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- <text id=91TT1969>
- <link 93TO0074>
- <link 90TT3358>
- <title>
- Sep. 02, 1991: Prelude to a Putsch
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, Page 50
- THE ORIGINS
- Prelude to a Putsch
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>At first, Gorbachev tried to lick the conservatives by joining
- them, but that strategy led him, and the U.S.S.R., to the brink
- of the abyss
- </p>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott/Washington
- </p>
- <p> For years, as they watched Mikhail Gorbachev bull his way
- through history, remaking his country, his era and himself,
- Soviets and Westerners alike wondered whether there was anything
- he couldn't do. Wasn't there some innovation so radical, or some
- capitulation so abject, that he simply couldn't get away with it?
- Like scientists pondering the limits of an anomalous but potent
- force of nature, Kremlinologists speculated about the existence
- of a "red line" that Gorbachev could not cross without reaping
- the whirlwind.
- </p>
- <p> Could he really introduce genuine democratic choice in Soviet
- elections, terrifying and infuriating apparatchiks from one end
- of the U.S.S.R. to the other? Did he dare abandon the Communist
- Party's monopoly on political power? Could the system tolerate a
- free press? Could the Soviet people stand to hear the truth about
- their own past? Could they adjust to some version of free-market
- economics?
- </p>
- <p> And what about the Soviet empire? Could Gorbachev
- unilaterally end the decade-long occupation of Afghanistan? Could
- he pull the plug on Soviet support for the Sandinistas in
- Nicaragua and pressure them into elections they would lose? More
- crucially, could he permit "fraternal" regimes to topple in
- Eastern Europe, giving up the buffer zone that Joseph Stalin had
- created after World War II and retiring the Warsaw Pact?
- </p>
- <p> The answer, he kept demonstrating to the astonishment of all
- and the dismay of many, was yes.
- </p>
- <p> Many experts thought, if a red line existed, it ran along the
- 860-mile boundary of barbed wire, concrete and minefields between
- East and West Germany. Surely Gorbachev could not let the people
- of what used to be the German Democratic Republic defect en masse
- to the Federal Republic, taking their whole country with them.
- And even if he dared let something so unthinkable happen, he
- couldn't possibly accept the membership of a united Germany in
- NATO.
- </p>
- <p> Yet, once again, he did all that, and more. In his attempt to
- break the ministries' stranglehold on the economy, Gorbachev made
- decentralization one of the cornerstones of perestroika. Under
- the slogan of demokratizatsiya, he created conditions around the
- country for popular local leaders, frequently outspoken
- nationalists, to defeat Moscow's minions. As a result of
- glasnost, the Kremlin faced up to some of the uglier truths of
- Soviet history, including the illegality of Stalin's annexation
- of the three Baltic republics.
- </p>
- <p> Most important, by dismantling the Ministry of Fear,
- Gorbachev made it possible for people to voice their grievances
- against "the center" and their desire for self-determination.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout 1990, Gorbachev's initiatives and their
- consequences, intended and otherwise, began to call into question
- whether the Soviet Union could survive in anything like its
- existing form. Gorbachev's daredevil act was veering toward a new
- red line: the 39,000-mile border around the periphery of the
- U.S.S.R. Ideology, economics, foreign policy, military alliances,
- they were one thing; real estate was something else. Could
- Gorbachev actually give up what many of his colleagues in the
- leadership and the Soviet power structure considered to be pieces
- of the motherland?
- </p>
- <p> For three days last week, the answer seemed to be no. By the
- beginning of this year, it was clear that if Gorbachev's policies
- continued, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania would eventually leave
- the U.S.S.R. and re-establish their independence. Gorbachev
- repeatedly said he accepted "in principle" the Baltics' right to
- independence. He was always quick to add his insistence that the
- leaders in those republics pursue their goal by "constitutional
- means." Everyone knew what that phrase meant: a slow process
- during which the central government would try to control both the
- throttle and the brake.
- </p>
- <p> In Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius, nationalists indignantly
- rejected the notion that they should play by the Kremlin's rigged
- rules. But in Moscow, Gorbachev's apparent willingness to accept
- even the idea of Baltic freedom further antagonized the hard-
- liners and set in motion the chain of events that led to last
- week's coup d'etat.
- </p>
- <p> At first Gorbachev and the reactionaries tried to co-opt each
- other. One of Gorbachev's aides, fluent in the earthy idiom of
- American politics, paraphrases a favorite line of Lyndon
- Johnson's: "Mikhail Sergeyevich felt it was better to have the
- camels inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing
- in. He wanted to keep them where he could see them and where they
- would have to take his orders. He also wanted to use them to put
- pressure on the Balts." That arrangement was fine with the
- reactionaries, since they had considerable latitude in how to
- interpret and execute Gorbachev's orders.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev met frequently with Boris Pugo, who had become
- Interior Minister on Dec. 2, 1990. In these conversations Pugo
- was careful to steer clear of the fundamental issue of whether
- the Baltic republics were entitled to independence. Instead he
- stayed within the bounds of his responsibility for law and order.
- With the Baltics acting as though they were already sovereign
- states, he said, the situation was "spinning out of control"; if
- the Baltics succeeded in defying Moscow, other republics would be
- encouraged to do the same.
- </p>
- <p> Pugo was a Latvian who had been the KGB chief in Riga in the
- early '80s. He knew that Gorbachev believed all nationalities in
- the U.S.S.R. should be united by Soviet patriotism. In his
- conversations with Gorbachev he evoked this sentiment repeatedly,
- in effect offering himself as an example of a good Balt as
- opposed to ungrateful, unreasonable troublemakers like Vytautas
- Landsbergis, the brave but reckless president of Lithuania.
- </p>
- <p> Pugo simultaneously played to Gorbachev's own Russianness by
- warning that the many ethnic Russians who lived in the Baltics
- were subject to harassment and perhaps even persecution at the
- hands of local nationalists. Choosing his words carefully, Pugo
- asked for, and received, authority to take "the measures
- necessary to assure that constitutional norms are upheld and the
- rights of minorities are respected."
- </p>
- <p> On Jan. 11, something called the "National Salvation
- Committee of Lithuania" announced its existence, presumably to
- replace the government of President Landsbergis with quislings.
- Soviet troops advanced on the republic's main television station.
- People poured into the streets and surrounded both that building
- and the parliament. Outside, citizens kept vigil into the night.
- </p>
- <p> In the early hours of Sunday morning, Jan. 13, Soviet units
- attacked the television tower. The various assaults left 15
- civilians dead, three of them mangled by tanks, and several
- hundred wounded. Appearing on Soviet television, Pugo charged
- that the Lithuanians had started the fight by "flashing bayonets"
- at members of the National Salvation Committee, who had no choice
- but to appeal for outside help. This accusation was particularly
- ludicrous, since the demonstrators were unarmed and no member of
- the committee had yet to show his face or reveal his name. On
- Jan. 20, a similar clash in Riga left five dead.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of this crisis, Boris Yeltsin traveled to
- Estonia, where he signed a "mutual support pact" with all three
- Baltic governments. He also urged troops from the Russian
- Federation stationed in the Baltics not to obey any "order to act
- against legally created state bodies, against the peaceful
- civilian population that is defending its democratic
- achievements."
- </p>
- <p> Back in Moscow, Gorbachev was in a state of impotent fury. On
- the one hand, he was apoplectic with rage at Yeltsin, calling
- him, at one point, "That son of a bitch!" Some of Gorbachev's
- advisers winced when he talked this way, since he sounded like
- Henry II asking, in his exasperation at Thomas a Becket, "Who
- will free me from this turbulent priest?"
- </p>
- <p> Fear quickly spread in Moscow that Gorbachev's reactionary
- tentmates might behave less like incontinent camels and more like
- attack dogs that had received a hand signal from their master.
- There was an anonymous threat to blow up a plane on which Yeltsin
- was scheduled to travel. Several ministers in the Russian
- Federation increased their bodyguards, started carrying sidearms,
- and sent their families to dachas in the country--as though
- that would put them out of harm's way if the KGB decided to round
- them up.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, however, Gorbachev was convinced, in the
- words of a close aide, that the massacres in Vilnius and Riga
- were a "provocation" against him personally, "an attempt by
- reactionary forces to derail the process of reform." He publicly
- denied responsibility for the decision to send in the tanks and
- issued a new order forbidding the military to make further all-
- out attacks on civilians.
- </p>
- <p> In retrospect, the conflagration in the Baltics bears an
- eerie similarity to what happened last week in Moscow: hard-
- liners attempted a coup d'etat and found themselves faced with an
- unexpected show of people power as well as the personal courage
- of Yeltsin; a popular, democratic leadership survived, albeit
- under siege, while Soviet armored troops milled around menacingly
- on the streets.
- </p>
- <p> The halfhearted and inept spasm of official violence in
- Lithuania and Latvia was a preview of last week's drama in Moscow
- in another respect too: instead of being the beginning of the end--the final, decisive crackdown that so many had long feared
- might be coming--it was a standoff between the forces of the
- center and of secession, the forces of repression and of
- continuing reform. It was also an enactment of the conflict going
- on within Gorbachev himself.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev was appalled at the bloodshed in the Baltics and
- devastated by the criticism that rained down on him at home and
- abroad. When he met with a group of international peace
- activists, instead of radiating his usual sense of command, he
- all but threw himself on the mercy of his visitors. He promised
- he was still committed to making the U.S.S.R. a "law-based
- society." He portrayed himself as a victim of tumultuous events
- and historical currents, compared himself to a voyager who was
- "out of sight of land." He was, he remarked, feeling seasick.
- </p>
- <p> The episode further damaged him politically. By allowing Pugo
- and the military to use violence, Gorbachev caused many of the
- democrats and nationalists to give up on him. Yet by not allowing
- the hard-liners to finish what they had started on Bloody Sunday
- in Vilnius, he alienated them as well. He still commanded the
- middle ground between right and left, but his position was
- becoming increasingly lonely and precarious.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, there was a war in the Persian Gulf, and Gorbachev
- had reason to fear that he might end up among the losers. During
- the last five months of 1990, largely under the influence of
- Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, the Soviet Union had sided
- with the U.S.--and most of the rest of the world--in
- demanding that Saddam Hussein withdraw his army of occupation
- from Kuwait. For reformers like Shevardnadze, Saddam was a
- grotesque example of the kind of Third World thug whom the
- Kremlin had too often supported over the decades. One of
- Yeltsin's closest deputies, the foreign minister of the Russian
- Federation, Andrei Kozyrev, called Saddam "the child of our
- totalitarianism, who was nurtured under the care of our ideology
- and with the help of huge arms shipments."
- </p>
- <p> At the other end of the political spectrum, Soviet
- reactionaries regarded Saddam as the victim not only of American
- bullying but also of Soviet betrayal. They saw Soviet votes in
- favor of the U.S.-backed resolutions in the United Nations as a
- symbol of a willingness to surrender Moscow's global influence
- and accept subservience to Washington. After Shevardnadze's
- resignation in December, hard-liners in the Party Central
- Committee and the military pressured Gorbachev to name as the
- new Foreign Minister a professional bureaucrat rather than a
- relatively independent, personally powerful figure in the
- Shevardnadze mold. Gorbachev obliged them by picking Alexander
- Bessmertnykh, a career diplomat.
- </p>
- <p> However, just as Bessmertnykh took office, the coalition
- launched the air war against Iraq. An English-speaking Soviet
- major interpreted for a group of senior officers from the General
- Staff who had assembled in the Defense Ministry to watch the
- televised daily briefings from the Pentagon and coalition
- headquarters in Riyadh. Most of Iraq's antiaircraft batteries
- were made in the U.S.S.R. and manned by personnel trained by
- Soviet advisers. Yet the coalition's fighter-bombers and cruise
- missiles achieved perfect surprise, then set about to clobber
- Iraq with near impunity for six weeks. There was much cursing and
- gnashing of teeth among the Soviet officers glued to the tube in
- Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> For them, the ground war was even worse. As the Iraqi army
- collapsed, a number of senior military officers told Gorbachev
- they feared that the U.S.-led forces would march to Baghdad and
- arrest Saddam, just as Uncle Sam had done a little over a year
- before with Manuel Noriega in Panama. That, said one general,
- would be "an unacceptable blow to our prestige."
- </p>
- <p> In one Kremlin session, a top official of the Defense
- Ministry predicted that U.S. forces would "stay in the gulf
- region indefinitely," constituting a "new threat" to Soviet
- security. In effect, and perhaps in intent as well, he continued,
- the U.S. was taking advantage of the end of the cold war by
- moving its heaviest concentration of manpower and firepower from
- Europe to the soft underbelly of the U.S.S.R.
- </p>
- <p> Thus the gulf war made the military more receptive than it
- might otherwise have been to appeals by reactionary elements in
- the Communist Party, the KGB and the government bureaucracy that
- they should all make common cause against Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> By mid-spring, the hard-liners were feeling confident and
- assertive. Vladimir Kryuchkov, the chairman of the KGB, relished
- repeating to anyone who would listen the charge that the CIA had
- been covertly trying to destabilize Soviet society. The
- unmistakable implication was that advocates of radical reform
- were dupes, if not agents, of sinister foreign forces. In a
- meeting with Westerners in March, Kryuchkov stressed that there
- were still "fundamentally conflicting interests" between the U.S.
- and the Soviet Union in a wide variety of areas around the world.
- He was making clear how little use he had for the Gorbachev
- slogans of "new thinking" and "mutual security." Kryuchkov also
- complained bitterly about "our eagerness to take historical
- shortcuts"--a thinly veiled reference to the program of radical
- reform--and warned that "democracy is no substitute for law-
- and-order."
- </p>
- <p> There were still a few reformers at Gorbachev's side, such as
- Anatoli Chernyayev, the President's personal foreign policy
- adviser, and Georgi Shakhnazarov, one of the principal architects
- of the liberation of Eastern Europe. But both of them confided to
- friends that they were deeply worried. In a wry parody of
- Marxist-Leninist jargon, Shakhnazarov commented, "I fear perhaps
- the correlation of forces is turning against us."
- </p>
- <p> Of the original Gorbachev loyalists and brain trusters, only
- Alexander Yakovlev still seemed to have much fight in him. Asked
- in March why he had been left off the newly created Kremlin
- Security Council, he replied, "It's very simple, and it doesn't
- bother me in the least. President Gorbachev had to accommodate
- our reactionaries. A certain amount of maneuvering is inevitable.
- But it's maneuvering on the path of the same objectives--reform
- and democracy."
- </p>
- <p> On March 17 citizens throughout the U.S.S.R. went to the
- polls to vote on a Kremlin-sponsored referendum on the future of
- the country. While the wording was vague, the stakes were clear:
- a positive vote would be taken as a mandate for Gorbachev to
- continue the process of redefining the relationship between the
- center and the republics according to his own timetable, his own
- political instincts and his own sense of what compromises were
- required with the conservatives. A negative vote might be an
- expression of support for Yeltsin, who has favored accelerated
- reform. Yeltsin had by now established himself not only as the
- leader of the Russian Federation but also as the principal
- spokesman for the eight other republics that were willing to
- remain autonomous (or "sovereign") members of a loose Soviet
- commonwealth and as the champion of the six republics--the
- three Baltics, Moldavia, Armenia and Georgia--that wanted
- complete independence.
- </p>
- <p> The referendum resulted in something close to a draw. But
- the effect was to strengthen Yeltsin's position. A number of
- Gorbachev's aides, including his Vice President, Gennadi Yanayev,
- stepped up their efforts at engineering a rapprochement between
- the Kremlin and the Russian Federation headquarters, known as the
- White House. "Gorbachev can take a step toward Yeltsin," said
- Yanayev shortly after the referendum. "Actually, he has no choice
- but to do so."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile followers of Yeltsin announced that they would hold
- a rally in central Moscow on March 28. In a meeting at
- Gorbachev's office, Pugo conjured up the specter of
- "neo-Bolsheviks storming the Kremlin." The rally was a direct
- challenge to Gorbachev's personal authority, said Pugo. Gorbachev
- agreed to prohibit all rallies and to back up the ban with a show
- of force by bringing troops and tanks into the capital.
- </p>
- <p> Yakovlev tried several times to dissuade Gorbachev from this
- course. Rather than intimidating the democratic opposition, he
- warned, a showdown would confirm the widespread suspicion that
- Gorbachev had, in his desperation, thrown in his lot with the
- reactionaries. And even if disaster was avoided, a decision to
- pit the military muscle of the center against peaceful
- demonstrators would backfire against Gorbachev, strengthening
- Yeltsin's popular base.
- </p>
- <p> This time, unlike during the Baltic crisis in January,
- Gorbachev took personal control of the forces amassed in the side
- streets around Red Square. He kept them in check, and the huge,
- orderly demonstration came off without serious incident.
- </p>
- <p> Yakovlev commented immediately afterward that even though he
- was relieved Gorbachev had made sure the troops held their fire,
- the attempted intimidation of Yeltsin's followers was Gorbachev's
- gravest mistake to date. Gorbachev may have jeopardized not only
- his chance to make common cause with Yeltsin, said Yakovlev, but
- perhaps "his place in history" as well.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev too was shaken by how narrowly disaster had been
- averted. For the second time, he had taken the advice of Pugo,
- Kryuchkov and the hard-liners--and for the second time he had
- seen that their methods would have led only to blood in the
- streets.
- </p>
- <p> "March 28 was not just a turning point--it was the turning
- point for Mikhail Sergeyevich," says one of his aides. "He went
- to the abyss, looked over the edge, was horrified by what he saw,
- and backed away." In so doing, Gorbachev moved closer toward a
- new and fateful alliance with Yeltsin and the democrats.
- </p>
- <p>Dancing with Wolves
- </p>
- <p> "These are people I have trusted," Mikhail Gorbachev declared
- apologetically last week. "They have turned out to be not only
- the participants against the President [but also] against the
- Constitution, against the people, against democracy. It was my
- mistake." There was little else Gorbachev could offer in defense
- of the glaring fact that most members of the vosmyorka--the
- conservative Gang of Eight who made up the State Committee for
- the State of Emergency--owed their high positions to him. The
- same was true of their powerful accomplices. In the wake of the
- failed coup, all of the surviving "gang" was under arrest. What
- remained was the mystery of Gorbachev's faith in them.
- </p>
- <p> Vladimir Kryuchkov
- </p>
- <p> Appointed KGB chairman by Gorbachev in 1988, Kryuchkov made
- efforts to burnish the organization's image. Gorbachev explained
- last week that he appreciated Kryuchkov's "certain level of
- cultural erudition, the ability to conduct dialogue." But the
- liberalism was largely tactical. He insisted after his arrest,
- "I don't think I have done anything in my life that my motherland
- can hold against me."
- </p>
- <p> Dmitri Yazov
- </p>
- <p> Opposed by Supreme Soviet deputies, Yazov won reappointment
- as Defense Minister in 1989 only with the help of Gorbachev, who
- was impressed by the general's level-headedness and his support
- for strict military professionalism. The stony-faced World War II
- veteran backed the call for the restructuring of society. But he
- also attacked glasnost for allowing civilians to criticize the
- army.
- </p>
- <p> Boris Pugo
- </p>
- <p> Responding to complaints early last year that a liberal
- Interior Ministry had led to public disorder, Gorbachev appointed
- the hard-nosed Pugo as the country's top cop. Pugo's pedigree--he is the son of a prominent Latvian communist--combined with
- his devotion to the Soviet Union helped elevate him in
- Gorbachev's eyes as the ideal citizen, untainted by ethnic
- animosity. His methods, however, seem to have been as nefarious
- as those of some of his predecessors. A former Latvian KGB chief,
- Pugo may have instigated violence in the Baltic republics in an
- attempt to force a crackdown by Moscow. After the coup's failure,
- he and his wife apparently attempted a double suicide. His wife
- survived.
- </p>
- <p> Gennadi Yanayev
- </p>
- <p> The quintessentially malleable apparatchik, Yanayev became
- Vice President only after two excruciating rounds of votes in the
- Congress of People's Deputies--and tremendous lobbying by
- Gorbachev. A sop to the Communist bureaucracy that created him,
- Yanayev nevertheless obediently parroted reformist policies--though observers noted that his heart was not in the performance.
- He proved equally unconvincing at projecting strength.
- Journalists at the junta's press conference laughed out loud at
- his lame answers and at his trembling hands. Said Gorbachev
- last week: "I see that the Congress was right when they did not
- accept the Vice President in the first round."
- </p>
- <p> Oleg Baklanov
- </p>
- <p> A weapons expert, the Ukrainian bureaucrat is not only first
- deputy on the shadowy but influential Soviet Defense Council but
- is also an important member of the nation's powerful military-
- industrial complex, a sector of the economy threatened by
- Gorbachev's reforms. Two other members of the gang of eight--Vasili Starodubtsev, an advocate of collective farming, and
- Alexander Tizyakov--were among the 12 conservative signatories
- of an open letter in July recommending a military takeover.
- </p>
- <p> Valentin Pavlov
- </p>
- <p> As Prime Minister, Pavlov was openly critical of Gorbachev's
- policies. The President, however, believed he could safely ignore
- the economist's rhetoric. Any Pavlovian clout had to emanate from
- the Supreme Soviet, whose powers would be sapped by the union
- treaty. Nicknamed "Porky the Hedgehog," Pavlov was widely
- unpopular. As the coup faltered, he checked into a hospital
- suffering from "hypertension."
- </p>
- <p> Anatoli Lukyanov
- </p>
- <p> An old schoolmate and close friend of Gorbachev's, Lukyanov
- had recently assumed the role of the Soviet leader's conservative
- doppelganger--and likely successor. As Chairman of the Supreme
- Soviet, he had used his power to delay liberal legislation, going
- so far as to turn off the mikes of some Deputies to keep them
- from being heard. In the early hours of the coup, he reportedly
- gave the plotters support by claiming that Gorbachev approved of
- their takeover. Others charge that he was the brains behind the
- putsch.
- </p>
- <p> Valeri Boldin
- </p>
- <p> Aside from the actions of the vosmyorka, Boldin's betrayal
- was perhaps the most shocking to Gorbachev. The ethnic Russian
- had been a close aide since 1981, when Gorbachev was a rising
- star. At Gorbachev's ascension to power, the Soviet leader
- handpicked Boldin to join his inner circle. Though known to
- favor conservative policies, Boldin had enough of Gorbachev's
- trust to be named chief of staff, in charge of his agenda and
- his appointments. He became the President's Judas.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-