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<text id=91TT0214>
<link 93XP0309>
<link 91TT2016>
<link 91TT0109>
<link 90TT1074>
<title>
Jan. 28, 1991: Soviet Union:The Bad Old Days Again
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Jan. 28, 1991 War In The Gulf
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 80
SOVIET UNION
The Bad Old Days Again
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Sending his tanks into Lithuania, Gorbachev puts unity above
reform and stirs the world's fears of a new Stalinism
</p>
<p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney/Vilnius, John
Kohan/Moscow and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
</p>
<p> The kind of new world George Bush was ready to fight for is
supposed to be founded on "the rule of law, not the law of the
jungle." But the government of the Soviet Union, the essential
partner in such a future order, still seems to favor the feral
approach. Knowing the world was looking somewhere else, its
army stamped a bloody boot on separatist Lithuania--a
no-nonsense warning that the union of Soviet republics will not
be allowed to splinter. President Mikhail Gorbachev's verbal
shrug at the violence looked like a casual reactivation of the
Brezhnev Doctrine--in his own country.
</p>
<p> Watchers could only wonder if the crackdown marked an
ominous turning point for Gorbachev's commitment to liberalize
his troubled nation. Has he chosen to sacrifice his promises
of change to demands for order? He appeared to have decided
that Soviet unity was worth any cost. The bloodletting in
Vilnius was plainly intended to warn other restive republics
to draw back from demands for sovereignty--before the troops
arrive there too. Some in the West were beginning to divine a
different message: a betrayal of their investment in Gorbachev's
leadership. Even his well-wishers fear Gorbachev has embarked
on an accelerating downward spiral.
</p>
<p> The events in Lithuania should not have come as a real
surprise. Ethnic separatism has always been Gorbachev's blind
spot, a yearning for which the Soviet President has neither
sympathy nor patience. Though he likes to claim he is simply
"enforcing the constitution," he has been consistent in his
efforts to neutralize democratically elected governments in
republics that threaten to slip away from the Kremlin's
control. While he has put up with considerable disorder, which
dismays his generals, he has demonstrated before that he is
ready to use armed force to hold the union together. Now
Gorbachev has adopted stale Stalinist lies by claiming he is
responding to pleas from nameless patriots to protect the
socialist revolution from fascists. To bolster those lies he
is also moving to reintroduce censorship. It was no accident
that 15 unarmed protesters died defending Lithuania's
television center. Glasnost, which has succeeded, is as
endangered as perestroika, which has not.
</p>
<p> The old-fashioned iron fist remained poised last week over
all three Baltic republics, which have asserted their
independence from the U.S.S.R. Army paratroops in Vilnius
openly threatened the Lithuanian government. Predicted
President Vytautas Landsbergis, who was holed up in the
barricaded parliament building awaiting the next move: "The
legitimate powers in Lithuania and Latvia will be overthrown."
</p>
<p> In Riga, capital of Latvia, ethnic Russians staged
pro-Moscow demonstrations and Soviet troops raided the police
academy, carrying away its weapons. As in Lithuania the week
before, party loyalists put together a shadowy, no-names-please
committee of "national salvation" to call for presidential rule
from Moscow. Communist Party organizers brought thousands into
the streets of Tallinn, the Estonian capital, to demand the
resignation of the elected government.
</p>
<p> WHO IS TO BLAME?
</p>
<p> Fabrication of the Big Lie reached ludicrous levels in
Vilnius three days after the massacre at the television center.
A Soviet camera crew interviewed the major who led the attack.
Identifying himself only as Vitali Ilyich--omitting his last
name--he claimed that no one had been killed. "We shot
people?" he said. "You must be fooling yourself." When asked
by Western journalists about the 10 scarred bodies that had
been displayed in public, he shrugged and replied, "It is hard
to say."
</p>
<p> That obfuscation was matched in Moscow, where no one wanted
to take responsibility. Responding to questions from Supreme
Soviet Deputies, Gorbachev implied that the killings in Vilnius
were the Lithuanians' own fault. He accused them of violating
the Soviet constitution, trampling the human rights of the
republic's Russian and Polish minorities and splitting the
society. Negotiations with Lithuania were hardly possible, he
said, "when the republic is led by such people" as Landsbergis.
</p>
<p> A day later, Gorbachev told the parliament that "thousands
of telegrams" had arrived at the Kremlin, along with appeals
from the Committee of National Salvation, demanding
presidential rule be imposed in Lithuania to halt the
restoration of "a bourgeois state." He even waved a document,
allegedly found by the KGB in a Lithuanian government building,
which he said was a list of Communists and anti-independence
leaders marked for detention.
</p>
<p> In spite of all this self-justification, Gorbachev denied
that he gave the order to shoot. "I learned about what happened
when they woke me up the next morning," he said. Interior
Minister Boris Pugo and Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov shirked
responsibility as well. The decision was made, said Yazov, by
the army commander in Vilnius, whose assignment was to protect
"all members of society."
</p>
<p> Other voices were raised in outrage, but the most
challenging belonged to Gorbachev's nemesis, Boris Yeltsin,
leader of the huge Russian republic. He called events in the
Baltics "the beginning of a mighty offensive against
democracy." To prevent such steps in his republic, said
Yeltsin, "it is becoming clear that we will not be able to
protect our sovereignty without a Russian army of our own."
</p>
<p> In parliament a day later, an angry, flushed Gorbachev
denounced Yeltsin's suggestion as "a gross violation of the
constitution of the U.S.S.R." and "a deliberate act of
provocation." He demanded that Yeltsin withdraw his comments.
But Yeltsin was unrepentant and proved he could play the old
Leninist party games as well. He claimed he was receiving
"thousands of telegrams" from across Russia asking him to
cancel his recent agreement to contribute almost 30% of the
national budget.
</p>
<p> Whether Gorbachev actually gave the order to use force in
Lithuania, or can plausibly deny a direct role, is irrelevant.
He was responsible. It is his policy to refuse demands for
sovereignty and independence that have arisen in non-Russian
regions and Russia itself. It has been his practice, when he
feels it necessary, to use military force to crush them.
Besides, if Gorbachev was not responsible, does that mean he
has lost control to the conservatives in the army and the KGB
and is being forced to front for their demands for order? U.S.
analysts doubt that. "Gorbachev is a hostage to his own
policy," says Robert Legvold, director of Columbia University's
Harriman Institute. "Things may be going further than he wants,
but he charted the course."
</p>
<p> GOODBYE, GLASNOST?
</p>
<p> He is also accountable for the sudden illness of glasnost.
Leonid Kravchenko, whom he appointed in November as chief of
the State Committee for Television and Radio, has been
systematically chipping away at the policy of openness. He
suspended the popular music and information show Vzglyad (View)
when it planned to broadcast a discussion of the resignation
of Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, who had charged that
dictatorship was returning. Kravchenko also forced Interfax, an
independent alternative to the official Soviet news agency TASS,
out of his headquarters.
</p>
<p> When the latest protests flared in the Baltics, central
television's newscasters aired little but Communist Party
disinformation, reading statements from the so-called national
salvation committees accusing the local governments of fascism.
The controlled press, TV and TASS all recited the propaganda
line on Vilnius last week, reporting that the paratroops acted
only to restore order after they had been attacked by
Lithuanian snipers. One report from commentator Alexander
Nevzorov presented the soldiers as heroes besieged by "ethnic
hysteria." The 15 dead, he claimed, had turned out to be
victims of road accidents and heart attacks.
</p>
<p> Some balance nevertheless crept in from more liberal radio
stations and newspapers. Komsomolskaya Pravda carried a
front-page picture of a body under a tank and the question
"Tbilisi, Baku, Vilnius, what next?" Under the headline BLOODY
SUNDAY, Moscow News published a statement from 30 well-known
intellectuals, including two of Gorbachev's most important
former economic advisers, labeling events in Lithuania "a
crime."
</p>
<p> Condemnation from the reformers stung the President into
counterattack. Marching onto the rostrum of the Supreme Soviet,
he proposed suspending the country's five-month-old law that
guarantees freedom of the press. "We are going through a period
of the most serious decisions," he said. "People need
objectivity."
</p>
<p> His proposal produced an uproar among liberal Deputies.
Ukrainian journalist Alla Yaroshinskaya jumped up and shouted,
"What is happening to our glasnost?" After heated debate, the
Supreme Soviet eventually voted for a compromise, calling on
the government and a parliamentary committee to work out
"measures to ensure objectivity."
</p>
<p> WHY MOVE RIGHT?
</p>
<p> As Yeltsin reflected later upon the week's events, he told
correspondents he had asked Gorbachev directly why he was
moving to the right. The Soviet President replied, according
to Yeltsin, "Because society is moving to the right."
</p>
<p> For a world that has largely welcomed and supported
Gorbachev's original course toward reform and democratizatsiya,
it is not easy to find the proper response to his right turn.
The West has, in effect, purchased stock in Gorbachev's
enterprise and desperately wants it to succeed. Gorbachev is
the man who ended the cold war. Who or what might follow him
is a question fraught with worry.
</p>
<p> To begin with, dismantling of the old superpower
confrontation is not complete. The treaty cutting conventional
forces in Europe is still to be ratified, and that is not a
sure thing now that the Soviets have admitted circumventing
some of its key provisions. The START agreement reducing
strategic nuclear weapons is not yet signed, and several
technical issues have not been solved.
</p>
<p> No one wants to do harm to improved superpower relations,
least of all George Bush. So far, Washington has only expressed
its "outrage" about the Baltics and asked the Soviets to
"refrain from further violence" or face possible curtailment
of economic programs. While there are other reasons to postpone
it, the White House said last week that the summit scheduled
for Moscow next month is "clearly up in the air" after Vilnius.
Says Michael Mandelbaum, director of the Project on East-West
Relations at the Council on Foreign Relations: "My guess is
that the Bush Administration will do as little as it decently
can, for geopolitical reasons."
</p>
<p> But pressure is building on Bush to speak more sharply in
hopes of making Gorbachev reconsider. For conservatives, recent
events only confirm their long-standing doubts about lending
support to a leader they consider an attractively tailored
Lenin. Says an analyst in Washington: "In effect, we need to
stop payment on his Nobel Peace Prize."
</p>
<p> In Congress opinion is hardening. Senator Bill Bradley, a
Democrat not noted for hawkish views, suggested last week that
the Senate consider a resolution returning economic links with
the Soviet Union to their cold-war sterility. A Foreign
Relations Committee staff member believes that "a lot of
members aren't going to want to do business with the Soviets
while any kind of crackdown is proceeding."
</p>
<p> Anxiety is widespread in the countries of the old Warsaw
Pact. Governments there do not seriously expect Moscow to
attempt to reduce them to satellites once again, but they are
nervously aware that the Soviet army has not yet gone home.
There are 360,000 Soviet troops in Germany, 50,000 in Poland,
15,000 in Czechoslovakia and 20,000 in Hungary. "They might
decide to `reinforce' them," frets a senior Hungarian diplomat.
Last week Warsaw anxiously asked Moscow to pull its forces out
by the end of this year, but the Kremlin balked, saying the
forces must remain until its troops in Germany have returned
home. The Czechoslovak government ordered 20,000 troops to its
border with the Soviet Union.
</p>
<p> The European Community warned Moscow that if violence
continues it might have to cut off its promised $1 billion in
food and economic aid and $500 million in technical assistance.
But however dismayed Germany might feel, it is in no position
to take similar action. Most of its bilateral aid was pledged
in formal agreements that opened the way to unification last
year and is tied to the withdrawal of Soviet troops by 1994.
"We will remain faithful to these treaties," said Foreign
Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, "because we want the Soviet
Union to be faithful to them."
</p>
<p> NO TURNING BACK?
</p>
<p> Gorbachev, who is more dependent on Western aid than ever
now that perestroika has broken down, must feel the need to
reassure the West. In one offering, he appointed Alexander
Bessmertnykh, a smooth professional diplomat serving as
ambassador to the U.S. since last May, to succeed Shevardnadze
as Foreign Minister. Bessmertnykh is considered a liberal but
not one with great political influence in the Kremlin. "He'll
be a soothing hand to hold," said a U.S. official, "but he
probably won't have much authority." The new minister quickly
stressed the continuity of Moscow's policy: "It will be
preserved," he said.
</p>
<p> Perhaps, but actions still speak louder than Bessmertnykh's
words. The Soviet Union vetoed discussion of the Baltic crisis
at a meeting of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in
Europe last week. The recently signed treaty provides for
discussion of "questions of urgent concern," but Moscow blocked
that, claiming it would be interference in Soviet domestic
affairs. That episode only demonstrated how a hard line at home
is imitated in dealings with the rest of the world. "If the
Soviet Union becomes a nasty, brutish place," says a U.S.
official, "its foreign policy will reflect that."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev's turn to the right has been accelerating for
several months. Some analysts date it from last October, when
he lost the support of the country's liberals by backing away
from the radical 500-day economic-reform plan put forward by
his former adviser Stanislav Shatalin. It became obvious that
he was relying on the security apparatus to enforce Moscow's
will and was handing over the future of perestroika to the
party and its military-industrial complex. While those power
centers are still strong, they are also the most interested in
preserving the status quo and the least receptive to reform.
</p>
<p> Ironically, it was the success of his efforts to democratize
the political order that ultimately pushed Gorbachev hardest.
Six years, ago Paul Goble, a leading expert on Soviet
nationalities and now a State Department adviser, wrote that
Gorbachev would eventually discover he could make liberalism
work in Russia, but that a significantly liberalized union of
15 republics was a contradiction in terms. "Like Lincoln before
him," says a senior U.S. analyst in Washington, "Gorbachev has
decided that he doesn't want to preside over the dissolution of
his own country." By opting to hold on to the union, Gorbachev
chose the course that requires armed repression from Moscow.
"He is trying to send a signal to the other republics," says
a State Department official. "He picked what he thought would
be the easiest target."
</p>
<p> The Soviet President has immense powers on paper but little
ability to rule in the separatist regions. Legvold predicts
that "Gorbachev will try to sit on these people through
[Defense Minister] Yazov. He wants it to be with as little
recrimination from abroad and as little mayhem in the area as
possible." After Lithuania, any republic that does not knuckle
under to Moscow could feel the fist next.
</p>
<p> Though Gorbachev has proved wondrously skilled at skipping
between right and left in the past, it is no longer certain
that the architect of perestroika could turn back now if he
wanted to. Each step on the road to coercion and dictatorship
takes him farther from former allies who might offer him a way
back to reform. He might still harbor a vision of a peaceful,
democratized Soviet Union. But he has not been able to find
either the determination or the right time to bestow true
freedom of choice on his country and all its people.
</p>
<p>HOW TO RESPOND?
</p>
<p> While the U.S. and Europe have condemned Moscow's repression
of the Baltics, they have taken no retaliatory steps. Some
advocate a stronger response.
</p>
<p> They urge the U.S. to:
</p>
<p>-- Cancel the Feb. 11-13 summit with Gorbachev in Moscow,
already considered "up in the air".
</p>
<p>-- Grant diplomatic recognition to the Baltic republics.
</p>
<p>-- Revoke a recent decision to lift temporarily the
Jackson-Vanik trade restrictions that denied Moscow
most-favored-nation status.
</p>
<p>-- Suspend trade credits and technical exchanges.
</p>
<p>-- Block the Soviet Union's membership in the International
Monetary Fund and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
</p>
<p> They urge European nations to:
</p>
<p>-- Delay $1 billion in emergency food aid, as well as $500
million in technical assistance.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>