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- <text id=90TT3060>
- <link 91TT1958>
- <link 91TT0600>
- <link 90TT1496>
- <title>
- Nov. 12, 1990: Soviet Union:Time Of Troubles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 44
- SOVIET UNION
- Time of Troubles
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The U.S.S.R. slips closer to dissolution as Boris Yeltsin leads a
- second Russian Revolution. How will Gorbachev keep the empire
- together?
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by John Kohan and Yuri
- Zarakhovich/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> For seven decades Revolution Day on Nov. 7 has been the
- Soviet holiday of holidays, celebrating the 1917 dawn of the
- Communist empire in a pageant of regimented unity. But the
- observances this week seem likely to symbolize something very
- different--where they are held at all. Officials in Moscow and
- Leningrad have criticized the traditional military parades as
- anachronistic wastes of money; parliamentarians in Latvia want
- rites honoring "victims of Communist terror"; authorities in
- Lvov in the western Ukraine resolved to ignore the anniversary
- altogether. Even after Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev
- ordered Moscow and other cities to hold the parades, some local
- leaders called for counterdemonstrations as well. No one was
- sure whose orders would be followed.
- </p>
- <p> The cacophony over Revolution Day is only a mild symptom of
- the Soviet Union's potential dissolution. Perhaps this Gorbachev
- order will be grudgingly obeyed. But many of the edicts that he
- has been issuing under a law enabling him, in theory, to govern
- virtually by decree amount to the unheard roars of a paper
- tiger. In some cases the Kremlin and the republics have been
- playing out a ritualized farce. The center, as it is now called,
- issues a Gorbachev decree; one or more republics declare it to
- be null and void on their territory; Gorbachev issues a second
- order declaring that these null-and-void declarations are
- themselves null and void.
- </p>
- <p> In the process, what was once one of the world's most
- tightly centralized states continues to fall apart. In the past
- few weeks, Kazakhstan in Central Asia became the 14th of the 15
- republics to declare its sovereignty. A nationalist alliance
- calling itself the Round Table won 54% of the vote in
- parliamentary elections in the republic of Georgia on a platform
- that opposes signing a new treaty of union with the central
- government. The Ukrainian government last week began
- distributing coupons to be used for the purchase of various
- goods, a step toward introducing its own currency. The
- Belorussian republic recently enacted measures regulating
- exports to other republics or abroad, and Armenia did the same
- last week.
- </p>
- <p> The newest fad is for even more atomization: not just
- republics but pieces of republics and even single cities are
- proclaiming themselves sovereign. Within the Russian federation,
- the Chuvash, Buryat, Kalmyk, Tatar, Mari, Komi, Yakut, Karelian
- and Bashkir autonomous republics, each the homeland of a
- distinct ethnic group, have all called for some form of
- separatism. Districts like the Irkutsk region of Siberia have
- adopted declarations of "equality and independence," and the
- city of Nizhni-Novgorod has petitioned the federation for
- special status.
- </p>
- <p> By far the most intense and significant conflict, however,
- is the tug-of-war between the Kremlin and the White House. That
- is what Muscovites jokingly call the marble-faced skyscraper
- perched on an embankment along the Moscow river that houses the
- government of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic.
- This immense land, stretching from the Arctic to the subtropics
- and from the Polish border to the North Pacific, contains 147
- million of the Soviet Union's 286 million people, 75% of the
- land and the bulk of the U.S.S.R.'s natural resources. In the
- West, the Soviet Union and Russia were long regarded as two
- names for the same country, and that belief, though incorrect,
- was not altogether without foundation. The other republics were
- seen as appendages of the Russian heartland. There was, for
- example, no Russian Academy of Sciences or even Russian
- Communist Party, only a central Soviet Academy and Soviet Party
- with branches in the Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Georgia and the other
- republics.
- </p>
- <p> Nowadays it is not only misleading but also wrong to view
- Russia and the Soviet Union as one political entity. The
- Russians are leading a second revolution to dismantle the
- results of 73 years of Communist rule and to bring the Soviet
- Union, as it exists today, to an end. Historians may someday
- mark the true beginning of the end on May 29, when the newly
- elected Russian Parliament chose Boris Yeltsin as its chairman.
- He gave the burgeoning rebellion a charismatic leader, endearing
- himself to the average man as a symbol of protest against a
- dictatorial system. Almost immediately after his ascension,
- Russia declared sovereignty, an act equivalent to yanking out
- the foundation stone from the whole Soviet structure. Now
- Gorbachev and Yeltsin are locked in a personal duel that is also
- a pivotal test of how much control the center can exert, vs. how
- much independence Russia and other republics can exercise. If
- Gorbachev is to have any union left to govern, he must find a
- way to keep Russia in it.
- </p>
- <p> The clock began ticking last Thursday on the sharpest and
- most important phase of that contest. On the eve of Nov. 1, the
- Russian Parliament launched the much touted 500-day economic
- program. Regardless of different plans in the Kremlin, Russia
- will begin instituting a free-enterprise market economy.
- Unprofitable collective farms are supposed to be disbanded or
- broken into private plots; most businesses are to be converted
- from state to private ownership, and most controls on prices,
- wages and production are to be scrapped. Says Ruslan
- Khasbulatov, Yeltsin's first deputy and a specialist on Western
- economic systems: "Russia has formally recognized the principle
- of private property, something Gorbachev has failed to do.
- Without that, there can be no market, no mixed economy."
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin may never have intended a showdown. He came away
- from a late August summit meeting with Gorbachev thinking the
- Soviet President had agreed to adopt the 500-day formula for the
- entire U.S.S.R. But last month Gorbachev pushed through the
- Supreme Soviet a watered-down plan that sets no timetable for
- converting from state ownership to private property and retains
- more subsidies to failing enterprises.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin and his aides predict that Gorbachev's halfway
- measures will fail, forcing the Soviet President to adopt the
- 500-day plan after all. But for the moment the controversy is
- coming close to open economic war. The Russian parliament last
- week passed a law placing all property in Russian territory,
- except that belonging to the Soviet military or the KGB, under
- its control. Gorbachev had earlier got the Supreme Soviet to
- grant him power to fire the heads of businesses that refuse to
- obey orders from the central government. It remains to be seen
- which jurisdiction can make its claims stick.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin meanwhile is moving on the political front to
- effect what ally Oleg Rumyantsev calls a peaceful democratic
- revolution. Rumyantsev runs a commission that is putting the
- finishing touches on a new Russian constitution. Yeltsin wants
- to submit it to the Russian Congress of People's Deputies at
- month's end and possibly to a popular referendum in January. The
- draft is modeled to a considerable extent and quite consciously
- on the U.S. Constitution. It declares Russia to be "a sovereign,
- social democratic state ruled by law" and specifically
- recognizes "the inviolable, natural right of private property."
- It establishes a presidency to be filled by popular election
- (guess who seems sure to be the first chosen?) and grants that
- office enough authority to cause some deputies to gripe about
- "royal powers."
- </p>
- <p> The Russian Federation is also maneuvering toward some kind
- of power-sharing agreement with its 16 autonomous republics.
- Yeltsin has urged localities to claim as much authority as they
- can cope with, delegating the rest to the Russian Federation. At
- the same time, Russian leaders want to prevent their federation
- from splintering into mini-republics. Khasbulatov speculates
- that it might be enough to let local authorities keep a share
- of taxes and revenues.
- </p>
- <p> If Russia can negotiate formal treaties with its autonomous
- republics in a month, as planned, Yeltsin will have stolen
- another march on Gorbachev. The Kremlin had hoped to have a
- Treaty of Union spelling out new relationships between the
- republics and the center ready by the end of the year. That
- looks increasingly unlikely. Unwilling to accept the degree of
- central power the Kremlin wants, the republics are negotiating
- with one another and forming loose groupings of their own. The
- Russians have already signed cooperation agreements with eight
- republics and plan to conclude negotiations with the remaining
- six by the end of the month. The five Central Asian republics
- have signed a similar pact setting up an economic federation.
- </p>
- <p> Where will it all end? Yeltsin has sketched several
- alternative courses. One would be for Russia to claim its share
- of Soviet natural resources, establish its own currency, customs
- union and possibly even army if necessary. That course would
- amount to outright secession. If Russia took it, and other
- republics and then districts followed suit, almost anything
- could happen: chaos, anarchy, even civil war.
- </p>
- <p> But there will be strong pressures driving the center and
- the republics toward compromise. Neither seems able to overcome
- the other economically; the republics can probably no more get
- the managers of state enterprises to obey their commands than
- Gorbachev can enforce his decrees. Yeltsin and his aides
- proclaim continued readiness to join Gorbachev in some kind of
- coalition government of "national trust" to guide the Union
- through the wrenching transition to a market economy. The
- Yeltsinites insist, however, that any coalition must drop Prime
- Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov. So far, Gorbachev has shown no
- disposition to dump him.
- </p>
- <p> The one outcome that seems least likely is a return to the
- highly centralized totalitarian dictatorship of the past.
- Whatever happens at the Revolution Day celebrations, Yeltsin and
- his allies are pushing a new Russian Revolution, one that could
- remake the country almost as completely as, and hopefully more
- happily than, did the one 73 years ago.
- </p>
- <p>BREAKNECK BREAKAWAY
- </p>
- <p> In the past few weeks, the rush by Soviet republics and
- smaller areas to break away from control by the center has
- become a stampede. A partial list:
- </p>
- <p> The Russian Federation is putting into effect its 500-day
- economic plan and writing its own constitution.
- </p>
- <p> Kazakhstan has become the 14th of the 15 republics to
- declare sovereignty. The remaining holdout, Kirghizia, is
- debating a similar decree.
- </p>
- <p> The Ukraine has begun issuing coupons for purchase of
- goods, a first step toward creating its own currency.
- </p>
- <p> Belorussia and Armenia have banned exports of consumer
- goods and raw materials, even to other republics.
- </p>
- <p> Nine of the 16 autonomous republics--in effect, ethnic
- homelands--within the Russian Federation have come out for
- some form of sovereignty within Russia as well as the U.S.S.R.
- </p>
- <p> The Irkutsk region in Siberia has declared its "equality
- and independence."
- </p>
- <p> The city of Nizhni-Novgorod has petitioned the Russian
- Federation for special status.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-