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- <text id=91TT2878>
- <link 93TG0172>
- <link 93HT0061>
- <link 92TT1408>
- <link 92TT0000>
- <link 91TT2015>
- <title>
- Dec. 23, 1991: The End of the U.S.S.R.
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 23, 1991 Gorbachev:A Man Without A Country
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- The End Of the U.S.S.R.
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Emboldened by their success in seizing independence, the
- republics have pronounced Mikhail Gorbachev's union dead and
- patched together a new, loosely knit commonwealth. But do they
- know how to build something better?
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by James Carney/Moscow, William
- Mader/London and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Revolutions are messy affairs that may go on for years
- with climax after climax before a stable new regime is finally
- established. But along the way they pass distinct turning points
- at which it becomes clear that the old order is gone beyond any
- hope of resurrection, and the future's possible shape, however
- vague and tentative, comes into view. So it was last week in the
- Soviet Union, late superpower and communist totalitarian state
- ruled from Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Since the failed coup in August, the country has been
- writhing in a last agony that, in the words of Russian President
- Boris Yeltsin, seemed to drag on "through some sort of sick
- eternity." Finally Yeltsin and the Presidents of Ukraine and
- Belorussia--founding republics of the old union in 1922 and
- still its Slavic core--decided to sign a death certificate:
- "The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, as a subject of
- international law and a geopolitical reality, is ceasing its
- existence."
- </p>
- <p> That announcement, along with the formation of a new,
- inelegantly named Commonwealth of Independent States, came as
- a stunning surprise but hardly a shock. The power had long been
- leaching out of the central authority in the Kremlin, and it was
- the leaders of the key republics that everyone looked to for
- salvation. The fear was that they would prove too determinedly
- nationalistic to come together in any kind of practical
- alliance. Yet Yeltsin and company came up with a proposal that
- all the independent republics could embrace--if they wanted.
- </p>
- <p> Through it all, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev fought
- to hold off the burial of the state he officially ruled. "I'll
- use all my political and legal authority" to keep playing a
- major role, he said in an interview with TIME. But his position
- now seemed largely irrelevant. Whether he resigns in short
- order, as is widely expected, or continues to sit in his Moscow
- office a while longer, his political and legal authority is
- virtually gone, and there is nothing much left for him to
- preside over.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, the first blurry outlines of what might
- replace the old union began to take shape. The new commonwealth
- formed by the three Slavic republics would supposedly coordinate--but not dictate--the economic, military and foreign
- policies of its sovereign members. To dramatize the break from
- the communist--and before that, Russian imperial--past, the
- Presidents decided that the commonwealth's coordinating bodies,
- yet to be formed, would be based not in Moscow, the Soviet
- capital, nor in the czarist capital of St. Petersburg, but in
- the plain-Jane, utilitarian Belorussian city of Minsk.
- </p>
- <p> After months of a headlong plunge toward dissolution,
- anarchy and possibly even civil war, the formation of the
- commonwealth marked the first hopeful step toward a new
- cohesion. As such, it swiftly began gaining additional members.
- On Friday Kazakhstan and the four Central Asian republics
- swallowed their annoyance at not being present at the creation,
- as well as their fears of becoming economic and cultural poor
- relations in a Slav-dominated family, and decided to join,
- provided they are given the status of co-founders. Their move
- brought together, however loosely, republics with 90% of the old
- union's people and all its strategic nuclear weapons. Only the
- small border republics of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and
- Moldavia were left temporarily outside the new fold, and they
- too were thinking of coming in.
- </p>
- <p> Which does not by any means ensure that the commonwealth
- will prevail, or even get itself truly organized. Its founding
- charter is not much more than a vaguely worded statement of
- intent. Its members must now actually define the policies they
- will pursue and form mechanisms to ensure that they really are
- coordinated. The alliance--it is not really a state--was not
- even a week old before its first potentially serious fissure
- appeared. While Yeltsin assured Soviet military leaders that the
- armed forces would remain under unified command, Ukrainian
- President Leonid Kravchuk proclaimed that all army units in his
- republic--except those controlling nuclear weapons--and the
- Soviet Black Sea fleet were now to constitute a separate
- Ukrainian army and navy, of which he would be commander in
- chief.
- </p>
- <p> Worse still, the commonwealth's efforts to unify economic
- policy are in a desperate race with the forces of hunger, cold
- and scarcity. So far, scarcity is winning. Severe shortages of
- fuel closed half the country's airports and halted domestic
- flights. Banks were running out of hard currency as citizens
- struggled with a runaway ruble. Factories called stoppages,
- services inexplicably ceased. Food was critically short in
- Moscow and St. Petersburg. Ukraine and Belorussia got Yeltsin
- to postpone until Jan. 2 a decree freeing many Russian prices,
- which was supposed to take effect Monday. The delay only touched
- off a new binge of panic buying; longer lines than ever snaked
- through Moscow's streets. While the politicians bickered over
- the shape of the union, citizens in the former Soviet Union were
- worried about how they would survive the winter.
- </p>
- <p> Some help is on the way. Secretary of State James
- Baker, taking care not to side with either the dying union or the
- commonwealth aborning, announced that U.S. Air Force planes will
- begin flying food into Moscow, St. Petersburg and other hungry
- cities, using military rations left over from the Persian Gulf
- war. He also proposed that all nations interested in sending aid
- to the old U.S.S.R. hold a conference in early January to
- coordinate who would put up how much. But a senior British
- diplomat grumbled that the conference "should have been held
- three months ago, and now it needs to be held next week. By
- January it might well be too late." The brutal Russian winter
- could cause suffering severe enough to trigger political chaos
- before the session can convene.
- </p>
- <p> The new commonwealth has managed to stave off, at least
- for the moment, the threat of an outright economic war between
- the sundering union's republics. That prospect played no small
- part in pushing the commonwealth's founders together. When
- Yeltsin, Kravchuk, Belorussian leader Stanislav Shushkevich and
- some aides gathered at the Belovezhskaya Pushcha dacha, a
- forest retreat outside the city of Brest, on Saturday, Dec. 7,
- they appeared to have no intention of declaring the old union
- dead and founding a new association. But they quickly found
- they could not come to any other agreement--and agreement was
- imperative.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin had been trying to introduce radical free-market
- reforms in Russia, but was balked partly because the remnants
- of the central Soviet ministries kept getting in the way. To
- remove them, some new form of union had to be invented, but
- negotiations were stymied by Gorbachev's desire to preserve at
- least a pared-down central government and the insistence of
- several republics on complete independence. The overwhelming
- vote for independence in Ukraine on Dec. 1 brought the
- tug-of-war close to a crisis; both Gorbachev and Yeltsin had
- said there could be no union at all without Ukraine.
- </p>
- <p> Nor was that the only cause for high anxiety. The
- imminence of free-market pricing in Russia frightened
- neighboring republics, which protested that they could not or
- would not move so fast. If Russia went ahead alone, prices would
- soar so high that neighbors could not afford to buy the
- republic's products, including the oil on which they depend.
- Farms and factories in neighboring republics would sell their
- products in Russia rather than at home, while masses of Russian
- shoppers would cross over into other republics to buy at prices
- lower than in their own stores. Further, Ukraine was planning
- to introduce its own currency in mid-1992, a move that could
- have touched off a stampede to all kinds of separate currencies
- that would have made hash out of any future efforts to revive
- economic cooperation.
- </p>
- <p> Meeting in Moscow two weeks ago, Gorbachev and Yeltsin
- agreed that one last effort had to be made to keep Ukraine in
- some sort of union. To that end, Yeltsin took advantage of an
- already scheduled trip to Belorussia to sign a trade agreement
- and invited Kravchuk to join the discussions at the forest
- dacha. According to their aides, the three initially tried to
- revive a Gorbachev idea to form a fairly loose Union of
- Sovereign States that would still have a central government of
- sorts. But all day Saturday, says Russian Deputy Prime Minister
- Gennadi Burbulis, they kept hitting "a dead end." Finally the
- leaders instructed their foreign ministers to start over from
- scratch and draft something new. Working separately through the
- night, the ministers produced three texts that proved to be so
- similar that the leaders had no trouble next morning melding
- them into one document.
- </p>
- <p> In a separate agreement, the republics pledged to
- implement coordinated radical economic reforms ensuring free
- enterprise and to stick with the ruble as a common currency for
- the time being; national currencies might be allowed later, but
- only "on the basis of special agreements." Less formally, they
- decided to move together toward free prices on Jan. 2 and to
- introduce a value-added tax and take other steps to hold down
- the budget deficits that are fueling runaway inflation. Details
- on how to achieve these worthy aims are to be filled in later.
- But at least the agreement promises to halt the slide toward
- economic war.
- </p>
- <p> Unspecific though it is, the economic agreement is a model
- of concreteness next to the 14 articles of the overall pact. In
- only a few places does that document even approach specificity.
- It states that the founders are "striving to liquidate all
- nuclear armaments under strict international control" and
- pledges the republics to respect one another's territorial
- integrity and to guarantee their citizens equal rights and
- freedoms. Bland as these provisions appear to be, they are
- significant in light of a major threat raised by a breakup of
- the U.S.S.R.: the menace of interrepublican hostility, or even
- war, over the status of ethnic minorities.
- </p>
- <p> Otherwise the founding agreement pledges the commonwealth
- republics to a vague concept of cooperation in many areas of
- government, from education to foreign policy. But what are these
- common policies to be? Who is to see that they really are
- coordinated? How? The document says only that "the parties
- consider it necessary to conclude agreements on cooperation in
- the above-mentioned spheres."
- </p>
- <p> The signers counter that they were not preparing a
- document for the ages, only patching together something to
- arrest the momentum toward anarchy and begin a process of
- reintegration. Arguments about details would have been fatal to
- that endeavor. They are probably right, but the document
- nonetheless is rife with opportunities for bitter disagreement.
- </p>
- <p> On their determination to kill off the Soviet Union as a
- unitary state, however, the signers were completely clear.
- Gorbachev was understandably insulted because Yeltsin phoned the
- White House to tell President Bush about the agreement before
- Shushkevich dialed Moscow to inform the Soviet President.
- Whether the snub was deliberate or an oversight, it conveyed the
- same message: the signers considered the Soviet President
- irrelevant, if not an obstacle, to their new union.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev fought desperately to hang on. He called the
- agreement unconstitutional and warned of anarchy, potential
- civil wars and fascist takeovers if the union fell apart.
- Founders of the commonwealth agreed that those were real
- dangers, but described their association as a "last chance" to
- avert them. Gorbachev tried to convene the Congress of People's
- Deputies, the national legislature, to work out some kind of
- compromise between the new commonwealth and his Union of
- Sovereign States, but was blocked when legislators from the
- commonwealth republics refused to attend. The Soviet President
- huddled with army commanders to appeal for military support a
- day before Yeltsin made a comparable pitch to a similar group
- of officers. Some generals interviewed on British television
- found Yeltsin more impressive, and subordinate officers voiced
- Russian variations of the Western proverb that he who pays the
- piper calls the tune. That can only mean Yeltsin: the Gorbachev
- government is flat broke and has only those funds that Yeltsin's
- Russian Federation doles out to it.
- </p>
- <p> Another leader who was peeved by what he regarded as
- cavalier treatment by the commonwealth founders was Nursultan
- Nazarbayev, president of Kazakhstan. When the agreement was
- signed he was in the air, en route to Moscow for a scheduled
- meeting with Gorbachev and the three Slavic presidents that
- never came off; Yeltsin phoned him at Vnukovo airport shortly
- after his plane landed to tell him about the agreement.
- Nazarbayev darkly suspected that the Slavic leaders were aiming
- at a "medieval" division of the union along religious-ethnic-
- cultural lines and talked for awhile of siding with Gorbachev to
- keep a central government alive. His defection from the
- commonwealth would have been a serious blow, since among other
- things it would have prevented any unified or even joint command
- over nuclear weapons; many of the biggest multiwarhead
- intercontinental Soviet missiles are based in Kazakhstan.
- </p>
- <p> By week's end, however, Nazarbayev decided to cut himself
- in and brought the other Central Asian republics with him.
- Western Sovietologists speculated that he had little choice:
- if Kazakhstan did not join the commonwealth, it might have split
- in two. Kazakhs are actually a minority among its 16 million
- citizens; about 40% are ethnic Russians, who might have seceded
- rather than risk being submerged in an independent Muslim state.
- The other Central Asian republics simply could not survive
- economically on their own. They could, however, have formed a
- federation that would look toward alliances with such states as
- Turkey and Iran, and perhaps even have induced some Tatars,
- Bashkirs and other Islamic ethnic groups in southern Russia to
- secede and join them in a sort of Greater Turkestan. By inducing
- the Central Asians to join the commonwealth instead, the Slavic
- leaders passed a hard test of whether they could lead toward
- cohesion and stability rather than divisiveness and chaos.
- </p>
- <p> Another test was acceptance by foreign governments, and
- the commonwealth was doing well on that score too. There was
- still a great deal of apocalyptic talk from analysts like CIA
- director Robert Gates, who warned that the former Soviet Union
- faced the greatest potential for explosive civic turmoil since
- the Bolsheviks consolidated their power roughly 70 years ago.
- But as the week wore on, the U.S. and its friends were
- beginning to face up to life without Gorbachev or a Soviet
- central government and to conclude that it might not be so awful
- after all.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the Western powers seemed informally to be coming
- together on a common approach. Its main elements: 1) they will,
- properly, leave the shape of a future union--or commonwealth
- or whatever--to be decided by the Soviet people and their
- leaders; 2) they will insist that whatever governments arise on
- the territory of the old union respect human rights and abide
- by all the U.S.S.R.'s treaty obligations, including commitments
- to reduce both nuclear and conventional arms; 3) they will
- strongly urge the successor states to preserve a unified command
- over nuclear weapons and offer money and technical assistance
- to dismantle any and all warheads that the republics want to
- destroy--Secretary of State Baker set out over the weekend on
- a five-day, five-city swing through the former U.S.S.R. for
- exactly that purpose; 4) they will speed up and coordinate aid
- to any republics that meet these criteria. As Baker put it, "We
- will continue to work with reformers wherever we find them."
- </p>
- <p> Though this approach is fundamentally realistic, there are
- problems and ambiguities in it. The commonwealth, if it
- establishes itself as a going concern, is likely to include both
- fledgling democracies like Russia and Ukraine and unreformed
- authoritarian regimes like Uzbekistan. Baker specifically
- mentioned the southern republic of Georgia as one that would not
- qualify for American aid because its government is
- authoritarian. But can Washington maintain such a stance if
- Georgia is accepted into a commonwealth where most or all of the
- other members are getting Western aid?
- </p>
- <p> At this point probably only some loose association like
- the proposed commonwealth, without any true central government,
- can bring the republics together at all. But the difficulties of
- making it work are immense. Of all people, Joseph Stalin gave
- the most eerily prophetic description. When the Soviet Union was
- founded on Dec. 30, 1922, he enumerated the conditions attending
- its birth: "devastated fields, factories at standstill,
- destroyed productive powers and exhausted economic resources
- render insufficient the separate efforts of separate republics
- in economic reconstruction." The union is now dying of exactly
- the same ills, and its heirs have yet to prove that they know
- how to build something better.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-