home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
121090
/
1210004.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-04-15
|
6KB
|
132 lines
<text id=90TT3348>
<link 91TT1968>
<link 90TT3437>
<link 90TT1847>
<title>
Dec. 10, 1990: Soviet Union:Donations Gladly Accepted
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Dec. 10, 1990 What War Would Be Like
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 59
SOVIET UNION
Donations Gladly Accepted
</hdr>
<body>
<p>As Germany begins ferrying food to the Soviets, the U.S. worries
about how to ensure that its aid will reach the hungriest
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by James O. Jackson/Bonn and John
Kohan/Moscow
</p>
<p> With the Soviet Union facing its most miserable winter since
the end of World War II, Mikhail Gorbachev told his countrymen
last week that he and the Communist leadership were "guilty
before the working class" for his nation's food shortages. But
what the Soviet people need these days are calories, not
confessions.
</p>
<p> Even a nation accustomed for some time to meager supplies
and long lines has been stunned by the utter disappearance of
milk, meat, produce and even bread. Some stores have taken to
closing early in the day for lack of anything to sell. To halt
worsening shortages, Leningrad took the dramatic step of
introducing rationing of key staples last week. Moscow is also
debating emergency measures. The Supreme Soviet has given
Gorbachev until the end of this week to come up with a plan to
halt shortages in major industrial areas. Addressing a meeting
of the Moscow City Communist Party, Gorbachev offered some
relief by announcing that he had brokered deals with three
Soviet republics--Estonia, Kazakhstan and the Ukraine--to
rush dairy products to Moscow and Leningrad. He also issued a
decree setting up workers' control committees to prevent
hoarding, waste and profiteering.
</p>
<p> The problem is not food supply--for one thing, the
U.S.S.R. had a record grain crop this year--but distribution.
Farmers have been holding back produce from the state, hoping
to make more lucrative cash and barter deals elsewhere. A
crumbling transportation system has left crops rotting in the
fields or in warehouses. Soviet citizens grumble that many of
the delays are deliberate, the work of diehard local
bureaucrats seeking to undermine Gorbachev. The very fact that
many Soviets have been stockpiling foodstuffs at home, though
it provides them a cushion against the future, has only added
to the sense of shortages in the stores.
</p>
<p> As he scrambles to get food from farm to table, Gorbachev
has been forced to appeal to the outside world for help. At the
summit meeting of Western leaders in Paris last month, he took
aside European heads one by one to emphasize his plight.
Nowhere did the message get through more clearly than in
Germany, where a national campaign to deliver food assistance
is being directed by the government and private organizations.
Last week more than 100,000 food parcels--each containing
enough coffee, sugar, rice, powdered milk, cheese and canned
meat to feed one person for two weeks--were shipped to the
Soviet Union. During a one-hour television broadcast called
Helft Russland (Help Russia), which aired last week throughout
Germany, Chancellor Helmut Kohl appealed for donations. Kohl
reminded his countrymen that Gorbachev "helped us Germans on
the way to unity in the last decisive months."
</p>
<p> The relief operation is shaping up as the biggest assistance
effort conducted in Germany since the Berlin Airlift of
1948-49, when the Western Allies saved the city from Soviet
strangulation. Ironically, among the supplies to be sent to the
U.S.S.R. will be 300,000 tons of powdered staples and canned
foods that had been stockpiled in Berlin against another such
blockade--a trove whose existence had been a secret for 40
years until the current crisis brought it to light.
</p>
<p> Germans acted out of a mixture of motives: simple
generosity, gratitude to Gorbachev, even a touch of guilt--German CARE, a descendant of the postwar American relief
program, addressed its shipments to cities like Kiev and
Smolensk that had suffered most from Hitler's aggression during
World War II. They also are worried that unless the food crisis
is brought under control, Western Europe will face a flood of
Soviet refugees. Nations along the Soviet border from
Scandinavia to Czechoslovakia are bracing for that possibility.
Fearing instability, Poland last week even decided to beef up
its troop deployments along the Soviet border.
</p>
<p> The spectacle of Gorbachev facing the anger of a hungry
nation has led George Bush to decide that he is ready to
consider asking Congress to waive the Jackson-Vanik Amendment,
which bars Moscow from most-favored-nation trading status until
freer emigration is allowed. Though Gorbachev has greatly
loosened emigration restrictions, the Administration has
insisted that the new policy must be written into law before
trade limitations can be lifted.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, a committee of officials from the departments of
State, Treasury and Defense, as well as the Agency for
International Development, is identifying the neediest areas
and the available resources of food and transport. The plan,
whose details are still secret, is to send supplies directly
to the areas thought to be the hardest hit, including cities
in Siberia and the Urals, as well as Moscow and Leningrad.
</p>
<p> One stumbling block is how to get the food to the Soviet
Union. The planes and ships that would normally be available
are being used to airlift troops and equipment to the Persian
Gulf. Mindful that much of the foreign aid sent to Armenia
after the 1988 earthquake ended up on the black market, U.S.
officials are also wondering how to ensure that food gets to
the people who need it. Says one: "We would like to handle the
distribution ourselves." As far as some Soviets are concerned,
that would be just fine. As Victor Shinkaretsky, a Russian
Deputy, put it last week, "As long as we are forced to beg for
a foreign piece of bread with butter, let's invite in those who
not only know how to produce but also how to distribute."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>