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<text id=93TT1361>
<title>
Apr. 05, 1993: A Friend In Need
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Apr. 05, 1993 The Generation That Forgot God
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RUSSIA, Page 22
A Friend In Need
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In peril at home, Yeltsin heads for a summit with Clinton, hoping
it will save his reforms
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by James Carney and Yuri
Zarakhovich/Moscow and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
</p>
<p> The cold war offered few grander pageants than summit
meetings between the leader of the free world and the ruler of
the Soviet empire. Whether the venue was Vienna, Washington,
Moscow or a brooding house by the sea in Reykjavik, the sessions
carried an air of high history, a sense that the fate of the
earth depended on how these two men got along. As the leaders
greeted each other, TV cameras carried the handshake around the
world and commentators tried to read far-ranging implications
in this smile or that frown.
</p>
<p> All that was supposed to change when the Soviet Union
imploded. Meetings between the presidents of the U.S. and Russia
would become routine affairs, the participants no longer meeting
as adversaries and their decisions no longer worth banner
headlines. When Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin meet in Vancouver
this weekend, the tensions between the two countries indeed
will be gone. Instead of bickering over missile throw weights
and Third World hot spots, Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin will
spend most of their seven hours together poring over loan
schedules, monetary policy and investment strategies as they map
out a program of aid from the West for the East.
</p>
<p> The Vancouver summit, however, will be as momentous as any
get-together conducted during the chilliest days of the cold
war. If the U.S. does not succeed in helping Moscow stay on the
path of economic and democratic reforms and Yeltsin is ousted,
the West will almost certainly face a leader in the Kremlin far
less friendly to its interests. Yeltsin's ongoing tussle with a
naysaying parliament keeps reminding nervous Western leaders
just how big a stake they have in the success of his leadership
and reforms. Moscow without Yeltsin could decide to withdraw its
support of sanctions in Yugoslavia and instead back the Serbs
in their bloody campaign for territory. A new regime could
decide to re annex the Baltic states, repair relations with Iraq
or refuse to honor approval of the START 2 disarmament treaty.
The specter of renewed confrontation with a conservative,
nationalist Russia that might attempt to revive the ways of the
Soviet empire--forcing the U.S. to give up the defense savings
it had meant to use to finance domestic economic recovery--helped make the case with the American people for why an old
enemy needs help now.
</p>
<p> Moscow's feuding politicians could hardly have set the
summit stage more dramatically if they had planned it that way.
On Saturday an attempt to put the question of impeaching
Yeltsin on the agenda failed by a vote of 475 to 337. However,
when Yeltsin returned to the Kremlin and took the podium, his
performance was so poor that it emboldened conservatives to try
for impeachment again on Sunday. After nightlong negotiations
between Yeltsin and his arch rival, parliamentary chairman
Ruslan Khasbulatov, the two sides agreed on a compromise in
which Yeltsin offered to yield on his quest for an April 25
referendum in favor of Nov. 21 elections for President and
parliament. Presented with a backroom deal that also included
scrapping the existing Congress for a smaller, bicameral
parliament, the Deputies erupted in fury. The plan was rejected,
and resolutions to consider the impeachment of Yeltsin and the
removal of Khasbulatov as chairman of the parliament both
passed. In a Red Square speech to 70,000 supporters, Yel tsin
vowed not to step down, whatever the outcome. Then, in a
historic secret ballot, the Deputies swung back in support of
both men; the resolutions for their removal were defeated.
</p>
<p> Bill Clinton came to Washington on a promise to do more to
promote democracy in Russia; a summit with Yeltsin was one way
to do it. The U.S. President hardly expected to find the issue
dominating his agenda so abruptly, but faced with a possible
collapse in Moscow, he plunged in. He gave his first formal
press conference last week, knowing Russia would be the main
topic. Spokesmen for the Administration hewed to a consistent
theme, articulated first two weeks ago and repeated by Clinton
in an opening statement, that placed Washington firmly behind
the Yeltsin program. "The U.S.," he said, "supports the historic
movement toward democratic political reform in Russia. President
Yeltsin is the leader of that process."
</p>
<p> Administration officials explained that they were trying
to register support for reform and the popularly elected
President without giving their imprimatur to the positions he
took in his constitutional dispute with parliament. Many
Russians, including Khasbulatov, expressed resentment. "Why
should they pin the label of antireformers on us?" he demanded.
Pravda commentator Viktor Linnik wrote that because the U.S.
wanted to keep Russia weak, "no substantial aid to Russia has
been delivered over the past 18 months."
</p>
<p> Providing more aid is the second, harder part of
Washington's plan to bolster Yeltsin. How much and what kind of
assistance will be the centerpiece of the summit talks. Topic
A will be direct financial aid from the U.S. and the ways
Washington can increase the flow of private trade and
investment. The Administration has concluded, says a White House
official, that "the best way for us to keep reform going is to
make sure we're engaged economically." Since two-way trade last
year totaled a modest $3.8 billion and Americans invested only
$400 million in Russia, there is room for growth. In Vancouver,
Clinton will announce an expansion of government services to
make such trans actions easier for American traders and
investors.
</p>
<p> Clinton is convinced that to help Yel tsin strengthen his
hold on power, the U.S. must deliver visible, practical
assistance to Russia quickly. He will offer an aid package
weighted toward outright grants rather than more loans, which
Russia is already finding hard to repay. The plan will put
together $417 million now available and another $286 million
Clinton is requesting from Congress for humanitarian and
technical aid.
</p>
<p> The $703 million total is a relatively small amount,
planners admit, but much of it can be spent right away and will
go to projects the Russians have urgently asked for. "We've done
a lot of work with the Russians," says the White House
official, "talked to them about what's most important." That
could include money to build housing for former army officers,
modernize Russia's oil industry, expand private efforts like the
Salvation Army's Moscow soup kitchens and expedite the delivery
of critical medical supplies. Administration aides know that
even this size program will not be popular with American voters,
but say the President will go to bat for it publicly and may
even ask for more. "Clinton's not afraid of this one," says a
senior official.
</p>
<p> The big-ticket items on Yeltsin's list will require
larger, multilateral, long-term assistance. Decisions on those
programs will be worked out after Vancouver, at a preparatory
meeting of the Group of Seven industrial democracies in
mid-April and at their summit in July.
</p>
<p> Washington believes that the $24 billion multilateral aid
package announced by the West a year ago was not carried through
because Western governments did not respond with enough energy
and imagination when Russia's faltering economy made it
impossible to meet various conditions for receiving the money.
Still, the Russians cannot honestly claim they have received
nothing. Between 1990 and 1992, the world pledged $81 billion
to the former U.S.S.R., and $57 billion has been paid or is on
its way, though most of that money was in loans.
</p>
<p> Clinton is pushing the G-7 hard to do more, starting with
rescheduling Russia's foreign debt of around $80 billion--even
though Moscow may never repay some of the loans. The U.S. is
urging the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to
find ways to help stabilize the Russian economy and the ruble
and to ease some of their restrictions. The Administration says
the World Bank is taking too much time to design its assistance
programs. "The priority," says a White House official, "should
be getting resources on the ground and doing something in 1993."
</p>
<p> Economics is also at the root of the Russian parliament's
challenge to Yeltsin. For months, lawmakers have been trying to
rein in his liberalized prices and his plans to privatize land
and modernize industry. They say reforms that have produced
painful side effects like 2,500% annual inflation, a 19% drop
in gross domestic product last year and the threat of vastly
increased unemployment are more than the Russian people can
bear. Since December, the parliament, led by Khasbu latov, has
been hacking away at Yeltsin's powers, determined to stall or
divert the President's efforts to turn Russia's subsidized,
militarized economy into a free market. One form of unemployment
the Deputies particularly oppose is their own; they have no
enthusiasm for new elections in which they might lose their
seats.
</p>
<p> The hot word in the political debate remains impichment,
impeachment, an imported term that Russians were using to mean
"vote Yeltsin out." That is a mistranslation of the long legal
process by which the U.S. can dismiss a President, but Russian
parliamentarians are also vague about the concepts of
demokratiya, konstitutsiya and zakonnost (legality). Despite
much ostentatious talk of legality, post-Soviet Russia is still
a place where the law and its institutions are in flux.
</p>
<p> Nevertheless, Khasbulatov insisted as last week began that
Yeltsin had violated the constitution when he claimed "special
rule" over the country pending a national referendum on April
25. Khasbulatov, a former professor of economics, demanded a
judgment by the Constitutional Court. Even though the decree
Yeltsin said he had signed had not been published, the court
obliged, ruling that the President could not legally declare
one-man rule or call a referendum, though he could ask the
nation for a vote of confidence.
</p>
<p> The court's Chief Justice Valeri Zorkin did not use the
word impichment in his advisory opinion, but that did not slow
down Khasbulatov. "It's absolutely clear," he insisted, "that
there are grounds for initiating the impeachment process."
Members of the parliament weren't all as sure. Khasbu latov
settled the debate by ramming through a summons to the
parliament's parent body, the 1,033-member Congress of People's
Deputies, to meet on Friday to consider removing Yeltsin from
office.
</p>
<p> Anxious Deputies milled in the corridors. "My conscience
tells me to vote for impeachment," said a well-dressed Moscow
representative, "but I have my managerial position to consider."
Another claimed, "The majority is on our side." But, the Deputy
wondered, "how can our thousand-member Congress rule Russia?"
Surveying the scene, a Russian journalist observed, "It's scary.
If they vote in favor of impeachment, how are they going to
enforce it? Secondly, they are not sure of the people's
support." In Paris, Pierre Hassner, research director of the
University of Paris Political Science Foundation, put it more
sharply: "Everyone was scared of doing something irreversible
and ending up with another Yugoslavia or Lebanon."
</p>
<p> The mood of crisis began to cool temporarily when the
missing Yeltsin decree was finally distributed, four days late.
Surprisingly, the text, dated March 20, did not contain the
words declaring "special rule" that the court found
impermissible, nor did it declare that parliamentary action
against Yeltsin's decrees would be automatically invalid, as he
had threatened.
</p>
<p> On the eve of Friday's full Congress session, Yeltsin
urged the Deputies not to press ahead with the vote to remove
him, warning that it could "plunge the people into the abyss of
confrontation." Whether Khasbulatov was responding to that or
had just counted heads and found he could not muster the
two-thirds vote necessary, he too stepped back. Conceding that
he may have overreacted to Yeltsin's "special rule" speech, he
withdrew his demand for impeachment. "Frankly," he said, "I am
not a supporter of impeachment."
</p>
<p> By the time the third session of the Congress in three
months gathered in the Grand Kremlin Palace on Friday, the
impeachment drive seemed to be losing its momentum. Although the
Kremlin rang with bitter invective, the hard-liners did not have
the votes to depose Yeltsin. Zor kin, the Chief Justice who had
set the impeachment bandwagon in motion, instead offered a
10-point plan for national reconciliation similar to Yeltsin's
own program, including a referendum on a new constitution and
a law abolishing the Congress in favor of a bicameral
parliament.
</p>
<p> At the Saturday session, Khasbulatov, true to his earlier
recantation, tried to head off the vote on the motion to
consider sacking Yeltsin. "Impeachment, impeachment! What is
this word impeachment?" he said, mocking the use of the foreign
term. He was clearly relieved when the motion did not attract
enough support to be placed on the agenda.
</p>
<p> In a weary, rambling speech Saturday afternoon, Yeltsin
suggested that in a week of compromise talks with Khasbula tov,
Zorkin and Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, he could produce
an agreement that might end the power struggle. The President's
face looked puffy, and he paused often, setting off mutters
among his foes that he was drunk. Maria Sorokina, a Deputy from
Lipetsk, her voice almost breaking, went to the podium to say
she had been a Yeltsin loyalist and had worked for his election
in 1991. No longer, she said. With heavy sighs, referring to the
President's speech, she asked, "How long will we put up with
this disgrace?" Yeltsin's aides later explained that he had not
slept for three nights and was exhausted. "These are difficult
days," Yeltsin told reporters, citing the death of his mother
two weeks ago. "I spent 10 difficult years living with her in
a small hut, and it is hard for me to bear this loss."
</p>
<p> The compromise proposed on Sunday met strong and immediate
rejection. The nine-point plan had offered a sop to the
Congress, later described as an attempted "bribe," by letting
them keep their privileges and salaries until their term ends
in 1995. The Deputies condemned the plan as a cynical attempt
to circumvent the Congress. "Only cynical people could have come
up with this," raged conservative Deputy Gennadi Benov. "We
could accept this only if we are a Congress of political
suicides." Opposition Deputy Vladimir Isakov immediately
proposed an impeachment motion and said to Khasbulatov, "We are
sick and tired of your unscrupulousness, of your ploys. The
President and the speaker are the two people here who have led
us and the country into this dead end." Isakov then moved that
Khasbulatov be sacked by secret ballot.
</p>
<p> Awaiting the ballot, Yeltsin told a mass rally in Red
Square how good it was to see 70,000 supporters. "We are half
a million!" someone corrected him from the crowd.
</p>
<p> "No, Boris Nikolayevich, you have 150 million supporters--all of Russia!" shouted a second demonstrator. "You have
come just in time," Yeltsin told the crowd. "Today will decide
the fate of the President, your fate, the fate of Russia."
Impeaching Yeltsin would have required a two-thirds majority,
or 689 votes--the actual vote was 617. Khasbulatov, who could
have been removed by a simple majority, was saved by a 558-339
vote in his favor.
</p>
<p> Asked who ultimately would win the struggle, Yeltsin
replied, "There will be no winners." It seemed likely that his
parliamentary foes would continue to sit belligerently in the
Russian White House thinking up new ways to thwart the
President, while Yeltsin remained in the Kremlin, issuing orders
that officials who really make or break reform often ignore. As
long as these rivals remain at odds, the government and its
reforms will be stalemated.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>