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- <text id=91TT1972>
- <link 91TT1964>
- <link 90TT1836>
- <link 90TT0425>
- <title>
- Sep. 09, 1991: The Party Is Over
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 09, 1991 Power Vacuum
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 48
- SOVIET UNION
- The Party Is Over
- </hdr><body>
- <p>But after 70 years of controlling everything from nurseries to
- nuclear weapons, can the communists be counted out?
- </p>
- <p>By James O. Jackson--Reported by John Kohan and Yuri
- Zarakhovich/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> At No. 4 Staraya Ploshchad, strollers stare in wonder at the
- blank windows and locked doors of the vast gray building that is
- the headquarters of the vanishing Soviet Communist Party.
- Laughter and cheers erupt as a 5-year-old boy, encouraged by his
- father, urinates on the wall. A graffitist has scrawled DOSHLI
- (We've come this far)--the slogan of Soviet soldiers fighting
- to victory over Germany in World War II.
- </p>
- <p> That building until last week was the mighty, monolithic
- power center of a party that had run the country for more than 70
- years using a combination of ruthless terror and plodding
- bureaucracy. Like party offices all across the country, it was
- shut down after the failure of the attempted coup, its assets
- frozen and its employees out on the street. Mikhail Gorbachev
- resigned as its leader and the national parliament suspended its
- activities.
- </p>
- <p> "Within an hour of the presidential order there was no one to
- talk to anymore," said Vladimir Gubarev, an editor at Pravda,
- which, like all other party newspapers, was suspended on Aug. 23
- and failed to appear for the first time since the 1917 Bolshevik
- Revolution. "There is no one in the Central Committee
- Secretariat. No one in the Politburo. They all fled like mice."
- </p>
- <p> The disappearance of the party and its minions was all the
- more stunning because it had been so ubiquitous in Soviet life.
- Its 300,000 apparatchiks, backed by a party-cell structure
- embracing 15 million rank-and-file members, supervised everything
- from kindergartens to strategic nuclear rocket forces.
- Advancement to the upper levels of politics, industry, army and
- intellectual life was virtually impossible without party
- membership. The party owned 5,254 administrative buildings, 3,583
- newspapers and 23 resorts and sanatoriums. Its cash assets last
- week were put at about 4.5 billion rubles. But as last week
- demonstrated, there was a hollowness behind the bland facade of
- power. Eaten away by corruption, nepotism, privilege and old age,
- the party could not stand up to the storm of glasnost and the
- hammering of perestroika.
- </p>
- <p> The coup's failure may have been due mainly to the leaders'
- lack of belief in the future of a party they, probably better
- than anybody else, knew was an empty fraud. In the months
- preceding the coup and collapse there were signs that top party
- bosses, sensing the end was near, had begun looting the treasury.
- The newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta reported a series of shady real
- estate deals involving top party officials and attempts to
- convert soft ruble accounts into hard currency. Just before the
- party lost control of the Moscow City Council, for example, the
- Communist chairman, Valeri Saikin, transferred 33 city buildings
- to the party free of charge. Top party leaders bought their
- palatial government-owned country houses for ludicrously low
- prices. Former Politburo member Alexandra Biryukova reportedly
- paid only 19,000 rubles for her dacha west of Moscow, although
- its real value was assessed at 754,000 rubles. Communists even
- turned to capitalists in an effort to conceal or divert their
- cash. "The Central Committee and other party organizations have
- been investing finances in shareholding companies, joint
- ventures, commercial banks and other commercial structures of
- various kinds," according to an announcement by the Soviet State
- bank, which last week froze all party funds. The bank itself may
- have been involved. The Russian Information Agency reported that
- chairman Victor Gerashchenko, who originally was fired last week
- for supporting the coup but then was reinstated, asked a U.S.-
- based firm to convert 500 million party rubles into dollars. The
- company refused.
- </p>
- <p> There were other signs of runaway corruption. The party had a
- colossal 1991 deficit of 1 billion rubles on a budget of 2.5
- billion rubles. One party source charged that a 500 million-ruble
- fund for the children of Chernobyl was diverted by local party
- committees to their own use.
- </p>
- <p> The extent of the corruption may have been what drove the
- party's top financial officer, Nikolai Kruchina, to leap to his
- death on Aug. 26 from a balcony on the seventh floor of--appropriately--a luxury Moscow apartment building set aside for
- top party officials. As the Central Committee's general affairs
- officer, Kruchina had been in charge of the party's billions and
- would have known of irregularities, if not actually been involved
- in them. Valentin Stepankov, chief prosecutor of the Russian
- Federation, said officials interviewed Kruchina about party
- financial affairs shortly before his death. "He seemed to have
- reason to be nervous," said Stepankov.
- </p>
- <p> But the prosecutor and others were concerned that some of the
- last-minute money dealings might be an attempt to bankroll an
- illegal underground party of anti-reform, communist hard-liners,
- something like the small but disciplined Bolshevik party that
- Lenin led to power in the October Revolution of 1917. "We do not
- have any valid information to that effect yet," Stepankov said.
- "But I have instructed my investigators to be on special alert
- for any documents on financial dealings and put them aside for
- special investigation."
- </p>
- <p> Even if it does not go underground, eliminating communist
- influence from the country may not be as simple as confiscating
- buildings and freezing bank accounts. Pravda's Gubarev estimates
- that two-thirds of the country's industrial and administrative
- infrastructure is run by party members accustomed to its vertical
- command structure. "It will take decades to create a new
- management system," he said. On the other hand, most of them are
- well-educated professional executives who joined the party more
- out of expediency than conviction. Freed from the constraints of
- a hidebound communist system, the most competent among them could
- be expected to quit the party and become effective administrators
- in a new market-oriented economic order.
- </p>
- <p> While it is unlikely that the party will ever regain its old
- dominance, it is not yet clear what will replace it. A spectrum
- of new groups appeared in recent weeks within the party, ranging
- from neo-Stalinist Nina Andreyeva's Bolshevik Platform in
- Leningrad to the Democratic Reform Movement created by former
- Gorbachev allies Eduard Shevardnadze and Alexander Yakovlev.
- There is also Russian Vice President Alexander Rutskoi's
- Democratic Party of Russian Communists, and a group of liberal
- academics from within the old party leadership announced plans to
- form a "new party of leftist forces." There is even a fledgling
- core of conservative, market-oriented parties in the West
- European tradition whose handful of members tend to group around
- the Democratic Russian Movement and the Democratic Reform
- Movement. But most of the emerging "noncommunist" politicians--Yeltsin, Yakovlev, Shevardnadze--are less than a year away from
- being dues-paying Communists themselves. After seven decades of
- one-party rule, the Soviet Union seems to be heading into an era
- not of multiparty politics but of nonparty politics, where
- political personalities rather than ideological positions will
- matter most to voters struggling to learn basic democracy.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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