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<text id=93TT0339>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: Now Who Rules Russia?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RUSSIA, Page 44
Now Who Rules Russia?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In a bold bid for absolute power, Boris Yeltsin turned the lights
out on parliament, but his hard-line rivals were not ready to
concede
</p>
<p>By JOHN KOHAN/MOSCOW--With reporting by J.F.O. McAllister/Washington and William Mader/London
</p>
<p> The timing was a surprise, but not the act. For months Moscow
had wondered when Boris Yeltsin would do it: take sole charge
of Russia. Last week he did, dissolving the rebellious parliament,
but his hard-line rivals did not slink off into the night. Now
there are two Presidents, two Ministers of Defense, two Ministers
of Security and two Ministers of the Interior. Two centers of
government contend for power, one in the Kremlin and a second
in Russia's White House, the seat of parliament. Both issued
a flurry of orders and made separate appeals to Russia's 150
million people to rally in support of two competing visions
of the future of the nation.
</p>
<p> The political stalemate that had brought Russians much of the
pain of reform without many of the benefits had finally gone
on too long for Yeltsin. He had tried during the past 18 months
of struggle with conservative lawmakers to abide by Russia's
Soviet-era constitution while he pushed the go-slow parliament
to adopt free-market changes. At times he came perilously close
to overstepping the law. But he always beat a retreat, fearing
that any challenge to the lawful order might destroy the state.
</p>
<p> A summer of paralysis took its toll. Yeltsin's economic-reform
program was stuck, his authority under constant challenge, his
time consumed in inconclusive dickering with his parliamentary
opponents. Fed up, Yeltsin finally laid his claim to power on
the line. In a prime-time television address Tuesday evening,
he announced he was disbanding the legislature, even if it meant
violating the constitution, and called new parliamentary elections
for December. Angry Deputies quickly denounced Yeltsin's move
as a coup d'etat and set up their own government, led by Vice
President Alexander Rutskoi, Yeltsin's most implacable enemy.
Suddenly, the most serious political crisis since the failed
attempt to re-establish communist hegemony in August 1991 had
engulfed Moscow.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin's gamble appeared to be paying off. Although citizens
watched indifferently as political passions raged in and around
the White House, parliament issued weapons to a motley band
of supporters in the early hours of the conflict. On Thursday
night eight armed men tried to break into a Moscow military
facility. One policeman and an innocent bystander were killed.
Yeltsin immediately ordered the Interior Ministry to confiscate
weapons from the supposed defenders of the White House, and
deployed hundreds of police, special forces and soldiers around
the city. On Friday night columns of troops established a protective
perimeter around the White House.
</p>
<p> Inside the building, a rump Congress of the People's Deputies
began a hastily convened session by impeaching Yeltsin, but
demoralized lawmakers were soon squabbling among themselves
about whether to get rid of parliamentary chairman Ruslan Khasbulatov
too. Yeltsin's government began to show signs of impatience
with the siege, blocking access to the motor pool, keeping out
fresh food supplies and, finally, turning off the electricity.
As the crowds outside dwindled to several hundred diehards,
groups of Deputies gathered by candlelight to plot their next
move. But the standoff seemed all but over by week's end.
</p>
<p> Escape from communism into the brave new world of democracy
is proving immensely difficult for all the pieces of the old
Soviet Union. Yeltsin is not the only reformer who has found
it nearly impossible to carry out change without violating constitutional
norms. Georgian leader Eduard Shevardnadze, who earned his democratic
credentials when he resigned as Soviet Foreign Minister in December
1990 to protest "coming dictatorship," also suspended his parliament
this month to gain enough power to keep his tiny Caucasian mountain
republic together. The question all across the former empire
is whether democratic ends can really be achieved by less-than-democratic
means.
</p>
<p> The West has shown sympathy and unanimous support for embattled
reformers who have bent the rules, especially if the alternative
is total chaos or a restoration of communist rule. After receiving
personal assurances over the telephone from the Russian leader
of his intention to hold free elections, President Clinton gave
him a ringing endorsement. "I support him fully," said Clinton,
adding that he was convinced Yeltsin would act in a way "that
ensures peace, stability and an open political process."
</p>
<p> Continued support for Yeltsin will depend on how wisely he uses
his newly assumed authority. Said a senior U.S. official: "It
is the process, not the person, that we are supporting." Yeltsin
got critical backing from Defense Minister Pavel Grachev and
the military top brass, as well as from the police and security
forces. Leaders from Russia's 88 regions and ethnic republics,
where public opinion will ultimately decide which of the rival
governments prevails, were still testing the winds from Moscow,
but it seemed unlikely that they would risk supporting Rutskoi
with the balance so clearly tilting in Yeltsin's favor.
</p>
<p> The morning after Yeltsin made his move, millions of ordinary
Russians showed at least passive support by simply going about
their business as if nothing had happened. The efforts of nationalists
and neo-Bolsheviks to evoke the people power of August 1991
and stir up passions against a coup were greeted by indifferent
shrugs. "Why are they doing this?" asked a Moscow mechanic driving
past the makeshift barriers. "No one is going to attack them.
These communists can shout themselves hoarse for all I care.
Yeltsin made the right decision."
</p>
<p> Yeltsin had been dropping broad hints in recent weeks that September
would be "a month of battle." He shored up his strength in the
hinterlands by inviting regional leaders to join a new consultative
body called the Federation Council. Two weeks ago, he traveled
to the suburban Moscow headquarters of the elite Dzerzhinsky
division of Interior Ministry special forces, whose support
would be vital for his plan.
</p>
<p> Announcing his dissolution order, the President baldly accused
the parliament of "trying to push Russia into the abyss," declaring
that the Deputies had "lost the right to remain at the levers
of state power." Then, after theatrically pausing to sip from
a cup of tea, he outlined plans to hold elections in December
for one chamber of a new bicameral legislature, the Federal
Assembly, that "would not engage in political games." As Yeltsin
explained, "These measures are needed to protect Russia and
the whole world against the catastrophic collapse of the Russian
state and the reign of anarchy in a country possessing nuclear
weapons."
</p>
<p> The parliament fought back at a hastily convened midnight session.
Lawmakers appointed Rutskoi in Yeltsin's place under an article
of the constitution that automatically strips the President
of his powers if he suspends the activities of any legally elected
organ of state power. Holding up a paperback edition of the
much amended Russian constitution, Rutskoi, the Afghan War hero
who was Yeltsin's handpicked running mate in the June 1991 elections,
swore a new oath of allegiance and proclaimed his former mentor's
decrees against the parliament null and void. Before the night
was out, Rutskoi had named his own candidates to run the power
ministries of Defense, Security and the Interior.
</p>
<p> The anti-Yeltsin revolt ran into trouble almost as soon as it
began. Officials loyal to the elected President cut off special
government telephone lines to the White House, making it all
but impossible for Rutskoi to establish reliable communications
with supporters in the provinces. The state television network,
under Yeltsin's control, refused to carry live coverage of the
parliamentary session, fitting events from the White House into
pro-Yeltsin broadcasts. Despite an appeal from Khasbulatov for
the army and police to disobey Kremlin orders, Rutskoi's newly
appointed Minister of Defense, General Vladislav Achalov, could
not even gain entry to Russia's Pentagon.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin tried to bolster his image as a winner by taking Defense
Minister Grachev and Interior Minister Victor Yerin along on
a brief walkabout in central Moscow. Mingling with the cheering
crowds, the President explained that he was already at work
setting up electoral commissions for the December vote. He laughed
off any suggestion of compromise with the parliament. "It does
not exist, so there is not, cannot and must not be any dialogue,"
he said. "I think we have had enough of parliament making fools
of us." Yeltsin did not say how he planned to bring the standoff
with parliament to an end, but promised that there would be
"no blood."
</p>
<p> Even if the Kremlin does succeed in dispersing the parliament,
the future is far too uncertain for Yeltsin to claim victory.
With the leaders of the August 1991 coup still involved in a
drawn-out trial, the Kremlin will hardly want to begin another
political spectacle by arresting Rutskoi, Khasbulatov and other
leaders of the anti-Yeltsin revolt and creating a new group
of martyrs for the hard-liners. Nor are rank-and-file legislators
likely to depart Moscow in silence. Support for Yeltsin in the
provinces is soft enough that parliamentary dissidents might
be able to stir up plenty of trouble before a December vote.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin cannot be certain that all will remain quiet in the
military either. Unit commanders in the Russian army may have
affirmed their loyalty, but regional mutinies might flare up,
led by officers angered at the breakdown of the once mighty
Soviet armed forces. "There are forces trying to bring officers
to the barricades against each other," Grachev conceded last
week. "If the officer corps splits and takes up arms, this could
be the start of a genuine civil war."
</p>
<p> The Russian leader took pains to demonstrate that business was
not just going on as usual at the Kremlin: he wanted to show
that the pace of decision making had picked up dramatically
without a parliament to thwart him. Yeltsin has reappointed
Yegor Gaidar, the original architect of his economic reforms,
to the government, signaling his intent to move back to a more
radical course. He played host to an economic summit of leaders
from the Commonwealth of Independent States, who pledged him
their support. He confirmed central-bank chairman Victor Gerashchenko
while taking control of the country's main financial operation,
formerly subservient to the parliament. Yeltsin even displayed
a willingness to put his own political future on the line by
moving up the date for presidential elections from 1996 to June
1994.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin's greatest challenge will be to demonstrate that he
can govern effectively by presidential decree for the next 11
weeks. That may not seem like a long time, but on Russia's troubled
calendar, it can be a political eternity. Should he falter with
his reforms now, he will no longer be able to blame parliamentary
opposition when critics complain that his policies have done
little more than promote corruption and impoverish the population.
Yeltsin may just find himself confronting a new parliament that
is every bit as ornery as the old one.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>