
- Wednesday was to the chief of his personal guard at the Kremlin,
- working out arrangements to guarantee his safety on a return to
- Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> When Kryuchkov and Yazov arrived at his dacha, Gorbachev
- refused to see them; he demanded that they be arrested (Lukyanov
- was not arrested but was suspended from his job pending an
- investigation). Rutskoi and his gun-toting party, who got to the
- dacha shortly after, were delighted to do that job. They frisked
- both Kryuchkov and Yazov; Kryuchkov offered no resistance, but
- the Defense Minister grumbled (neither was armed). Even then
- Rutskoi and his companions were worried that other plotters might
- try something. "We told the airport to prepare two planes to
- mislead the scoundrels," Rutskoi later said on Soviet television.
- </p>
- <p> All this took so long that Gorbachev did not get back to
- Moscow until 2:15 a.m. Thursday. Stepping off the plane, he
- looked haggard and drawn but flashed a relieved smile, rather
- like the released hostage that he was. In theory, at least, he
- was back in full command. In fact, he faced gigantic tasks of
- rounding up the plotters, alleviating the economic and social
- chaos that had given the excuse for the coup, and working out a
- modus vivendi with Yeltsin. As for the surviving plotters, all
- of whom had been arrested by week's end, they were facing not
- only treason trials but also the knowledge that their mismanaged
- coup had intensified the move toward democracy and
- decentralization they had tried to stop. The three days that
- shook the world were over.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-