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- <text id=89TT3319>
- <title>
- Dec. 18, 1989: East-West:Out Of Control?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 14
- EAST-WEST
- Out of Control?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As the Communist order unravels at blinding speed, confusion
- looms
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe
- </p>
- <p> The old is dying and the new cannot be born. In the
- interregnum, a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.
- </p>
- <p> -- Antonio Gramsci, Italian Marxist philosopher (1891-1937)
- </p>
- <p> The great variety of symptoms that confronted the
- Communists of East Germany and Czechoslovakia last week were not
- morbid, but they did carry the risk of metastasizing into
- something dangerous. As exhilarating as the rapid pace of change
- may be, the tight grip of party rule that seemed unshakable just
- weeks ago has loosened to the point of presenting both countries
- with the prospect of events slipping out of control. Though the
- revolution in East Berlin continues to outrace changes in
- Prague, the dynamics of tumult are much the same in both
- countries. Besieged party leaders grant one desperate concession
- after another, hoping each move will quiet the mounting outcry
- and preserve some measure of power for themselves. The
- opposition's success begets bolder demands -- and party leaders
- capitulate, further diminishing the very authority they hope to
- maintain.
- </p>
- <p> East Germany's Communist Party granted the ultimate
- concession when its leader, Egon Krenz, and the other nine
- members of the Politburo resigned last week, along with the
- entire 163-member Central Committee. Three days later, Krenz
- stepped down as head of state, a move that left him stripped of
- the powers he had inherited only a month and a half earlier from
- his discredited predecessor, Erich Honecker. Manfred Gerlach,
- who heads a small party until now bound to the Communists, was
- named to replace Krenz in the ceremonial post of President.
- Honecker meanwhile was in quick succession expelled from the
- party, placed under house arrest and slapped with criminal
- charges. An additional 104 party functionaries and eight former
- Politburo members were also arrested.
- </p>
- <p> The wholesale dissolution of the party leadership left some
- members with an uneasy sense that no one was in charge. But
- Prime Minister Hans Modrow seemed in command as he appealed on
- national television for calm, and the party hastily threw
- together a temporary 25-member working group to fill the
- leadership void. On Thursday the first talks between the
- Communist Party and the opposition yielded agreements to
- recommend parliamentary elections for May 6 and to rewrite the
- constitution. In addition, the foundering party advanced an
- emergency congress by a week to try to restore order and salvage
- shreds of credibility from the wreckage.
- </p>
- <p> Meeting at East Berlin's Dynamo Football Club Gymnasium,
- the 2,714 delegates overwhelmingly nominated as party leader
- Gregor Gysi, a reformist lawyer who at 41 becomes the youngest
- Communist boss in Eastern Europe. Only three months ago, Gysi
- came under withering attack by hard-liners for representing the
- opposition group New Forum in its bid for legal status. Now,
- said Gysi after winning election, the Communists in East Germany
- will be merely "one party among others."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Mikhail Gorbachev is confronting a political
- crisis as the reforms he inspired in Eastern Europe begin to
- haunt him at home. With Gorbachev's tacit blessing, East Germany
- and Czechoslovakia have joined Hungary and Poland in abolishing
- the Communist Party's constitutional monopoly on power.
- Nonetheless, the Soviet leader has always insisted that the
- party must retain its pre-eminence in his country if perestroika
- is to succeed. Last week the Lithuanian legislature defied
- Gorbachev's wishes and legalized rival political parties,
- setting the stage for other Soviet republics to do the same.
- This week radical delegates are expected to propose a debate in
- the Congress of People's Deputies on whether to delete Article
- 6 of the national constitution, which enshrines the party's
- "leading role" in Soviet society.
- </p>
- <p> In East Germany it remained uncertain whether the Communist
- Party's last-ditch effort to fashion a new identity could save
- it from extinction. With the party's upper echelon disgraced,
- the taut discipline snapped down below. A half million of the
- 2.3 million cardholders have deserted the party in recent weeks,
- and last week middle-ranking members joined the opposition
- groups in crying for the departure of the power brokers who for
- 41 years imposed their rule. Citizens worked with the regular
- People's Police to prevent the shredding and theft of
- incriminating documents. Airline flights to Rumania were
- suspended to block the removal of key documents. Police sealed
- the offices of party leaders and searched other party members
- as they exited their workplaces.
- </p>
- <p> Some citizens seemed determined to take matters into their
- own hands. In one incident, about 100 people halted a man who
- was leaving an East Berlin office of the dreaded Stasi (secret
- police) with two suitcases in tow. When the man was handed over
- to the police, they discovered currency worth hundreds of
- thousands of dollars that was believed to be intended for party
- officials. Two days later the man was found hanged in his jail
- cell. The 25,000-man Stasi, meanwhile, was partly defanged by
- the dismissal of its directorate and the reassignment of some
- 7,000 agents to customs detail.
- </p>
- <p> At one point, the government seemed intent on depicting a
- mood of impending breakdown, as if trying to ensure its survival
- by convincing people that only the present leaders could keep
- blood from flowing in the streets. In a statement issued through
- the state-run ADN news agency last Wednesday, the government
- reported "growing indications of stormings of facilities and
- installations of the National People's Army." But no mention was
- made of where the assaults took place. In a separate appeal,
- from the army, generals warned that they would not permit
- disturbances at military installations and called on soldiers
- to fulfill their duty "thoughtfully and reliably in these
- fateful hours." That same day the Defense Council resigned,
- leaving command of the 172,000-member armed forces in the hands
- of the government and the new head of state.
- </p>
- <p> While army discipline never flagged, Modrow was plainly
- worried about the Fighting Groups, the bands of factory workers
- that function as the party's private army. Though the government
- had announced that the groups would be disarmed, it remained
- unclear how successful efforts were to get the group leaders to
- surrender the keys to their armories.
- </p>
- <p> The issue of reunification with West Germany also seemed to
- be galloping forward faster than anyone had anticipated. Until
- now, the East German opposition has rejected calls for
- reunification. But in Leipzig, more and more posters reading
- GERMANY, ONE FATHERLAND are dotting the weekly demonstrations.
- And the round-table discussions last Thursday between party
- officials and opposition figures produced a call for a "new
- relationship" with West Germany based on "confederative
- structures." That echoed the language of a unification plan
- unveiled by West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl two weeks ago,
- to the consternation of the British, the French and the Soviets,
- among others.
- </p>
- <p> While East Germany faced a volatile situation -- the party
- dissolving but a government still more or less intact --
- Czechoslovakia faced a situation that was equally volatile but
- opposite. The three-week-old party leadership of Karel Urbanek
- was holding firm despite the defection of thousands of members.
- Prague's government, however, was at a dangerous pass. After
- the Civic Forum, the country's leading opposition group,
- rejected a proposed new government that seated only five
- non-Communists among the 21 ministers, Prime Minister Ladislav
- Adamec warned, "I cannot act under pressure of one group of
- citizens." When the Civic Forum refused to withdraw its demand
- for half the seats in the Cabinet to be filled by
- non-Communists, Adamec resigned.
- </p>
- <p> Within hours President Gustav Husak appointed Deputy Prime
- Minister Marian Calfa, 43, a lawyer and relatively obscure
- party member, as Prime Minister. The next day Calfa seemed to
- meet the Civic Forum's request by offering the group half the
- positions in a new Cabinet. Vaclav Havel, the dissident
- playwright who leads the Civic Forum, entered into negotiations
- with Calfa and seemed close to agreeing on the makeup of a
- government. The political atmosphere was further cleansed with
- the announcement Saturday night that the 76-year-old Husak would
- step down as soon as he swore in a new Cabinet. As a quisling
- installed by Moscow after the invasion of 1968, Husak has become
- increasingly reviled, and his departure has been a prime demand
- of the Civic Forum.
- </p>
- <p> Havel also declared he would be willing to serve as
- President to help guide the country through its crisis. "If, God
- help us, the situation develops in such a way that the only
- service I could render my country would be to do this, then, of
- course, I would do it," he said. Havel's announcement was
- evidence of the opposition's new determination to insert itself
- into the power vacuum. Abandoning its earlier plan to remain
- nonpartisan, the Civic Forum proclaimed that along with its
- Slovak counterpart, Public Against Violence, it would endorse
- a slate of candidates in the parliamentary elections that it is
- demanding by next July.
- </p>
- <p> So far, civility and generosity have characterized the
- Czechoslovak revolt, which has seemed more methodical and less
- reactive than the spontaneous actions in East Germany. But
- Prague may yet follow a path that could impede reconstruction.
- While Havel has promised the party there will be no purges,
- cries for retribution began to be heard last week, resulting in
- the party's expelling former party leader Milos Jakes and former
- Prague party boss Miroslav Stepan. There are also continued
- signs of fragmentation within the opposition, as is happening
- in East Germany. But as yet, Havel continues to exert a moral
- authority that seems to be holding the disparate forces
- together.
- </p>
- <p> Shrewdly, the Civic Forum is taking steps to align itself
- with sectors of the military. Havel announced the formation of
- the Military Forum, a group within the armed forces that is
- calling for a variety of reforms, including a shortening of
- military service from two years to 18 months. The Civic Forum
- exerted its power at the state level by forcing the resignation
- of the cabinet in the dominant Czech republic and the
- appointment of a new body that ceded nine of the 17 ministerial
- posts to non-Communists. Three days later, the government of the
- Slovak republic also quit.
- </p>
- <p> Only a gambler would wager on where the revolutions in East
- Germany and Czechoslovakia will end. Negotiations and cool
- heads may ultimately prevail, allowing the Communist Party to
- help negotiate a future that will result in multiparty systems
- along the lines of those evolving in Hungary and Poland.
- Conversely, dissent could give way to anarchy that would trigger
- a military crackdown. The current challenge for opposition
- forces in both countries is to strike a delicate balance between
- keeping pressure on the Communists for new reforms and not
- demanding so much so fast that chaos ensues and crushes the
- spirit of progress not only in Eastern Europe but in the Soviet
- Union as well.
- </p>
- <p>--William Mader/London and Frederick Ungeheuer/Berlin
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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