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<text id=93TT1238>
<title>
Mar. 22, 1993: Who Rules Russia?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE KREMLIN, Page 30
WHO RULES RUSSIA?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In a brutal struggle for power, parliament reins in Yeltsin
and imperils the course of his economic and political reforms
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by John Kohan and Yuri
Zarakhovich/Moscow, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> Boris Yeltsin and Ruslan Khasbulatov stared each other
down in the Kremlin last week, and Yeltsin blinked. More to the
point, he abruptly rose from his chair and walked off the stage.
Russia's President and the chairman of its parliament, the
Supreme Soviet, have been in direct confrontation for months
over the course and pace of economic reforms--and more
fundamentally, over who should rule Russia. Yeltsin, who stands
higher in public esteem than the legislature, has managed to
hold his own through compromises and concessions, including the
sacrifice of some of his key planners. But after four days of
shouting, an emergency session of the Congress of People's
Deputies jammed the brakes on so hard that the future of reform
and the presidency are now in doubt.
</p>
<p> The struggle for power between President and parliament is
not just a battle between two ambitious men or between
reformers and hard-liners or even between rival ideologies. What
Yeltsin has been trying to do with Russia may not be possible.
Never before has a nation with such a despotic history as
Russia's transformed itself into a multiparty democracy with a
market economy. Yeltsin and his team of shock therapists have
been at the task since the Soviet Union collapsed in December
1991, producing few successes and much turmoil, hardship and
anxiety. As the pain mounted, Khasbulatov and the President's
other conservative antimarket, anti-Western rivals muttered and
threatened, then finally struck.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin was preparing for two events in April--a summit
meeting with Bill Clinton and a national referendum on whether
Russians favored a parliamentary or presidential republic--that he hoped would strengthen his hand against the opponents
of change. Khasbulatov pre-empted him by calling in the
1,033-member Congress, a mainly naysaying group elected back in
March 1990 when communism was still the power in the land. The
parliamentary leader was determined to establish once and for
all that the legislators, not the President, were
constitutionally empowered to run the country.
</p>
<p> Assembled in the ornately pilastered hall of the Great
Kremlin Palace, the Deputies unhesitatingly voted by large
majorities to cancel all previous power-sharing compromises with
Yeltsin, ban the April referendum, strip away the President's
power to issue decrees and put the Cabinet under parliamentary
control. In effect, the executive branch was neutralized and
parliament took over as arbiter of personnel and policy. On
Friday, when the President's proposed amendments were rejected
overwhelmingly, a grim-faced Yeltsin strode out of the hall.
</p>
<p> Presidential aides immediately insisted that if the April
referendum were not held, Yeltsin would go ahead with a
nonbinding plebiscite asking Russian citizens to choose between
the executive and the parliament. On Saturday, Yeltsin refused
to return for the closing session but sent the Congress two new
proposals: water down the limitations it had voted on
presidential power and agree to hold his referendum on April 25.
The deputies dismissed the first request as "inappropriate" and
cautioned Yeltsin that it would be unconstitutional for him to
try to hold a plebiscite on his own.
</p>
<p> Thus the question of who really rules Russia remains
unresolved. The Congress is in no position to take over
management of the government's daily affairs, and the President
is unlikely to accept such humiliating defeat. The Congress's
actions, warned his press secretary, Vyacheslav Kostikov,
indicate a "slide back to Soviet communist power." That warning
was not entirely verbiage, since most of the Congress Deputies
were originally bureaucrats from the Communist Party,
trade-union functionaries and directors of state factories and
collective farms. They are opposed to basic reform partly out
of nostalgia for the old days and partly because they are
determined to cling to the power and the privilege they still
hold as parliamentarians.
</p>
<p> The quarrel among the politicians has left the machinery
of government so damaged it is hard to see how it can be made
to work again soon. Yeltsin's referendum was intended to settle
whether Russians wanted a parliamentary or presidential
republic, but even if he won he would have found it hard to
enforce the outcome. Any decision on a new constitution would
have to come from the Congress's unwilling legislators. In any
case, as long as this power struggle continues and the two
leaders are engaged in personal combat, the real loser is the
reform program, which has already been much diluted by
compromise.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin does not have many options left. He told the
Deputies that he would go ahead with his own kind of referendum
on power sharing and was also ready to take "additional measures
to preserve the balance of power in the country." Whether he
goes to the people with a referendum or a nonbinding plebiscite,
he will again face the problem of enforcing the result if he
wins. In a telephone call, Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev
assured U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher that Yeltsin
was determined to carry out the poll, possibly by April 25, and
would then try to find a way to hold new elections. If he is
able to fulfill that plan, especially new elections, it could
be the best possible outcome for the crisis. Many of the
communist hacks would be sure to lose their seats.
</p>
<p> For months, Yeltsin had tried repeatedly to negotiate an
accord on power sharing between the executive and legislative
branches, but Khasbulatov, once a Yeltsin protege and advocate
of reform, paid no attention. Even on the eve of last week's
Congress, the presidential team gave fifty-fifty odds that a
compromise could be reached. They were hopelessly optimistic.
congressional Deputies who filed into the hall were so sour
about reform that they refused even to consider a motion to
remove Karl Marx's rallying cry, "Workers of the World, Unite,"
from the Russian Federation's national emblem. In the face of
such hostility, Yeltsin's conciliatory appeal for "honest and
equal cooperation" went unheard. Deputies yawned and chatted as
the President's supporters pleaded for strong powers to
"guarantee" reforms. When that pitch failed, Yeltsin warned that
if they could not find a way to agree, a referendum "will remain
the only means of resolving the conflict."
</p>
<p> In recent weeks, Yeltsin has hinted that if the Deputies
try to curb his authority, he might mount a presidential coup
d'etat, dissolving the Congress and ruling by decree. It would
be illegal, and it could be carried out only with the help of
the armed forces and police. They had carefully declared
themselves to be outside politics, and Defense Minister Pavel
Grachev banned troop movements and exercises in the Moscow
region during the Congress. Even so, rumors swept the session,
and one Deputy dashed to the microphone to announce that 10
truckloads of troops had just pulled up at the Kremlin. A
quickly formed commission checked and four hours later reported
that only snowplows had arrived. Correspondents asked a
lieutenant on guard in the Kremlin's Ivanov Square about troop
movement. "Are you fellows crazy?" he responded.
</p>
<p> In the euphoria that filled the hall after Congress voted
to rein in Yeltsin, only a few parliamentarians were thinking
about the consequences of putting the executive branch under
control of the legislature. Deputy Yevgeni Kozhokin reflected
that revolutionary France was the only country he knew that was
ruled by a parliament: "If Khasbulatov emerges as our
Robespierre, I will be sorry for my country." A commentator for
the Russian Information Agency called the sessions a "slow
strangulation of the President."
</p>
<p> The root of the conflict inside the government is Russia's
attempt to function under the Brezhnev-era constitution. It has
been amended hundreds of times over the past 15 years, but many
of the additions contradict one another. Parliamentarians point
to Article 104, which describes the Congress of People's
Deputies as the highest organ of power, while presidential
supporters cite four other articles that spell out a division
of powers among the executive, legislative and judicial
branches.
</p>
<p> None of these niceties made any difference during the
Soviet era because all policies and power were in the hands of
the Communist Party. The government, like everyone else, did
what the party instructed it to do. Once the party was
abolished in August 1991, the organs of government had to
function on their own, and found they did not know how. The
force that had bound them together was gone, and they began to
fly apart.
</p>
<p> Russia needs a new constitution and democratic elections,
but the existing parliament would have to approve them, and
Khasbulatov thinks the present patchwork constitution is fine.
Although congressional terms run until 1995 and Yeltsin's until
1996, both he and Khasbulatov have said they might favor earlier
balloting. The Congress decided Saturday to refer the election
issue to the Supreme Soviet, Russia's smaller standing
parliament.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin is largely to blame for letting the conflict
between the presidency and parliament grow into a crisis so
severe it threatens his hold on power. After his heroic
performance during the coup attempt in August 1991, his
authority among the Russian people was at a peak. He could have
arranged to dissolve the holdover Congress and call new
elections. He did not do so, and ever since, at moments of
confrontation with the legislators, Yeltsin has faltered and
hedged, each time ending up with less room to maneuver.
</p>
<p> There was no sign last week that Yeltsin was in immediate
danger of losing his post by impeachment or forced resignation.
But his ability to ram through difficult economic decisions
will continue to wane. "My best guess," says former Director of
Central Intelligence Robert Gates, "is that the struggle will
continue and that it will be a continuing drain on the reform
process."
</p>
<p> In the interest of rallying support, the Yeltsin team
often depicts his conflict with the Congress as a struggle
between good and evil, pitting democrats against communists and
fascists. In reality, most experts believe, there is little
chance of a restoration of the old-style Soviet rule. But other
forms of authoritarian rule or even a dictatorship bent on
reversing the reform process are possible. It is obvious that
Russia is not on the fast track to transformation into a
democratic, free-market society. The unadventurous new Prime
Minister, Victor Chernomyrdin, a veteran industrial manager,
speaks of the need for a "pragmatic, down-to-earth" approach to
change. That certainly means slowing, if not necessarily ending,
reforms. Russia cannot be effectively governed in fits and
starts. Sooner rather than later, Yeltsin and Khasbulatov will
have to find a way out of the political stalemate they have
created. They cannot continue to coexist like a divorced couple
under the same roof for long.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>