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<text id=89TT2167>
<link 91TT0215>
<link 90TT0926>
<link 89TT2357>
<title>
Aug. 21, 1989: Soviet Union:Cry Independence
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
The New USSR And Eastern Europe
Aug. 21, 1989 How Bush Decides
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 28
SOVIET UNION
Cry Independence
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Pushing for sovereignty, the Baltics shape the future of
perestroika
</p>
<p>By John Kohan/Tallinn
</p>
<p> Sitting in his spacious, wood-paneled office in the
Estonian capital of Tallinn, Communist Party leader Vaino
Valjas, 58, wryly sums up the situation in his tiny Baltic
republic with a peasant proverb: Better to see once than to hear
a hundred times. The former Soviet Ambassador to Nicaragua was
called home only a year ago to take up his new post, but what
Valjas has already witnessed in those tumultuous twelve months
is nothing less than a revolution, from the birth of unofficial
political movements like the Estonian Popular Front to the
bruising constitutional crisis with Moscow over the republic's
sovereignty. "For years we have gotten used to speaking of the
party's monopoly on power," he says. "We have forgotten the
principle that the party has power only as long as the people
trust it."
</p>
<p> Valjas represents the new breed of Communist reformers who
are taking power in the Baltic republics of Estonia, Lithuania
and Latvia. He and his colleagues know that the party's
prospects in the three Baltic states hinge on how quickly it can
come to terms with growing popular demands for more radical
political and economic change--even if the party runs the risk
of angering Moscow. So far, the Baltic challenge has not erupted
in ethnic violence and social anarchy; instead, it has been
subtly expressed in arcane legal debate and parliamentary
procedure. For President Mikhail Gorbachev, it represents both
a bold affirmation of his goal of creating a society governed
by law and an assault against the national union he has vowed
to protect. How he responds could determine the future of
perestroika.
</p>
<p> The nationalist drift in the Baltics has aroused fear among
the region's sizable Russian minority. When the Estonian
supreme soviet voted last week to impose a two-year residency
requirement for voters in local elections, supporters of the
pro-Russian Intermovement and Joint Council of Work Collectives
denounced the measures, charging that they consigned recent
Russian immigrants to a political "pale of settlement." At least
10,000 workers joined strikes at some 30 enterprises. Since most
of the affected plants are under the control of Moscow
ministries, many Estonians viewed the labor unrest as another
in a series of provocations from conservative forces opposed to
the Estonian campaign for local sovereignty.
</p>
<p> It is a measure of how quickly political change has been
sweeping through the Baltic republics that the debate about
national self-determination has moved from the streets into
Communist Party headquarters. Asked about the future, Valjas
replies, "Our ideal is an independent, sovereign Estonia within
the Soviet Union or within a federation of sovereign
republics." Latvian Ideology Secretary Ivars Kezbers muses about
being a "free republic in a free Soviet Union." Lithuanian
Second Secretary Vladimir Berezov says that "our common goal is
independence, even if the ways of getting there are different."
</p>
<p> The paradox is that Gorbachev's campaign for economic
reforms and political liberalization has drawn a more
enthusiastic response from the three Baltic republics than from
almost anywhere else in the country. The emergence of
independent splinter groups like the Lithuanian Party of
Democrats, the Estonian Christian Union and the Latvian National
Independence Movement has already created something
approximating a multiparty system in the Baltics. The Estonian,
Latvian and Lithuanian delegations to the new Congress of the
People's Deputies have proved to be the star pupils of the
Gorbachev School of Democracy. The Estonians noted how one
young Central Asian deputy from Kirgizia, sitting across the
aisle, began to vote along with them--until he was shifted to
the opposite side of his delegation.
</p>
<p> If most of the country is moving at a snail's pace in
carrying out perestroika, the relatively more prosperous Baltic
states have been pressing the Kremlin to go further with
economic reforms. Moscow officials have opposed the idea of
independent national currencies, but that has not stopped the
three republics from drafting plans to reduce the flood of
Soviets who come from the rest of the country to buy scarce
goods in better-supplied Baltic shops. The Estonians discuss
establishing their own credit-card system, and the Latvians talk
about creating an alternative currency as early as next January.
It would be paid to local workers and redeemable in special
stores. Last month the Supreme Soviet finally gave Estonia and
Lithuania the green light to try running their economies free
of interference from central ministries in Moscow. If these
experiments prove successful, the three Baltic states could
serve as the economic locomotive Gorbachev badly needs to pull
the country's other twelve republics toward perestroika.
</p>
<p> Of course, such a scenario would derail if the Baltic
republics decided instead to uncouple totally from the Soviet
train. Emotions are running particularly high this month because
of the 50th anniversary of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, the
treaty signed by the Foreign Ministers of Nazi Germany and the
Soviet Union that opened the way for Moscow's occupation of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in 1940. In downtown Vilnius, the
capital of Lithuania, a group of young hunger strikers has set
up a makeshift shelter decorated with placards calling for
liquidation of the Nazi-Soviet pact. HOW LONG WILL THE RED ARMY
BE MASTER OF OUR LAND, declares a poster with a blood-red
footprint on a map of the republic. On Aug. 23, the date of the
agreement, popular-front groups hope to organize a human chain
from Estonia to Lithuania, a sort of Hands Across the Baltics.
</p>
<p> Valentin Falin, head of the Central Committee's
international department, conceded last month what Moscow has
long denied: that the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact included a secret
protocol that called for the Soviet takeover of the Baltics. But
Baltic deputies serving on a commission to study the pact
complain that Moscow representatives want to stop short of
drawing the necessary conclusions about the legal standing of
their republics in the union. Says Estonian Popular Front leader
Rein Veidemann: "We must solve the Baltic question and recognize
the fact that we were first occupied and then annexed." But what
would belated recognition of that historical reality actually
accomplish? "Nothing," says Latvian Ideology Secretary Kezbers
flatly. "The marriage between the Soviet Union and the Baltic
states is de facto if not de jure. It is part of the existing
order of postwar Europe."
</p>
<p> Still, the Baltic states hope at least to cut a better deal
with Moscow, perhaps in a new treaty that guarantees their
sovereign rights. During five decades of Soviet rule, the three
republics have watched helplessly as all-powerful ministries in
Moscow imposed new industries, regardless of whether they were
appropriate to the region. As a result, stretches of white sand
beaches along the Baltic coast became too polluted for
swimming. An influx of outside manpower threatened to make
Latvians a minority in their own homeland. The hardworking
Estonians learned to their amazement that by Gorbachev's
reckoning, they were supposed to be running a yearly deficit of
500 million rubles in the Soviet Union's federal budget.
</p>
<p> The Baltic states also demand more say in military affairs.
The Estonian government has petitioned Moscow to put more
Estonians in the republic's interior-ministry forces and border
guards. There have been calls to restore the tradition of local
military units like the Sixteenth Lithuanian Rifle Division, and
more radical proposals to create a zone of peace in the Baltics.
Says Latvian Popular Front leader Dainis Ivans: "We should
decide ourselves how many military bases we need on our
territory and move step by step toward making Latvia a
military-free zone."
</p>
<p> The anger accumulated over decades has blossomed into a
rainbow of national colors, a sign that whatever their unity of
aims, each state still proudly clings to its own national
traditions. In Estonia the once banned blue-black-and-white flag
from the period of independence between the two World Wars waves
again above Tallinn's Toompea Castle. Latvia has hoisted its
traditional crimson-and-white banner above Riga Castle. In
Lithuania the historic yellow-green-and-red tricolor flutters
once more from Gediminas Tower in Vilnius. A report from each
of the Baltic republics:
</p>
<p> ESTONIA
</p>
<p> As a popular saying in this northern Baltic state puts it:
Think nine times and speak on the tenth. Estonia's major
contribution to the Baltic reform movement has primarily been
new ideas, whether blueprints for popular-front movements or
drafts of laws regulating economic "cost accounting" at the
local level. But when Estonians do speak, they get a hearing.
Last November the Estonian supreme soviet passed amendments to
the local constitution, investing ultimate legal authority with
the republic rather than with Moscow. That act of defiance
brought on a finger-wagging lecture from Gorbachev. But the tiny
Baltic state held its ground, and Moscow pursued the matter no
further. Says party chief Valjas: "Estonian persistence has
brought results."
</p>
<p> Valjas has astutely chosen compromise rather than
confrontation with the powerful Estonian Popular Front. He has
even turned over the key state-planning portfolio to economist
Edgar Savisaar, a member of the movement's executive council.
During elections last March, the Popular Front did not run its
own candidates against party regulars. Valjas garnered 90% of
the votes in his district, but a poll for a Finnish newspaper
taken just after the balloting showed that if true multiparty
elections had been held, the Communists would have placed a
distant second to the Estonian Popular Front (16.3% to 35.2%).
</p>
<p> The same questionnaire revealed that when ethnic Estonians
were asked about the future of the republic, 55% opted for
complete independence. A coalition of small nationalist groups
has launched a campaign to register those who lived in Estonia
during its years of independence (1918 to 1940) and their
descendants in order to convene an Estonian National Congress
to discuss the fate of the nation. Organizers deny that they are
creating a rival parliamentary body, but the fact that some
100,000 people have responded has caused concern within the
ranks of the party and the Popular Front, and deepened the
mistrust of the Russian minority.
</p>
<p> The Estonian leadership has come under virulent attack from
militant Russians for promoting legislation that gives priority
to the language and culture of ethnic Estonians. Gorbachev may
have taken a conciliatory approach with the nation's striking
miners, but the authorities in Tallinn signaled last week that
they were growing impatient with Russian agitators who have been
using labor protests to press their demands. The authorities
invoked a resolution recently passed by the Supreme Soviet in
Moscow to ban the strike and issued a call for "common sense."
As Popular Front leader Veidemann notes, "Our greatest danger
lies in creating two separate societies, as in Northern Ireland
and Lebanon."
</p>
<p> LATVIA
</p>
<p> The other Baltic states jest that being Latvian is "not a
nationality but a profession," a reflection of the peculiar
position of an ethnic group whose cultural survival has long
been threatened. In 1935 Latvians made up 76% of the population
in their homeland. By 1979 their numbers had dwindled to 53.7%.
During the same period, the total of ethnic Russians in Latvia
climbed from 11% to 32.8%. Thus, Latvian national aims have to
be advanced through the art of compromise. At a time when
Lithuanian and Estonian parliamentarians were debating whether
to turn down Moscow's election-reform laws last November, the
Latvians, led by President Anatoli Gorbunov, veered away from
open revolt and drafted alternative wordings for the disputed
passages.
</p>
<p> Latvia has always had stronger ties to Moscow than have the
other two republics. Latvian Riflemen made up the Kremlin's
elite Praetorian Guard in the years after the Bolshevik
Revolution, and party boss Arvid Pelshe became a fixture of the
Brezhnev gerontocracy. Latvian First Secretary Janis Vagris, who
gained his post last October when Boris Pugo was promoted to
Moscow's Party Control Committee, is viewed by many as a
compromise choice whose views on reform and political pluralism
are acceptable to party conservatives.
</p>
<p> One intriguing measure of popular support for the cause of
Latvian self-determination came during the parliamentary
elections, when Juris Dobelis, a leader of the Latvian National
Independence Movement, ran against four establishment
candidates, including First Secretary Vagris. The Communist
Party chief squeaked by with 51%, and Dobelis polled an
impressive 34%. When the Latvian Popular Front asked its
100-member council last June whether it should "join the
struggle for Latvia's complete and economic independence," the
vote was a unanimous yes. In May Popular Front members opened
formal contacts with the leaders of Latvian exile organizations
at a gathering in France. The movement hopes to score well in
local elections this December and in balloting for the Latvian
supreme soviet next February. As Kezbers admits, "They have
slogans, programs--and no responsibility for the past."
</p>
<p> LITHUANIA
</p>
<p> One of the more dramatic moments at the Congress of the
People's Deputies occurred in early June, when members of the
Lithuanian delegation walked out of the Kremlin's Palace of
Congresses in protest against Gorbachev's plan to put the
question of a new Committee for Constitutional Supervision to
a vote. Considering the importance of constitutional issues for
the republics, the Lithuanians wanted more time to discuss the
makeup of the committee. Gorbachev compromised and referred the
matter to a commission. From the point of view of the pragmatic
Estonians, it was a case once again of the Lithuanians "mounting
a charge on white horses." But Popular Front leader Virgilijus
Cepaitis sees it differently: "We have been giving lessons to
Moscow, and they have been accepting them. We are helping
Gorbachev by showing the way."
</p>
<p> Lithuanians make up fully 80% of the population in the
southernmost Baltic republic, assuring bedrock support for
Sajudis, as the Lithuanian Popular Front is known. One
indication of the group's growing power came on the eve of its
founding congress last October, when the reform-minded Algirdas
Brazauskas became leader of the Lithuanian Communist Party. He
received thunderous ovations at the meeting, especially after
his dramatic announcement that the Vilnius Cathedral would be
returned to the Roman Catholic Church. But relations soon
deteriorated in the bruising parliamentary debate last November
over proposed changes in the constitution. At Brazauskas'
urging, the Lithuanians declined to follow Estonia's lead in
rebelling against Moscow. Angry Lithuanians took to the streets,
and Sajudis called for a symbolic work protest.
</p>
<p> Troubles erupted again last February, after representatives
from Sajudis and Vincentas Cardinal Sladkevicius called for the
restoration of Lithuanian sovereignty at ceremonies marking the
71st anniversary of the beginning of Lithuania's short-lived
independence. During an emergency party plenum, Brazauskas
warned that such actions might lead to imposition of a "special
form of rule." The scare tactics failed: in last March's
parliamentary elections, Sajudis candidates picked up 36 out of
42 seats. Brazauskas also won, but only after his Sajudis
opponent bowed out to ensure his victory.
</p>
<p> Since then, the party leadership has met monthly with
Sajudis representatives to discuss draft laws. But the present
idyll in Lithuania's volatile political scene is bound to end,
as both sides prepare for the electoral battle for local and
republic-wide elections in December and February. The Lithuanian
Popular Front has also had to move faster to keep ahead of the
drift in public thinking toward the more radical positions of
the Latvian Liberation League. Says Lithuanian Party Secretary
Berezov: "We fear that some hotheads want to speed up the
process and have it all tomorrow. They risk ruining everything."
</p>
<p> At present, the economic life of the three Baltic republics
is so intertwined with the Soviet Union that it would be
impossible for them to go it alone. "We can decide to be
separate and free, but what will we do the next morning?" asks
Vello Pohla, leader of the Estonian Green Movement. "Everything
has been damaged by 50 years of Soviet administration. We have
to reach a standard of living first that would make it possible
to raise the question of secession." Latvian Ideology Secretary
Kezbers points out that the West, for all its moral support,
would probably offer little economic help to three independent
Baltic republics. As he puts it, "No room has been booked for
us in the Europe Hotel."
</p>
<p> Moscow would not even need to resort to tanks and troops to
dampen the Baltic enthusiasm for secession. It could exert
pressure just by slapping an embargo on fuel and raw-material
shipments. Yet there are numerous way stations of sovereignty
on the road to independence. Some Baltic economic thinkers
believe, for example, that the region could turn into a
clearinghouse between East and West, where Estonians, Latvians
and Lithuanians could serve as go-betweens for Westerners eager
to open up the Soviet market. "The Baltic states may not be as
exotic as Hong Kong, but they make a good bridge between East
and West," says Kezbers. "The Soviet Union is a vast country
needing everything, and we know how it works."
</p>
<p> The political benefits of such a strategy are obvious. "We
cannot make Russia go away, and we are not about to leave
Estonia," says Estonian Popular Front leader Veidemann. "So we
must find a clever way to coexist and create conditions that
would make the Soviet Union interested in our independence."
</p>
<p> If Gorbachev responds wisely and generously to the
nationalistic stirrings in the Baltics, he will win on two
fronts: the cause of perestroika throughout the Soviet Union
will be advanced, and one more irritant in East-West relations
will disappear. Living next door to good neighbors is always
better in the long run than sharing a home with unhappy
relatives.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>