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- <text id=91TT1970>
- <link 91TT0654>
- <link 90TT3060>
- <title>
- Sep. 02, 1991: Yeltsin:The Man Who Rules Russia
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, Page 54
- RISING STAR
- The Man Who Rules Russia
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Can Boris Yeltsin translate his populism into the kind of
- democratic leadership that his republic craves, or is he destined
- to rule by demagogic decree?
- </p>
- <p>By David Aikman/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The dramatic rhetoric, the bold, often impulsive political
- gestures, the sometimes imperious style: as Boris Yeltsin has
- grown larger upon the political stage, the world has grown more
- familiar with his outsize personality, including his glaring
- character flaws and his impressive personal and political
- strengths. Yet there are transforming moments in a leader's life
- when his actions change forever the way he views himself or the
- way the world views him. Last week Yeltsin stood on such a
- pinnacle. All the qualities that made him one of the most
- fascinating and problematic political figures in the age of
- Gorbachev were recast in the form of Russia's man of destiny.
- Yeltsin's view of himself may not have changed, but the world
- discovered a giant.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin has at various times been dismissed, both in the
- Kremlin and in the West, as a buffoon, an opportunist, a would-be
- autocrat wrapped in a populist mantle. His judgment has often
- been questioned--along with his sobriety. Cynical speculation
- has abounded about his conversion to democratic principles. His
- assertiveness and impulsiveness have always exasperated more
- conventional politicians like Gorbachev, who viewed Yeltsin for
- years with wariness and distrust.
- </p>
- <p> Yet whatever his detractors and enemies said, Yeltsin's
- extraordinary political career time and again has demonstrated
- that he had one thing they lacked: an intimate relationship with
- the Russian masses. "Yeltsin rises on a turret and around him
- there are no ghosts of past Kremlin rulers, but real Russians,
- not yet vanished," observed the poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko.
- Yeltsin, unlike his peers in the Kremlin, has experienced a
- mercurial rise based on shaking off the past and embracing the
- radical opportunities of the uncertain present.
- </p>
- <p> Like all men and women who survive and flourish in public
- life, Yeltsin has evolved and matured, changing from an
- ambitious technocrat to an energetic, near bullying party boss to
- an impassioned if erratic reformer. Born in 1931 in Sverdlovsk
- province in the Ural Mountains, he grew up in a family so poor
- that all six members slept on the floor of a one-room apartment
- with a goat. His childhood was, he has written, "a fairly joyless
- time." He was always, he later recalled, "a little bit of a
- hooligan." When he was 11, he lost the thumb and forefinger of
- his left hand after he and a pair of chums stole two hand
- grenades from a warehouse; as they tinkered with the weapons, one
- exploded. He was expelled from grade school for denouncing a
- sadistic teacher. Yeltsin stubbornly pursued the battle, and the
- teacher was eventually fired.
- </p>
- <p> Trained as an engineer, Yeltsin waited until he was 30 before
- joining the Communist Party. By 1985 he had carved out a regional
- reputation as the reform-minded first secretary of the Sverdlovsk
- district central committee; it was enough to bring him to the
- attention of another reformer from the hinterland, the newly
- installed Communist Party General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev.
- Gorbachev soon appointed Yeltsin first secretary of the Moscow
- city party committee. Thereupon the tall, bulky technocrat seemed
- to settle into a sort of permanent guerrilla war with his
- superiors in the Politburo and with his often corrupt underlings
- throughout the city's rambling bureaucracy.
- </p>
- <p> In the Politburo he chafed openly at Gorbachev's go-along
- committee style, as the new leader maneuvered to consolidate
- power. He began to rock the boat loudly, with sulfurous speeches
- that argued for rooting out corruption and injustice. In Moscow
- he rode the subway and workers' grimy commuter buses, barged
- into stores to ask why there was no meat for sale, fired hundreds
- of incompetents from the city's payroll and arrested hundreds of
- others for corruption. Embarrassed by Yeltsin's increasingly
- critical tone, Gorbachev in late 1987 forced him out of the
- Politburo and humiliated him at a closed plenum of the Moscow
- party committee, after Yeltsin had made an impassioned plea for
- greater democracy. On Moscow streets the news of his downfall
- was greeted with something akin to mourning.
- </p>
- <p> Lesser souls might have languished indefinitely in the deputy
- ministerial sinecure that Gorbachev tossed Yeltsin's way as a
- consolation prize. But Yeltsin nursed himself back to both
- political and physical health and bided his time. During the 15
- months he spent in the wilderness, he built up a coterie of
- devoted friends and followers who have supported him in all his
- political ventures since then. His closest administrative and
- political assistant, Lev Sukhanov, who has been with him since
- those dark days, flew personally to the Crimea last week to
- accompany Gorbachev back to Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Partly because of his clashes with the party apparat, Yeltsin
- became known as a maverick while running the Moscow party
- committee: he was outspoken, impetuous and disdainful of
- authority. He took on the entire machine in 1989 to run as
- Moscow's delegate-at-large for the Congress of People's Deputies.
- The contest was the first nationwide multicandidate parliamentary
- election in the Soviet Union since 1918, and Yeltsin's combative
- campaign won him the support of 89% of Moscow's 6 million voters,
- an astonishing accolade from the usually cynical and apathetic
- populace.
- </p>
- <p> He faced a more skeptical audience in the Congress of
- People's Deputies. It was not until late in 1989 that Moscow's
- reformers became convinced that Yeltsin had undergone a genuine
- conversion to democracy. What persuaded the small prodemocratic
- interregional group in the Congress of People's Deputies was
- Yeltsin's willingness to work with younger and far more radical
- deputies and learn from them about issues he had never been
- familiar with, like economic privatization and the Baltics' case
- for independence. "Despite his age, he is teachable," says
- Galina Starovoitova, a senior Soviet and Russian national
- legislator and a longtime ally of the late Andrei Sakharov. "He
- has a skill at listening to people."
- </p>
- <p> But not everybody else was yet persuaded. During a quirky,
- rushed trip to the U.S. in September 1989, when he first met
- George Bush, Yeltsin had to recover from a botched public
- appearance at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. He had been
- drinking during the night and surprised his hosts the next day
- with his spirited, prankish behavior. His early reputation in the
- circles of the U.S. foreign policy establishment as a lightweight
- stemmed from an encounter with National Security Adviser Brent
- Scowcroft on the same trip. Yeltsin seemed at first unaware of
- who Scowcroft was: he was determined to meet Bush, the Russian
- insisted. Not surprisingly, "senior Administration official"
- comments on Yeltsin thereafter were coldly dismissive.
- </p>
- <p> That was followed last June, however, by Yeltsin's great
- triumph, his successful campaign for the Russian presidency. In
- the process he was transformed again into a publicly impassioned
- nationalist who called his country "sick," demanded a new union
- treaty and castigated Gorbachev for half measures on political
- and economic reform. Through it all, his judgments were not
- always sound. He dismayed many admirers last February, for
- example, by bluntly calling for Gorbachev's resignation on
- national television.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike the high-profile Gorbachev and Raisa, Yeltsin leads a
- reclusive home life. His wife Anastasia rarely appears in public.
- The couple have two daughters, two granddaughters and one
- grandson, also named Boris. Yeltsin plays tennis at least once a
- week and is an avowed admirer of the works of the anticommunist
- Nobel laureate Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, as well as the traditional
- classics: Pushkin, Lermontov, Turgenev. Again unlike Gorbachev,
- he has no intellectual ambitions, nor is he self-consciously
- "cultured."
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin's taste for raw political combat has surely been
- whetted by his stunning success last week. It is an important and
- to some extent worrisome question whether he will be able to
- control his triumphalist instincts in the days and weeks ahead.
- Now more than ever, the contrast between his personality and
- Gorbachev's may be the issue. Where Gorbachev is sophisticated
- and quick on his feet, Yeltsin speaks bluntly and seems
- uncomfortable with cut-and-thrust discussions. Where Yeltsin
- likes face-to-face airing of differences, Gorbachev seems to
- detest confrontation. Most important, the two men differ
- profoundly on political philosophy: Gorbachev is the stubborn
- adherent to socialism, Yeltsin the burning convert to democracy.
- </p>
- <p> "If Gorbachev didn't have a Yeltsin, he would have to invent
- him," Yeltsin wrote wryly in his 1990 autobiography, Against the
- Grain. The question now is, If Gorbachev is not there, against
- what opponent will Yeltsin seek to match himself? Against the
- Soviet bureaucracy? Against George Bush? Or, like a latter-day
- Peter the Great, against the recalcitrant, politically
- inexperienced Russian people?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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