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- <text id=93TT0387>
- <title>
- Oct. 11, 1993: Sorry State Of Siege
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 47
- Sorry State Of Siege
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Yeltsin has a serious mess on his hands as the political crisis
- refuses to end
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN KOHAN/MOSCOW
- </p>
- <p> They marched in the crisp gold sunlight of a perfect autumn
- afternoon. Some 10,000 strong, they chanted "Soviet Union, Soviet
- Union," "Yeltsin is Dead," as they braved a hail of rubber bullets
- and tear gas from troops loyal to Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
- Breaching police lines, the demonstrators recaptured the plaza
- behind the barricaded White House, where 100 or so deputies
- of the disbanded Russian Parliament, along with their aides
- and security men remained in defiance of Yeltsin. Former Vice
- President Alexander Rutskoi, a brief case held protectively
- before his chest, addressed the mob in fiery language, commanding
- them to "stand up, take positions...and attack." With that,
- the tense stand-off that has paralyzed Russia for nearly two
- weeks teetered into total chaos.
- </p>
- <p> Overwhelming troops from the Interior Ministry, the demonstrators
- grabbed shields and guns from their opponents, commandeered
- several military vehicles, and swarmed south to the mammoth
- high rise that houses Moscow's mayor. Within an hour, the mob
- had seized control of the building. They then moved on to Ostenkino,
- the national television broadcasting center and seized it without
- any apparent resistance from pro-Yeltsin troops.
- </p>
- <p> By nightfall, forces loyal to Yeltsin finally began to muster
- their response. Yeltsin, who had left Moscow for an afternoon
- in the country, rushed back by helicopter to personally direct
- the counter offensive declaring a state of emergency. However,
- troops inexplicably refused to maintain their defenses by force.
- </p>
- <p> In Washington a worried President Clinton was briefed on the
- chaotic situation in Moscow. "It is clear that the violence
- was perpetrated by the Rutskoi-Khasbulatov forces. President
- Yeltsin has bent over backwards to avoid excessive force and
- I still am convinced that the United States must support him
- and the process of bringing about free and fair elections."
- </p>
- <p> Earlier in the week, a dozen defenders of the White House peered
- out over a makeshift barricade of cobblestones and scrap metal,
- welcoming visitors to "the First Boris Yeltsin Concentration
- Camp." Striving to be heard above the din, Vladimir Chernov,
- one of the Deputies holed up in the White House, stepped to
- the edge of the cordon to shout out the latest news from inside.
- He dismissed any talk of compromise. "How can you trust them?"
- he asked. "They have made these young boys take up arms against
- their own people."
- </p>
- <p> In the streets, the pushing and shoving between government troops
- and supporters of the parliamentary holdouts grew rougher. Flak-jacketed
- riot police lashed out at protesters, swinging truncheons and
- body-size shields as they charged stocky babushkas, or grandmothers,
- who yelled "Shame!" at the rows of Yeltsin forces. "If you were
- my sons," shrieked a hysterical woman, "I would strangle you
- with my bare hands, you traitors!"
- </p>
- <p> As the political crisis dragged into its second week, one thing
- was clear: Yeltsin was facing the crisis of his life. If the
- President thought his hard-line enemies in the legislature could
- be easily pushed aside after he issued his decree dissolving
- the parliament, he was mistaken. The Kremlin enticed some parliamentarians
- out with promises of new jobs, then sealed the building off
- with police lines, water trucks, and razor-sharp coils of barbed
- wire. But the hard core of Deputies remaining loyal to Rutskoi
- and Khasbulatov simply refused to budge.
- </p>
- <p> Only the mediation efforts of Patriarch Alexiy II, head of the
- Russian Orthodox Church, who offered his services last week
- as a go-between, brought some hope for ending the impasse. After
- two days of tough negotiations at Moscow's Danilovsky Monastery,
- representatives from the Kremlin and the White House agreed
- last Saturday to work out a step-by-step plan for a joint reduction
- of weapons and guards at the parliament over a two-day period.
- They also discussed the issue of "safety guarantees" for the
- defenders of the White House. One key obstacle remained: any
- accord would have to be approved by parliament, which rejected
- an earlier peace plan. As Deputy Mikhail Chelnokov put it, "The
- most important question to be discussed is not weapons but Yeltsin's
- coup d'etat."
- </p>
- <p> It was certainly possible that if the Deputies turned down the
- latest disarmament deal, the Kremlin might feel forced to launch
- an assault on the White House, but a bloody outcome could rebound
- against Yeltsin, shifting Russian sympathies toward the martyred
- Deputies. He also has his international image to think about.
- As the deadlock continued, Western governments grew nervous
- about what his next move might be: they have swallowed Yel-tsin's
- violations of the constitution so far, but any violence could
- scare democratic governments away. After Washington expressed
- concern about possible violations of "human rights" last week,
- Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev felt obliged to state once again
- that "there was no intention and is no intention to use force."
- </p>
- <p> The danger for Yeltsin is that his hold on power would be eroded
- the longer the siege goes on. He is already struggling to keep
- the conflict from spreading into Russia's 88 republics and regions,
- as Khasbulatov claimed that "dictator Yeltsin does not control
- the country outside of Moscow." The President's strength is
- shakier among the regional legislatures dominated by former
- Soviet apparatchiks who share parliament's distaste for radical
- reform. In a warning signal of troubles to come, lawmakers in
- Siberia vowed to set up their own republic, withhold tax revenues
- and even disrupt the Trans-Siberian Railroad if Yeltsin did
- not end the White House blockade. Conservative legislators from
- 60 republics and regions gathered in Moscow's Constitutional
- Court building to condemn the President's decrees. These politicians,
- eager to stake out their own authority beyond Moscow's weakened
- government, have demanded that Yeltsin grant them a major role
- in organizing elections and rewriting the constitution.
- </p>
- <p> Presidential adviser Sergei Filatov insisted that Yeltsin still
- commanded popular support in the provinces as well as the allegiance
- of regional administrators he appointed. But the President was
- taking no chances last week as he dispatched Kremlin envoys
- from the Urals to the Pacific coast for eight separate meetings
- with regional leaders. Yeltsin may need his supporters in the
- hinterlands to contain the political damage caused by the siege
- at the White House. He has summoned his Federation Council,
- a consulting group of provincial leaders, to meet next week,
- and could use the forum as a kind of interim parliament.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin got plenty of advice about how to end the conflict from
- centrist political parties and Russian Constitutional Court
- chairman Valeri Zorkin. All the compromises hinged on holding
- simultaneous elections for both the parliament and the presidency--the so-called zero option that Yeltsin has long opposed and
- roundly dismissed as "extremely dangerous." He believes the
- President ought to remain in office during the legislative vote
- to prevent a power vacuum from forming, and then stand for election
- later. Yeltsin has to be seen as winning his point about holding
- an early vote for a new parliament or the whole exercise in
- suspending the legislature will appear to have been a farce.
- </p>
- <p> As the crisis lurched toward some undefined denouement last
- week, Yeltsin could still claim the upper hand. He appeared
- to have the army and the security services under firm control.
- Public opinion remained on his side, in no small measure because
- of heavily slanted press reports. Even as angry supporters of
- the parliament, numbering in the thousands, staged nightly street
- clashes with riot police, most Muscovites continued to watch
- events from the sidelines, swearing at the massive traffic jams
- that snarled center-city boulevards. Yeltsin had to ask himself
- how long he could let the standoff continue before ordinary
- Russians began to doubt the wisdom of his power play and lambaste
- him for being too weak or question his commitment to democratic
- reforms. It all came down to a far from simple question: Were
- all hopes of compromise now dead?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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