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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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1990
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<text>
<title>
(Sep. 02, 1991) Postmortem:Anatomy of a Coup
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
</history>
<link 01609>
<link 00388>
<link 00041>
<link 00274><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, Page 32
POSTMORTEM
Anatomy of A Coup
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The dramatic tale of how a handful of party hacks hijacked Soviet
democracy--until a popular revolt shattered their ill-hatched
plans
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by James Carney and Ann M.
Simmons/Moscow and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> It might have been the most widely advertised coup in
history. Rumors and warnings had begun as early as the summer of
1990. According to British intelligence, elements of the Soviet
army and KGB actually rehearsed a coup (under the guise of a
countercoup) in February of this year. June brought what was soon
called the "constitutional-coup attempt." Prime Minister Valentin
Pavlov asked the Supreme Soviet for the authority to issue
decrees without Mikhail Gorbachev's knowledge, but was rebuffed.
In late July hard-liners published an announcement appealing for
"those who recognize the terrible plight into which our country
has fallen" to support dramatic action to end disorder. They
might as well have put up billboards shouting COUP!
</p>
<p> In hindsight, even the timing seems screamingly obvious.
Gorbachev had designated Tuesday, Aug. 20, for the ceremonial
signing of a new union treaty with the presidents of the Russian
and Kazakh republics; other republics were expected to sign
later. The treaty would transfer so many powers--over taxes,
natural resources, even the state security apparatus--to the
republics as to make restoring ironfisted Kremlin control of the
whole country impossible. Moreover, a new national Cabinet would
have been named by representatives of the republics. Some of the
eventual coup leaders, including KGB chairman Vladimir Kryuchkov,
Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov and Interior Minister Boris Pugo,
would almost certainly have lost their jobs. The plotters could
not afford to let that treaty go into effect.
</p>
<p> Yet Gorbachev by his own testimony was totally unprepared. To
some scholars and Soviet officials that appears so odd as to
suggest that the President himself had staged a Potemkin coup to
win domestic and foreign sympathy. But that seems farfetched.
More probably, the very volume and intensity of coup talk had
dulled his political antennae; the cry of wolf was sounding old
and tired. Alexander Yakovlev, a close adviser, claimed after it
was all over that he had even given Gorbachev the names of some
likely--and, as it turned out actual--plotters. The
President, according to Yakovlev, had scoffed that they "lack the
courage to stage a coup."
</p>
<p> As late as 4 p.m. Sunday, working at his Crimean vacation
retreat at Foros on the speech he intended to give at the treaty
signing, Gorbachev telephoned Georgi Shakhnazarov, an aide and
friend, who was vacationing nearby. They chatted briefly;
Shakhnazarov heard nothing to indicate that his boss was in any
way troubled. Less than an hour later, however, at 10 minutes to
5, the head of Gorbachev's security guards entered the
President's office and, as Gorbachev later recounted the story,
announced that "a group of people" was demanding to see him. Who
were they, asked Gorbachev, and why had they been let into the
house? They were accompanied by Yuri Plekhanov, the chief of the
state security-guard organization, said Gorbachev's man; that was
all he knew. Gorbachev picked up a phone to call Moscow. "It
didn't work. I lifted the second [phone], the third, the fourth,
the fifth. Nothing." All his communications had been cut.
</p>
<p> Instantly realizing what might be up, Gorbachev went to
another room, called in his wife, daughter and son-in-law and
warned them that his visitors might "attempt to arrest me or take
me away somewhere." Returning to his office, he found that the
delegation had already bulled its way in. There were four besides
Plekhanov. Gorbachev initially named only one: Valeri Boldin, his
own chief of staff. It was as if John Sununu had joined a coup
against George Bush. The others were finally identified as Oleg
Baklanov, deputy chairman of the National Defense Council and in
effect leader of the military-industrial complex; a Communist
Party hack named Oleg Shenin; and General Valentin Varennikov. In
the name of the so-called State Committee for the State of
Emergency, the visitors demanded that Gorbachev sign a decree
proclaiming an emergency and turning over all his powers to Vice
President Gennadi Yanayev. Gorbachev's reply: "Go to hell."
</p>
<p> By then, a special detachment of KGB troops had surrounded
his vacation house. Just in case Gorbachev somehow got out and
tried to return to Moscow, KGB units drove tractors across the
runway of the nearby airport to prevent Gorbachev's TU-134
presidential jet from taking off.
</p>
<p> Roughly 12 hours passed before the outside world knew
anything. But at 6 a.m. Monday, TASS, the Soviet news agency,
reported falsely that Gorbachev was ill and had yielded his
powers temporarily to Yanayev. An hour later, TASS announced the
formation of the eight-member State Committee for the State of
Emergency, ostensibly headed by Yanayev. Actually, this gray and
ineffectual apparatchik was only a figurehead; the real power
probably was held by Kryuchkov, Pugo and Yazov, plus possibly
lesser-known figures. Some of Russian republic president Boris
Yeltsin's aides later fingered Baklanov as the chief plotter.
The committee announced that it would rule by decree for six
months, and began setting up some of the machinery of
dictatorship. All newspapers except for nine pro-coup sheets were
ordered to stop publishing, political parties were suspended and
protest demonstrations banned. Muscovites going to work or to
shop Monday morning had to maneuver around troops, tanks and
armored personnel carriers that were moving to cordon off or
seize key installations.
</p>
<p> Yet it was obvious even that early that the coup was ill
planned and curiously halfhearted. The plotters neglected to
carry out that sine qua non of successful coups: the immediate
arrest of popular potential enemies before they could begin
organizing a resistance. In particular, the failure to make sure
that Yeltsin was taken into custody (there were some reports that
an attempt at an arrest was made, but botched) was fatal.
Inexplicably, the putschists did not even pull the plug on the
communications of anyone except Gorbachev. Bush and other foreign
leaders were amazed at how easily they could get through by
telephone to Yeltsin; he in turn seems to have had no difficulty
coordinating action with other coup opponents across the country.
</p>
<p> Most successful coup organizers also begin by moving reliable
troops into key positions. Yet U.S. intelligence analysts, poring
early Monday over satellite pictures taken during the previous
two days, detected no evidence of any unusual troop movements.
The Soviet plotters used troops and equipment that happened to be
on hand in Moscow and other cities and gave the soldiers only the
vaguest idea of what they were supposed to be doing. In Moscow
some seemed to think they were participating in an odd sort of
parade or drill.
</p>
<p> Far from being prepared to crush opposition, the troops were
obviously under orders to avoid confrontation if possible and
above all not to shoot. Citizens shouted "Fascist!" or worse at
the troops, scrawled swastikas in the dirt on tanks parked
outside the Russian Parliament Building, climbed aboard armored
personnel carriers to argue with the commanders and urge them to
turn back--all with impunity. When the coup leaders decreed a
curfew from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m., the soldiers made no attempt to
enforce it.
</p>
<p> In Leningrad troops based inside the city stayed in their
barracks throughout the coup. Armored assault units headquartered
nearby at one point started moving on the old czarist capital,
but reformist Mayor Anatoli Sobchak--another leader the coup
conspirators foolishly left at large--persuaded the tankmen to
halt outside the city.
</p>
<p> Why were the coup plotters so inept and halfhearted? Simple
incompetence might be one answer; several were party or
government hacks who had never displayed much imagination or
initiative. They may have thought that the economic collapse that
had made Gorbachev wildly unpopular, coupled with a long Russian
tradition of submissiveness to authority, would win the populace
to their side without any need for bloodshed. They may even have
been corrupted, so to speak, by the new atmosphere of democracy
and legalism--at least to the extent of feeling a need to give
their coup a cloak of constitutionalism, which in turn prevented
them from acting with the ruthlessness a successful coup
generally requires. Alternatively, some American officials think
the plotters were not so much inept as unable to round up enough
support to flaunt any more muscle than they did.
</p>
<p> There were many indications that an early and decisive use of
force might have carried the day. According to British sources,
heads of government and foreign ministers of the major Western
powers had agreed during a long series of very secret talks on a
coordinated policy to oppose any Soviet coup attempt. But though
all of them condemned the coup, some initially hinted that they
might eventually live with it. On Monday morning Bush asserted
that "coups can fail" but at the same time voiced hope that
Yanayev too might turn out to be a reformer. French President
Francois Mitterrand on Monday night treated the coup as a fait
accompli.
</p>
<p> Within the U.S.S.R. many powerful figures who wound up
opposing the coup were initially noncommittal, stayed
conspicuously out of sight or played highly ambiguous roles.
Alexander Dzasokhov, a secretary of the Central Committee of the
Soviet Communist Party, tried to paint the party as a resolute
opponent of the conspirators. "From the very beginning of the
coup," he said, the committee secretariat "kept trying to get in
touch with the state Emergency Committee and demanded that they
see Gorbachev." In fact, though, Nursultan Nazarbayev, president
of Kazakhstan, says the Central Committee on Monday secretly
urged local party organizations to support the junta.
</p>
<p> Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmertnykh came down with
a vaguely defined illness, one of several seeming cases of "coup
flu." (Symptoms: cold feet and a weakening of the backbone.)
After initially cabling Soviet ambassadors around the world to
put a "good face" on the coup, Bessmertnykh climbed out of his
sickbed to denounce the plot only after it was falling apart--too late, as it turned out, to keep from getting fired. General
Mikhail Moiseyev, Chief of the Soviet General Staff, was perhaps
conveniently on vacation in the Crimea when the coup began. But
some of his subordinates claimed he wrote out the orders for the
troops to occupy key points in Moscow--as well as the orders
for them to go back to their barracks when the coup was palpably
failing.
</p>
<p> Even the indomitable Yeltsin reportedly had a moment of
irresolution. On Monday morning he hurried to the Russian
republic headquarters--nicknamed the White House because of its
marble facade--and was quickly joined by other coup opponents.
One of them, former Soviet Interior Minister Vadim Bakhatin, says
they urged Yeltsin to proclaim himself in command of all army and
KGB units on Russian republic soil. Bakhatin recounts that
Yeltsin was reluctant; he feared that such an order would split
the army and perhaps start a bloody civil war. Bakhatin and
others, however, convinced Yeltsin that if no one exercising
constitutional authority was willing to countermand orders from
the junta, the army might eventually if reluctantly invade the
White House and arrest them all, and the coup would succeed.
</p>
<p> From then on, Yeltsin never wavered. At 12:30 p.m. Monday he
clambered atop an armored truck outside the White House to
announce the decree assuming command. He denounced the coup as
illegal and unconstitutional and called for a general strike to
thwart it. In retrospect, that was the first and perhaps the
biggest turning point. Yeltsin had made it obvious that the coup
would face determined resistance; his appearance helped inspire
protest demonstrations throughout the country. At the time,
however, its significance was not entirely apparent. No more
than about 200 Muscovites had gathered outside the Russian
republic building to see and hear his fiery performance. But as
word spread, the crowd grew and grew until it eventually numbered
in the tens of thousands.
</p>
<p> At 5 p.m. Monday the conspirators finally called a press
conference to introduce themselves. Their performance was a
disaster. Far from coming across as a take-charge group, they
appeared nervous and half apologetic. They gave a preposterous
excuse for assuming authority (Gorbachev was too tired and ill
to retain command); stressed that the coup was a constitutional
devolution of authority to Yanayev, although it clearly was not;
and proclaimed a highly dubious devotion to continued reform.
Junta member Vasili Starodubtsev sniffled continually, and
Yanayev seemed twitchy. As Gorbachev later commented, "They said
I was sick, but they were the ones whose hands were shaking."
</p>
<p> Gorbachev apparently was listening if not watching. His
security guards stayed with him at the Foros dacha, scrounged up
some old radio receivers that had been forgotten but not
discarded, and set up a jury-rigged antenna so they could monitor
foreign radio coverage of the coup. Gorbachev later praised the
reporting of the British Broadcasting Corp., Radio Liberty and
Voice of America--without seeming to recognize the irony that
all three networks had been jammed by the Soviet government not
so very long ago. Though he said he had been subjected to
intense "psychological pressure," this apparently consisted of
isolation rather than any actual interference with his
activities. The President spent part of his time drafting an
angry condemnation of the coup, and was so incensed at the
reports of his illness that he made four videotapes of himself
(he did not say how he got hold of a camera) to prove he was not
sick at all. Fearing that the worst might happen to him, he also
recorded his last will and testament. Gorbachev's wife Raisa was
apparently quite shaken by the experience. She was later reported
to have suffered some paralysis of her left hand and was said to
be receiving medical treatment.
</p>
<p> In the outside world, the tide was beginning to turn. By
Tuesday morning the Western powers had got their act together and
unanimously, though separately, proclaimed a clear line: no
normal relations with the Soviet Union until legitimate authority
was restored, and a quick and indefinite cutoff of most of the
economic aid that the U.S.S.R. desperately needs.
</p>
<p> Coal miners in Siberia and the far north left their pits.
Resolutions condemning the Emergency Committee were passed in
communities from Sakhalin Island in the far east to Petrozavodsk,
near the border with Finland. In Leningrad tens of thousands
gathered in front of the Winter Palace, which Lenin's forces had
stormed to begin the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917.
</p>
<p> In Moscow resistance organizers had fanned out across the
city Monday night to post leaflets in subway stations calling for
a mass demonstration at noon Tuesday. From a second-floor balcony
of the Russian republic building, speaker after speaker led a
throng of up to 150,000 Muscovites in chants of "We will win!"
Shouted Yeltsin: "We will hold out as long as we have to, to
remove this junta from power." Bush telephoned on Tuesday morning
to encourage that determination by making it clear that the
putschists would get no foreign support.
</p>
<p> Tuesday afternoon brought one telltale indication that the
junta was losing what grip it had established. After obediently
reporting all the pronouncements of the so-called Emergency
Committee and little else, TASS suddenly began interspersing them
with reports of the burgeoning resistance. For example, it let
Soviet citizens know that Aleksei II, Patriarch of the Russian
Orthodox Church and a signer of a December appeal for a law-and-
order crackdown, had come out against the coup.
</p>
<p> Tension nonetheless built toward a climax Tuesday night. It
was obvious that the junta could no longer prevail unless it
began using deadly force, starting with an armed assault on
Yeltsin's White House. All afternoon and evening, loudspeakers
blared warnings that tanks were rolling toward the building and
60 planes filled with paratroopers were preparing for an airborne
assault. Thousands of people worked through the night building
barricades to deter an attack, supplemented by human chains of
unarmed protesters. At the foot of the main staircase, an
organizer with a megaphone called, "All courageous men who are
willing to defend the building, please come forward!" About 90
men--the forerunners of many, many more--formed up in three
rows on the stairs. An Orthodox priest in full regalia read the
Lord's Prayer to them.
</p>
<p> Just before midnight, short bursts of gunfire did echo from
nearby streets. It was not, however, the start of an assault but
a confused scuffle between tanks and protesters around a
trolleybus barricade. Three demonstrators were left dead--the
only casualties in Moscow of the coup.
</p>
<p> Otherwise, nothing happened. During the daylight hours
Tuesday, Ruslan Khasbulatov, first deputy chairman of the supreme
soviet of the Russian Federation and a close Yeltsin adviser, was
on the phone to KGB chief Kryuchkov and Defense Minister Yazov.
He asked them point-blank if the junta planned to storm the White
House. "Yazov did not deny it," he reported. Late Tuesday night
and again Wednesday morning, Gennadi Burbulis, another Yeltsin
aide, spoke twice more with Kryuchkov. Finally Kryuchkov
promised, "You can sleep soundly." There would be no shoot-out.
</p>
<p> Why not? Reports within the Soviet Union and from Western
intelligence sources differed in detail, but agreed in essence:
the armed forces would not carry out any order to attack. One
story was that senior army commanders had met secretly Tuesday
night and decided they would not storm the White House or
countenance any firing at civilians.
</p>
<p> Some troops sent to menace the Russian republic headquarters
turned to defending it instead. By agreement with Yeltsin, Major
General Alexander Lebed, a commander of airborne troops, on
Tuesday afternoon ordered the tanks and armored personnel
carriers from his Tula division parked around the building to
turn their turrets around so that they could not fire at
Yeltsin's headquarters; no ammunition was distributed to the
vehicles' crews. In effect, the tanks and APCs became part of the
barricades protecting the building. Some American officials
believe that the junta did intend to storm the building but
Lebed's virtual defection derailed its plans. Another version,
not necessarily contradictory, was that Colonel General Gennadi
Shaposhnikov, commander of the Soviet air force, and Lieut.
General Pavel Grachev, chief of the airborne troops, flatly
refused to order an attack on the White House. That story gained
credence at week's end when Shaposhnikov was appointed Defense
Minister, with Grachev his chief deputy.
</p>
<p> Wednesday morning there was a seemingly ominous flurry of
military activity. Soviet troops in Lithuania and Estonia took
control of several radio and TV stations; in Moscow paratroopers
shut down an independent radio station that had resumed
broadcasting the day before. But those actions quickly turned
out to be the plotters' last gasp. The failure to storm the White
House on Tuesday made clear that the junta would not or could not
resort to the serious bloodshed that by then would have been
necessary to crush resistance. By Wednesday the plotters
evidently concluded that the jig was up, and the coup fell apart
with astonishing speed.
</p>
<p> At 2:15 p.m., Yeltsin announced to the Russian parliament
that some of the conspirators were running to Vnukovo Airport to
get out of town. A delegation headed by Yeltsin's vice president,
Alexander Rutskoi, chased after them to arrest them. One hour
earlier, TASS announced that the Defense Ministry had ordered all
troops to clear out of Moscow, and this order was happily obeyed.
Bystanders cheered as soldiers, some waving prerevolutionary
Russian flags, rode atop armored vehicles on their way back to
bases. The order to clear out, in fact, came from Gorbachev. For
two days he had demanded that his captors let him phone Moscow
again and supply a plane so that he could return to the capital;
his requests were ignored. But on Wednesday he was suddenly
allowed to use the phone once more. He called General Moiseyev,
who by then was back in Moscow, and Moiseyev passed on the order
to the Defense Ministry.
</p>
<p> After two days of isolation, Gorbachev was suddenly again
besieged by visitors from Moscow, this time competing for his
favor. How many conspirators tried to flee the capital on
Wednesday is still not entirely clear. Pugo, for example, was
originally rumored to be aboard a plane headed for Central Asia,
but in fact was soon admitted to a Moscow hospital with gunshot
wounds, apparently self-inflicted, from which he died. Kryuchkov
and Yazov, however, did get to Vnukovo Airport ahead of their
pursuers from Yeltsin's headquarters, and hopped a plane for
Gorbachev's resort. They were accompanied by Anatoli Lukyanov,
chairman of the Soviet parliament. Though he is an old friend and
law-school classmate of Gorbachev's, Lukyanov played at best an
ambiguous role in the coup; he was not a member of the Emergency
Committee but has been accused by some of Yeltsin's aides of
being the mastermind behind the whole plot. Hard on their heels,
Rutskoi and his avengers also took off for the Crimea--taking
care to bring guns.
</p>
<p> Possibly Kryuchkov and Yazov hoped to negotiate with
Gorbachev an end to the coup that would preserve some of their
power. Or maybe they simply intended to beg for forgiveness and
leniency. Rutskoi and his friends, however, feared they might
want to kill the Soviet President. The thought that some of the
plotters might try to execute him in a last attempt to save the
coup occurred to Gorbachev as well. One of his first calls on
Wednesday was to the chief of his personal guard at the Kremlin,
working out arrangements to guarantee his safety on a return to
Moscow.
</p>
<p> When Kryuchkov and Yazov arrived at his dacha, Gorbachev
refused to see them; he demanded that they be arrested (Lukyanov
was not arrested but was suspended from his job pending an
investigation). Rutskoi and his gun-toting party, who got to the
dacha shortly after, were delighted to do that job. They frisked
both Kryuchkov and Yazov; Kryuchkov offered no resistance, but
the Defense Minister grumbled (neither was armed). Even then
Rutskoi and his companions were worried that other plotters might
try something. "We told the airport to prepare two planes to
mislead the scoundrels," Rutskoi later said on Soviet television.
</p>
<p> All this took so long that Gorbachev did not get back to
Moscow until 2:15 a.m. Thursday. Stepping off the plane, he
looked haggard and drawn but flashed a relieved smile, rather
like the released hostage that he was. In theory, at least, he
was back in full command. In fact, he faced gigantic tasks of
rounding up the plotters, alleviating the economic and social
chaos that had given the excuse for the coup, and working out a
modus vivendi with Yeltsin. As for the surviving plotters, all
of whom had been arrested by week's end, they were facing not
only treason trials but also the knowledge that their mismanaged
coup had intensified the move toward democracy and
decentralization they had tried to stop. The three days that
shook the world were over.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>