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- <text id=91TT1975>
- <link 91TT0654>
- <link 90TT0425>
- <link 89TT0310>
- <title>
- Sep. 09, 1991: A Character in Search of a Role
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 09, 1991 Power Vacuum
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 42
- SOVIET UNION
- A Chastened Character In Search of a Role
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Humiliated but determined to hang on to his powers, Mikhail
- Gorbachev exerts his formidable strength
- </p>
- <p>By John Kohan/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> One thing can be said for Mikhail Gorbachev: he certainly has
- a strong survival instinct. After committing enough errors of
- judgment to have wrecked the careers of a dozen or so Western
- politicians, he was back on the job at the Kremlin last week,
- chastened, humiliated, but as determined as ever to hold on to
- his powers as President of the Soviet Union. Never mind that the
- Communist Party was no more, the central government dissolved,
- the security services and armed forces undergoing a painful purge
- and the Soviet parliament in total disarray. The failed putsch
- may have left a gaping hole at the very center of power, but
- Gorbachev was toiling to fill it by the sheer force of his
- presence.
- </p>
- <p> Flushed with their victory on the barricades of Moscow, the
- resurgent Russians, led by Boris Yeltsin, seemed to have had
- other plans in mind for the President once they restored him to
- power. Yeltsin has been thinking of a considerably weakened role
- for his former rival in a future bare-bones Union: Gorbachev
- glad-handing visiting heads of state, Gorbachev keeping the
- country's electric grid in working order or Gorbachev making
- certain the trains run on time. As one brazen Russian slogan put
- it, "Misha, don't forget under whose flag you were rescued."
- </p>
- <p> But the Soviet President signaled last week that he had not
- returned from house arrest in the Crimea to become a hostage of
- the Russians. He cautioned the parliament against jumping to the
- conclusion that "the Russian leadership has shoved aside the
- President of the country." He felt sufficiently confident to
- chastise Yeltsin for meddling in the affairs of the larger Union.
- Gorbachev obviously believes he still has an independent role to
- play in shaping the evolution of a new Soviet Union. But does
- anyone else?
- </p>
- <p> In the immediate aftermath of the coup, bookmakers would have
- set odds against a Gorbachev comeback at 100 to 1. But his
- chances seem to be improving with each passing day. His fervent
- conversion to the cause of radical reform has no doubt helped
- boost his standing, but he has probably benefited even more from
- the erratic behavior of Yeltsin. The Russian president cuts a
- commanding figure on flag-draped balconies, issuing stirring
- calls for the defense of freedom, but he seems uncomfortable
- maneuvering in the corridors of power, where Gorbachev is most at
- home.
- </p>
- <p> In contrast to the mercurial Yeltsin, Gorbachev is safe and
- sound. Consider, for example, Yeltsin's statement on Russian
- territorial claims against other republics. It seemed to explode
- on the political scene like a firecracker tossed by some impish
- prankster. Then, in characteristic style, the Russian leader
- slunk out of Moscow, leaving no official word of his whereabouts,
- though he was presumed to be on his way to one of the Baltic
- republics. Such acts are the stuff of grand legends, not sound
- policies. And they are most definitely not characteristic of the
- cautious Gorbachev style of leadership.
- </p>
- <p> Detractors of the Soviet President have accused him in the
- past of wanting to be a dictator. He did have such power, but he
- was always reluctant--sometimes too reluctant--to use it.
- When the conspirators asked Gorbachev to join the plot, he
- refused and honored his vow as the first President of the Soviet
- Union to "defend the constitution." He speaks often now about the
- importance of zakonnost--legality--in the aftermath of the
- coup. Such admonitions are of crucial importance if a law-
- governed state is to emerge on the territory of the shattered
- Union--and Gorbachev still has the authority to utter them.
- </p>
- <p> The passive failure of the Soviet Union's new parliamentary
- democracy during the coup has bolstered the case for rule by
- presidential decree. Unlike Gorbachev, Yeltsin has shown no
- hesitation in forcing the pace of democratic change by ukase. But
- his order to muzzle the Communist Party press was an early
- warning signal of how fundamental rights might be endangered in
- the process. Gorbachev remains the only leader of sufficient
- stature to put a check on the excesses of the new Russian
- revolution--and of Yeltsin--if only because of the
- constitutional office he holds.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin may talk about doing away with the central
- authorities, but he still wants some kind of union. Yet the
- failed coup has inspired a mass exodus of republics, fearful of
- the restoration of a new Russian empire under Czar Boris.
- Although Gorbachev's statement that "the Soviet President and the
- Russian parliament need each other" drew jeers from Russian
- Deputies, that claim may yet be vindicated. Gorbachev can
- certainly play a crucial role now as an independent mediator,
- power broker and guarantor of a new Union.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev proved his skills as a go-between when he
- negotiated the last, never signed union treaty. Whether the
- nation that emerges out of the rubble now takes the form of a
- federation, confederation or commonwealth, there will still be a
- need for some kind of governmental body to judge the conflicting
- claims of the member states. The President of the Soviet Union is
- the logical candidate to assume such an executive role, and that
- means Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> The coup has taken some of the luster off the Kremlin's Nobel
- Peace laureate in the eyes of the outside world, but Gorbachev
- still remains the one Soviet politician with whom international
- leaders feel comfortable doing business. In diplomacy the Yeltsin
- factor looms large. His heroic stand against the conspirators won
- him applause abroad, but foreign diplomats are less enthusiastic
- about what they have seen of the Russian president since the
- putsch was crushed. Gorbachev's prestige abroad will prove to be
- important capital in the bank, especially now that his homeland
- is entering a new era of absorption with domestic problems.
- </p>
- <p> There is also the question of who will speak for this new
- conglomerate of states, who will guarantee treaties signed with
- the old Soviet Union, who will provide continuity with the
- foreign policy of the past and help interpret the themes and
- variations of each republic pursuing its own national interests.
- The international community may be lining up to grant
- recognition to the three Baltic republics; how it will deal with
- seven more candidates clamoring for full admission into the club
- is another matter. For the interim, foreign visitors will still
- want to stop first at the Kremlin to catch the familiar voice of
- Gorbachev above the babble.
- </p>
- <p> A Gorbachev-Yeltsin alliance has long been an axiom of reform
- politics in the Soviet Union. The combination may not make for
- the most stable relationship, but the two complement each other
- neatly in experience and temperament. Gorbachev is the cautious
- infighter who thinks out every move in advance; Yeltsin is the
- street brawler who goes with his heart and throws caution to the
- winds. Gorbachev is the sophisticated world traveler who shows
- presence of mind in the White House or the Vatican; Yeltsin is
- the blunt-spoken man of the people, comfortable mixing with
- workers on a shop floor. The fact that the power balance has
- shifted in Yeltsin's favor and made Gorbachev the junior partner
- does not change the basic formula.
- </p>
- <p> That is not to say that Gorbachev might not be out on the
- street in the coming months. He might also find himself relegated
- to the role of caretaker President, able like the prophet Moses
- to lead his people to the promised land but not destined to enter
- himself. It is simply too early to tell. When leaders of the
- newly registered Democratic Party of Russian Communists, a
- radical reform group founded by Yeltsin's vice president,
- Alexander Rutskoi, were asked last week if they thought Gorbachev
- had any chance of winning a popular election for President of the
- Soviet Union, they were noticeably hesitant about giving a direct
- answer. "Who can say?" one speaker finally ventured. "Look at how
- much Gorbachev's image has changed over the past few days. Who
- knows what it will be like in even a month's time?" If events of
- the past fortnight have taught any lesson, it is this: no one
- should rush to write off Mikhail Gorbachev.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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