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- <text id=91TT2019>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: Soviet Union:Knell of the Union
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- SOVIET UNION
- Knell of the Union?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In concert with republic leaders, Gorbachev erects a shaky new
- central structure and emerges as the Great Coordinator
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by James Carney/Moscow, Dan Goodgame/
- Washington and William Mader/London
- </p>
- <p> After four days of pitching their hastily improvised
- vision of a loosely knit union of sovereign states to wary
- Soviet legislators, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin tried
- to sell an equally skeptical audience on the viability of their
- new enterprise. In an extraordinary live broadcast orchestrated
- by ABC television that linked U.S. viewers with the Kremlin's
- St. George's Hall, the Soviet and Russian presidents sought to
- allay American fears that there would be any backsliding toward
- communism.
- </p>
- <p> "I think this experiment that was conducted on our soil
- was a tragedy for our people," said Yeltsin.
- </p>
- <p> "That model has failed," concurred Gorbachev. "I believe
- that this is a lesson not only for our people, but for all
- peoples."
- </p>
- <p> Playing up their new partnership, the two leaders smiled
- and quipped before the cameras, alternately deferring to each
- other. But as they fielded American viewers' questions, the
- underlying tension in their respective agendas was palpable.
- While Gorbachev repeatedly stressed the need for "cooperation"
- between the republics and for a new central order, Yeltsin
- preferred to press the interests of his Russian state.
- </p>
- <p> What, then, to make of the legislative spectacle in Moscow
- last week during which a re-energized Gorbachev delivered the
- coup de grace to the mortally wounded carcass of communism?
- Working in concert with Yeltsin and the leaders of nine other
- republics, Gorbachev rammed through laws that both eradicated
- the final traces of authoritarianism and erected a shaky central
- structure to guide the republics toward confederation. After
- four days of acrimonious wrangling, the Congress of People's
- Deputies endorsed by a vote of 1,682 to 43 a sketchy
- transitional government that establishes an executive State
- Council and two subordinate bodies, a reconstructed parliament
- and an Inter-Republican Economic Committee. In tandem, and
- largely at the sufferance of the increasingly restless
- republics, the task of these organs will be twofold: to provide
- the glue that maintains some semblance of unity and to convince
- the world that there is still a there in Moscow with which to
- deal.
- </p>
- <p> While the overwhelming vote gave the impression of slowing
- the Soviet free fall precipitated by the Aug. 19 coup, the
- newly created bodies were ill defined and presented only a
- stopgap solution. It was impossible to predict how much of a
- counterforce they would exert against the centrifugal strains
- unleashed by the Big Bang of the failed coup. As it was, the
- first act of the State Council, a body made up of Gorbachev and
- the top officials of 10 republics, was to grant independence to
- the three Baltic republics. The move, which a mere month ago
- would have dazzled the world, last week seemed belated and
- inevitable, coming four days after the U.S. had extended formal
- recognition to Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and scores of
- other nations had already done the same.
- </p>
- <p> At best, the transitional government can buy time as the
- splintering Soviet Union struggles to enact sweeping free-market
- reforms that must be centrally coordinated if the republics hope
- to bring their bankrupt economies into the 20th century. The
- rump authority can also try to write a new constitution and
- serve to persuade an international community that progress is
- being made on such crucial matters as the upholding of treaty
- obligations, nuclear disarmament and economic reform. "Let me
- tell you, the West is watching," Gorbachev warned the Congress
- last week. "If we are able to coordinate, unite within new
- forms, find new structures, the West will support us."
- </p>
- <p> But will these republics, most of them freshly sovereign
- by self-proclamation, be able to unite in common cause now that
- the boot of the coercive state has been lifted? Last week's
- hard-won consensus left more questions than it answered. Who,
- for instance, will wield the greater influence within the State
- Council: Gorbachev or the republic leaders? Will there continue
- to be a need for a confederative President? Or constitution?
- Most important, how effectively will this new center check the
- disintegration of the union, and for how long can it hold?
- Voices of caution that proved prescient in the recent past
- sounded new alarms. Warned former Foreign Minister Eduard
- Shevardnadze: "The struggle between the democrats and the
- reactionaries is not over."
- </p>
- <p> That much was in evidence early last week as members of
- the highest legislative body in the land descended on Moscow
- for an emergency session. In reformist corridors, there were
- loud warnings of a pending "constitutional putsch" in which
- conservatives would rout Gorbachev from his presidency. But in
- one of those unpredictable twists that have become the
- breathless stuff of which Soviet history is made, it was
- Gorbachev who corralled the required two-thirds vote to consign
- the Congress to oblivion--and it was the recalcitrant
- hard-liners who wound up complaining of an unconstitutional
- coup.
- </p>
- <p> If Gorbachev's performance was a taste of the cracked
- empire's dawning democracy, it smacked of democracy by decree.
- Though the transitional plan was presented by Nursultan
- Nazarbayev, the president of Kazakhstan--a clever ploy to
- underscore the new importance of the republics--it was
- Gorbachev who cowed the Deputies into submission. Alternately
- shutting off microphones to silence opposition, flouting rules
- and berating the Deputies like naughty schoolchildren, Gorbachev
- imposed his will. On Day 4, he delivered an ultimatum. "If we
- can't agree on this, the Congress ceases to work," he said,
- making it clear that if all else failed, he and the republic
- presidents would push through the reforms by decree.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, hard-liners, threatened with the loss of their
- last remaining privileges, retreated behind the threadbare
- mantle of the Soviet constitution to press their demand that
- reforms proceed in a "legal" manner. It was an ironic line,
- coming from those who had overtly or passively backed the
- plainly unconstitutional coup attempt. In the end, their support
- was bought with what amounted to a bribe: the right to continue
- enjoying perks such as apartments and cars until 1994, when
- their terms would have expired, as well as salary payments worth
- $175 a month.
- </p>
- <p> Old-fashioned conservatives were not the only ones
- agitated by the high-handed manner in which Gorbachev and the
- republic leaders railroaded their plan through the Congress. "We
- should stop treating the constitution like a whore, adjusting
- it to the lusts of any new ruler," argued Alexander Obolensky,
- a gadfly Deputy with a liberal bent. But such rhetorical
- arpeggios were offset by equally impressive flourishes from
- democracy-minded reformers who were not about to let a creaky
- constitution stand in their way. "It's not correct to say
- Congress was forced to its knees," radical Deputy Ilya Zaslavsky
- said, tweaking his colleagues. "This Congress was never off its
- knees in the first place."
- </p>
- <p> Through it all, Gorbachev and his former political
- nemesis, Yeltsin, remained in lockstep. Gorbachev signaled both
- that he understood the tenuousness of his position and that he
- had no intention of crossing Yeltsin or any of the other
- republic leaders. "Today you have a President. Tomorrow you may
- have another President," he told the Congress midway through
- the session. "In any case, we are all one, side by side, and we
- shouldn't spit on each other." Yeltsin, in turn, allowed that
- Gorbachev had returned from his Crimea internment a changed man.
- "He found within himself the courage to change his views,"
- Yeltsin said. "I personally believe in Gorbachev today."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev apparently believed in Gorbachev too. Half
- bully, half beggar, he appeared fully recovered from the lack
- of political surefootedness that had attended his return from
- the Crimea. Gorbachev seemed to accept the reality that the
- transitional structure he had so forcefully championed severely
- circumscribed his powers as the nation's chief executive. He
- took easily to his self-created role as the Great Coordinator.
- It was a position that no one else could fill, and one that
- republic officials, perhaps overwhelmed by recent events,
- yielded gratefully. Gorbachev is "the man who unites all
- others," said Yuri Shcherbak, a leading Deputy from Ukraine. "In
- this he plays a critical role."
- </p>
- <p> While Gorbachev's continuation at the helm now seemed
- assured for some time, it was difficult to tell what drove him.
- Pragmatism? Resignation? A determination to salvage what he
- could of his crumbling empire? And his crumbling job? "Gorbachev
- is a great believer in the precept that if you can't beat them,
- join them," suggested Sir Bryan Cartledge, a former British
- ambassador to Moscow. Perhaps. But no one in recent memory has
- reversed course with greater resiliency and panache. As
- Gorbachev intoned, "A new reality has emerged in the country,"
- it was easy to forget that just three short weeks ago, he
- remained under the sway of communist stalwarts.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin, by contrast, stepped back, ceding center stage
- after two weeks in the limelight. Singed by the outcry that he
- had touched off a week earlier when he precipitously threatened
- to "review" Russia's borders with other republics, Yeltsin
- perhaps understood intuitively that his role as leader of the
- new Russian nationalism precluded him from effectively playing
- the arbiter's role. To allay fears that Gorbachev might be
- acting as his front man for a resurgent Russia, Yeltsin promised
- that his gargantuan republic would not dominate any
- confederative structure. "The Russian state, which has chosen
- democracy and freedom, will never be an empire, neither a
- younger nor an elder brother," he said. "It will be an equal
- among equals."
- </p>
- <p> It was a message aimed not only at fellow Deputies but
- also abroad, particularly at the Oval Office. The avalanche of
- decrees that Yeltsin issued in the immediate wake of the putsch,
- coupled with his initial high-handed treatment of Gorbachev, did
- much to undermine the goodwill and trust that Yeltsin had built
- with the Bush Administration during the heady three days of the
- coup. Wariness prevailed last week. "The man clearly has courage
- and political talent," said a White House insider. "But he's
- also clearly a demagogue and an opportunist, and we'd be fools
- if we didn't worry about those tendencies."
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Bush Administration seemed confident enough
- of Gorbachev's continued stewardship not only to accord
- recognition to the Baltics but also to set forth "five
- principles" that would govern the U.S. response to the rapidly
- shifting situation in the Soviet Union. Tipping its preference
- for a clearly delineated central authority that could oversee
- inter- and intra-republic conflicts, the Administration
- emphasized the need for orderly and peaceful change, safeguards
- to ensure the rights of ethnic minorities, and respect for
- international obligations.
- </p>
- <p> There were hints that the U.S. Administration might soon
- venture further. Just hours after the Soviet legislature
- concluded its business, President Bush summoned his top advisers
- for a secret meeting. Discussion centered on concern that now
- that the Soviets had cobbled together a working relationship
- between the center and the republics, the Administration would
- no longer be able to drag its feet on economic and defense
- policy questions. Secretary of State James Baker argued
- forcefully, as he had at a Cabinet meeting the previous day, for
- a more aggressive program of economic aid that would go beyond
- immediate humanitarian measures. "Nationalism can turn to
- fascism," he warned the Cabinet. "If they move to fascism, or
- slip back to communism, we will get the blame."
- </p>
- <p> While the demonstration of cohesion in Moscow dominated
- Washington's field of vision, there was ample restiveness in the
- republics to stir concern. Most alarming was the violence
- unleashed in Georgia when the republic's dictatorial president
- responded to mounting calls for his resignation by ordering a
- police crackdown. In the ensuing mayhem, at least five
- demonstrators and 21 police were wounded. Moldavia's Dniester
- region, populated largely by Ukrainians and Russians, declared
- its independence from the republic, which is moving to distance
- itself from Moscow and renew ties with neighboring Romania. To
- the west, in Chechen-Ingush, an autonomous republic of the
- Russian Federation, pro-democracy forces surrounded the
- parliament building and demanded that the government resign. In
- response, Soviet television reported, the region's president
- declared a state of emergency.
- </p>
- <p> Even the Baltic republic of Lithuania gave cause for
- concern. Since early this year, the new government has
- exonerated at least 1,000 Lithuanians convicted by Soviet courts
- for allegedly collaborating with the Nazis. Although the
- republic denied that it had knowingly rehabilitated anyone
- guilty of genocide, the action provoked protests from Jewish
- organizations in the U.S. and Israel. It also left the Bush
- Administration in the uncomfortable position of warning against
- extrajudicial exonerations at the very moment Washington was
- renewing diplomatic ties with Vilnius.
- </p>
- <p> Given the welter of events, the only certainty was that
- the various republics will improvise as they go, pushing the
- boundaries of their independence to see where the points of
- resistance may lie. The same can be expected of the freshly
- manufactured central structure, as it sorts out which republics
- will fully join in a new confederation and which will opt for
- either associate or observer status. Optimists predicted that
- having broken apart, the republics will fast recognize their
- joint interests. But if the new State Council unravels or is
- paralyzed by disagreement, the attempt to restore some coherence
- will be short-lived--and a disillusioned populace may find new
- merit in the predictable positions of the old hard-line.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-