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- <text id=90TT3140>
- <link 91TT1969>
- <link 91TT0449>
- <link 89TT3170>
- <title>
- Nov. 26, 1990: Soviet Union:Depths Of Gloom
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 26, 1990 The Junk Mail Explosion!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- SOVIET UNION
- Depths of Gloom
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As talk of shortages gives way to fear of famine, even Gorbachev
- and Yeltsin united together may not be able to save the
- country
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by James Carney and John Kohan/
- Moscow
- </p>
- <p> "We cannot reconcile ourselves to separatists' attempts to
- turn the union into a flabby entity devoid of a single will or
- even to dismember it."
- </p>
- <p>-- GORBACHEV
- </p>
- <p> "In some cities there is only two or three days' worth of
- stocks. To try to persuade people that matters should be this
- way in the sixth year of perestroika is absurd."
- </p>
- <p>-- YELTSIN
- </p>
- <p> For American legislators, going home during a recess to get
- an earful from their constituents is routine. For delegates to
- the Supreme Soviet, it is brand new, and shocking enough to
- help produce a near rebellion against President Mikhail
- Gorbachev. "I've been in my constituency, and there will be
- famine there soon, comrades, famine, a real famine!" exclaimed
- Valentina Gudilina, a delegate from the Moscow region, to her
- colleagues when they reconvened Wednesday after a 10-day break.
- Delegates also complained that they had heard nothing from
- Gorbachev about a five-hour meeting he had held a few days
- earlier with Russian republic leader Boris Yeltsin, although
- Yeltsin had told his own parliament that they had agreed in
- principle to form a new "coalition" government. The upshot: the
- parliamentarians refused even to debate any bills until
- Gorbachev gave a State of the Soviet Union report on the
- economic crisis and just what he and Yeltsin were up to.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev complied--sort of. On Friday he delivered a
- finger-wagging, lectern-thumping address that was long on
- promises, short on specifics. Yes, Gorbachev said, he planned
- "to get rid of outdated, clearly useless structures" in the
- government and to bring into it "politicians and experts who
- are more popular and enjoy the widest support." That sounded
- like a reference to Yeltsin, but Gorbachev coyly avoided giving
- any names and offered few details of what changes he really had
- in mind.
- </p>
- <p> But after hearing successive speakers, including Yeltsin,
- agitate for resolute action, Gorbachev returned to the podium
- Saturday morning. In a brusque 15-minute speech, he proposed
- "an urgent, fundamental reorganization of executive power in
- the center by subordinating it to the President." Gorbachev
- called for vesting the Federation Council, an advisory body
- made up of republican heads of state, with broad powers to
- coordinate relations between the Kremlin and the republics.
- Citing a nationwide disintegration of law-and-order, he
- suggested creating both a Presidential Security Council to
- oversee law enforcement and an executive task force to combat
- organized crime.
- </p>
- <p> But Gorbachev skirted many other issues. He called for
- "urgent measures" to end the worsening food shortages, but
- offered no new ideas. In his State of the Union address,
- Gorbachev merely defended the watered-down reform package that
- was passed in October and has since been not only derided but
- largely ignored. He implored the republics to stop reversing
- his economic decrees; in fact, he added, the Supreme Soviet
- should enact a moratorium on all independence-oriented
- legislation. But the idea that any such ban would be obeyed is
- so farfetched as to call into question whether Gorbachev
- understands how far the republics have broken away from the
- Kremlin.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev left legislators to speculate whether Yeltsin's
- influence in the new executive branch would be limited to his
- seat on the enhanced Federation Council or would include some
- greater form of power sharing. On Friday Yeltsin displayed
- little tolerance for waiting games. He followed Gorbachev to
- the podium and warned that the President "must stop making
- mistakes and clinging to the old system...the economic and
- political crisis in the country has come to a head, the people's
- patience is coming to an end, and an explosion could occur at
- any time."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, there were indications that Gorbachev and Yeltsin
- were groping toward some kind of accommodation. Gorbachev's
- hold on public confidence seems to erode almost daily.
- According to a recent poll, his popularity rating has slid in
- the past 10 months from 52% to 21%--3 points below Richard
- Nixon's rating in the U.S. just before he resigned the
- presidency. Last week he was openly hooted during a speech to
- army officers, and a group of 22 intellectuals called on him
- to either act decisively or resign. But if Gorbachev can no
- longer govern effectively without a boost from the popular
- leader of the Russian republic, Yeltsin is equally incapable
- of putting his radical economic-reform program into effect
- without the cooperation of the central government.
- </p>
- <p> None of which guarantees that they can in fact come to an
- agreement. At the moment, the main stumbling block is Prime
- Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov. Yeltsin regards him as a hopeless
- foot dragger on reform and demands that he resign. But
- Gorbachev has stubbornly defended Ryzhkov, whose influence over
- the vast state bureaucracy makes sacking him a risk. On
- Saturday Ryzhkov attacked Yeltsin for pursuing a "destructive
- policy" but hinted that calls for his own resignation have
- become so frequent that the issue "requires a decision."
- </p>
- <p> Some Washington analysts question whether the tide of
- economic and political disintegration has gone too far for even
- Gorbachev and Yeltsin working together to reverse. "The current
- is moving faster than the boat," says a Sovietologist, "which
- means they can't steer anymore." As if to illustrate the point,
- when Ryzhkov's government issued a decree decontrolling prices
- of so-called luxury goods (not only jewelry and furs but also
- furniture and car parts), Yeltsin's Russian government, furious
- at not having been consulted, immediately suspended it.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev's great hope for overcoming the breakaway tendency
- of the republics is the proposed new treaty of union. The
- current draft, as described by officials who are familiar with
- it, has some highly attractive features. It declares the new
- Soviet Union to be a "voluntary" association of sovereign
- republics to create "a state governed by law, which would serve
- as a guarantee against any tendency to authoritarianism and
- tyranny." The republics can choose any form of government they
- like as long as they respect some basic human rights,
- including "use of native languages, unhindered access to
- information, freedom of religion." It even grants the republics
- "the free choice of forms of property and economic management."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev told parliament Saturday that his proposed
- shake-up was necessary to restore political and economic
- stability until a complete restructuring of government is
- institutionalized by the new union treaty. In fact, some of the
- changes that Gorbachev called for on Saturday--the creation
- of a vice presidency and the enhanced Federation Council--mirror those outlined in the draft treaty. The document would
- also create a Cabinet of Ministers led by a Chairman and
- including the heads of government (rather than the heads of
- state) of the republics. Besides the expected control over the
- military, foreign policy and the like, the treaty gives the
- union the right to guide financial, credit and money policies
- and to work out an economic and social-development strategy and
- a budget.
- </p>
- <p> Does that seem to contradict the republics' right to "free
- choice of forms of...economic management"? Well, these
- central union powers are to be exercised "together with the
- republics"--a phrase that occurs over and over in the draft,
- and seems less a clarification than an invitation to conflict.
- </p>
- <p> One major question: since the 1922 constitution setting up
- the Soviet Union would be dissolved, would republics be able
- to secede merely by refusing to sign the new treaty? Grigori
- Revenko, a member of Gorbachev's current Presidential Council,
- has suggested that the rebellious Baltic republics of
- Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, at least, would not be allowed
- to go as easily as that; they would still have to negotiate
- with Moscow over property issues. And they might not be the
- only ones. Akaky Asatiani, a leader of the Georgian parliament,
- said flatly last week that Georgia "will not sign the federal
- treaty," and Mircha Snegur, president of Moldavia, cast doubt
- on whether his republic would either.
- </p>
- <p> Thus debate on the new treaty will begin with only 10 of the
- 15 republics committed to try working out something they could
- sign. That is hardly an auspicious beginning for what may turn
- out to be a last-ditch effort to keep the Soviet Union from
- disintegrating into little more than a name--and maybe not
- even that.
- </p>
- <p>
- THE NEW AND IMPROVED UNION
- </p>
- <p> Key provisions that are expected to be in the draft union
- treaty, which will replace the 1922 compact that set up the
- Soviet Union:
- </p>
- <p> THE NAME OF THE COUNTRY will be changed to the Union of
- Sovereign Soviet Republics--still abbreviated U.S.S.R., or
- C.C.C.P. in the Cyrillic initials of its Russian name. The word
- Sovereign replaces Socialist, which appears nowhere in the
- draft.
- </p>
- <p> THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH will be headed by a President and Vice
- President elected U.S.-style by direct popular vote. The
- President must win more than half the votes in the union as a
- whole and also in a majority of the constituent republics.
- </p>
- <p> THE LEGISLATURE, which will be the supreme lawmaking power,
- will consist of two houses: a Chamber of the Union, to be
- filled by direct election; and a Chamber of Nationalities,
- whose members will be chosen from the governing bodies of the
- republics and national territories.
- </p>
- <p> THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT will exercise control over issues of
- war and peace, national defense and national security, the
- nation's energy network, and transport and communications
- systems, and will issue a single national currency.
- </p>
- <p> THE REPUBLICS are free to choose their own systems of
- government as long as they recognize certain basic rights. They
- will own all natural resources and state property on their
- territory except for what is necessary to carry out the powers
- of the union--a provision that, like much else in the treaty,
- seems a formula for endless wrangling.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-