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- <text id=89TT2553>
- <link 90TT2818>
- <link 90TT1175>
- <link 90TT0426>
- <title>
- Oct. 02, 1989: Soviet Union:His Vision Thing
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- The New USSR And Eastern Europe
- Oct. 02, 1989 A Day In The Life Of China
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 22
- SOVIET UNION
- His Vision Thing
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A master of power politics, Gorbachev still lacks a well-
- conceived blueprint for the new economic structure he so
- desperately needs
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan
- </p>
- <p> Anxiety and apprehension seem to pervade Moscow whenever
- Mikhail Gorbachev is out of town. But for much of August, with
- the Soviet President off on his annual vacation in the Crimea,
- the capital showed symptoms of panic. Conservative members of
- the Politburo were warning that the country could be slipping
- out of control. Government officials were speculating openly
- about the possibility of a coup. A rock group climbed the Soviet
- hit parade with a song whose refrain was "We are anticipating
- civil war." Arriving home, Gorbachev, looking tanned and
- vigorous after four weeks on the Black Sea shore, went straight
- to the Kremlin television studio and accused conservatives and
- radicals of creating an atmosphere of "despair and uncertainty."
- </p>
- <p> Mikhail Sergeyevich the political wizard was back onstage.
- With seeming effortlessness, he cashiered three full members and
- two nonvoting members of the ruling Politburo, foot draggers
- all, and promoted to their posts four men he apparently
- considers more reliable. He won unanimous approval of his
- compromise plan to bring forward the next party congress to
- October 1990 so he can purge still more recalcitrants on the
- 251-member Central Committee. With Gorbachev flexing his
- muscles, talk of a coup--at least the Kremlin-corridor variety
- that ousted Nikita Khrushchev in 1964--appeared misplaced. But
- at the same time his virtuoso display of political control
- highlighted a central question: If he can hire and fire the
- country's most powerful men, why hasn't perestroika--his plan
- to restructure the economy--paid off in the currency the
- country demands, a better standard of living for Soviet
- citizens?
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev did his star turn during a two-day Central
- Committee meeting in Moscow that was 18 months in the planning.
- It focused on the ominous wave of nationalism that refuses to
- ebb: resurgent independence movements in the Baltic states, the
- Ukraine and Moldavia; rioting and murder among rival ethnic
- groups in the southern republics of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia
- and Uzbekistan, in which at least 232 people have been killed
- in the past 18 months.
- </p>
- <p> It would have been unrealistic to expect the plenum to
- resolve chronic problems of empire that have bedeviled Czars and
- party leaders alike. Nevertheless, the outcome was noticeably
- flat and predictable. The party's new platform offered vague
- promises of economic and cultural autonomy to the 15 national
- republics but warned that secession or the revision of borders
- was unacceptable. Violence would be met with the "full force of
- Soviet laws," the platform warned. Yet all this has been said
- before, and seems unlikely to end the fighting over
- Nagorno-Karabakh or cool the breakaway passions in the Baltic
- states. On Friday the Lithuanian Communist Party defied Moscow
- with a declaration that it is "seeking independence in the
- course of perestroika."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev used the close of the Central Committee plenum to
- purge one-quarter of the twelve voting members of the
- Politburo. He ousted three aging conservatives: Ukrainian party
- chief Vladimir Shcherbitsky, 71; former KGB chairman Viktor
- Chebrikov, 66; and agriculture specialist Viktor Nikonov, 60.
- Gorbachev's main nemesis, Yegor Ligachev, 68, stays on, but
- Western diplomats believe it suits the President to have a
- significant figure to his right as a counterweight to Boris
- Yeltsin on his left so he can bill himself as a
- middle-of-the-roader. Gorbachev promoted new KGB chief Vladimir
- Kryuchkov, 65, and chief economic planner Yuri Maslyukov, 51.
- While both are considered supporters of perestroika, they are
- also veteran members of the party apparat, come from the same
- ideological mold as the men they replaced and give no hint of
- brilliance.
- </p>
- <p> Plainly Gorbachev is hamstrung by the narrow pool of party
- cadres he has to choose from and uncertainty over who is
- capable of putting his plans into action and managing them
- effectively. In fact, the purged Nikonov was appointed by
- Gorbachev with high hopes just three years ago. Moreover,
- Gorbachev has never had the vast party bureaucracy and probably
- not even a majority of the Central Committee fully behind him.
- </p>
- <p> But more important, it is not clear that he has a detailed
- vision of what kind of system he wants to replace the old one
- with--a free market economy, a form of democratic socialism
- or simply a more efficient state monopoly. At last week's
- meeting, Gorbachev dismissed all claims "that we are unable to
- resolve problems facing the country without introducing
- capitalism into the economy." So far, though, perestroika has
- been a series of slogans rather than a well-structured set of
- programs. American Sovietologist Abraham Becker of the Rand
- Corp. concludes that Gorbachev came to power with a narrow view
- of the country's problem and what was needed to reform it. "He
- believed erroneously that drastic but elementary personnel
- changes, a shaking up of the cadres, would turn around the
- bureaucracy," says Becker. The Carnegie Endowment's Dimitri
- Simes thinks time for such tinkering is running out. "Gorbachev
- has to decide what kind of Soviet Union he wants, what kind of
- vision for it he has," Simes says.
- </p>
- <p> Soviet and foreign analysts disagree on whether ethnic
- turmoil or economic failure is the greater threat to Gorbachev.
- There is no doubt, though, that the peril is real. "Even after
- this week," observed former British Ambassador to Washington Sir
- Oliver Wright, "the odds are against him." A Soviet political
- scientist in Moscow, Yevgeni Ambartsumov, is equally grim. "The
- threat of economic collapse exists," he says. "Things are
- getting worse."
- </p>
- <p> There is no shortage of suggestions on what Gorbachev
- should do. Western economists advise some breathtakingly
- sweeping changes: decontrol prices, end huge state subsidies,
- expand the private sector, open a capital market with realistic
- interest rates. Soviet specialists call for something more
- elusive: effective leadership. Says Oleg Bogomolov, director of
- Moscow's Institute of Economics of the World Socialist System:
- "To sustain perestroika, a new speedup, more radical change, is
- required." Gorbachev, adds Ambartsumov, "talks too much and
- doesn't carry through his decisions."
- </p>
- <p> With hindsight, some British experts suspect that Gorbachev
- was led into fundamental errors by his own dynamism,
- self-confidence and impatience. Says a senior British official:
- "He moved on all fronts simultaneously, which has confronted him
- with all the country's problems at once." Many Soviet scholars
- regard the party bureaucracy as the main obstacle to reform and
- argue that Gorbachev, despite top-level housecleaning, has so
- far failed to sweep out conservatives and dead wood at the
- middle and local levels, where things get done--or don't.
- Others say glasnost unleashed pent-up ethnic resentment. By
- attacking across the board, Gorbachev only produced confusion,
- resistance and rampant nationalism. Says a Foreign Office expert
- in London: "You don't have to be a Soviet conservative to think
- he should have exercised more control."
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, that is exactly what he did in applying
- perestroika to foreign affairs. Gorbachev knew where he wanted
- to go and how to get there. He moved first to improve
- U.S.-Soviet relations, which he considered pivotal. To prove his
- bona fides, he withdrew Soviet troops from Afghanistan and
- supported regional settlements in Africa and Latin America. He
- followed up by renouncing intervention in the affairs of Eastern
- Europe. His steady march toward nuclear-arms reduction often
- caught the U.S. off guard and vastly impressed Western Europe.
- His sure hand on foreign policy has been so convincing that some
- American congressional leaders are complaining that the Bush
- Administration is responding too tentatively.
- </p>
- <p> But Gorbachev could still overestimate the practical value
- of a warmer relationship with the U.S. Like so many foreign
- leaders with domestic problems, Gorbachev might be looking to
- Washington to bail him out of his crisis with pledges of
- cooperation and signs of acceptance. That would be a mistake.
- Not even a series of major triumphs abroad could compensate for
- the lack of a blueprint to make perestroika work at home.
- </p>
- <p>-- Ann Blackman/Moscow and William Mader/London
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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