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<text>
<title>
(Sep. 02, 1991) The Origins:Preludes to a Putsch
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 02, 1991 The Russian Revolution
</history>
<link 02536>
<link 00869>
<link 00165>
<link 00041>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, Page 50
THE ORIGINS
Prelude to a Putsch
</hdr>
<body>
<p>At first, Gorbachev tried to lick the conservatives by joining
them, but that strategy led him, and the U.S.S.R., to the brink
of the abyss
</p>
<p>By Strobe Talbott/Washington
</p>
<p> For years, as they watched Mikhail Gorbachev bull his way
through history, remaking his country, his era and himself,
Soviets and Westerners alike wondered whether there was anything
he couldn't do. Wasn't there some innovation so radical, or some
capitulation so abject, that he simply couldn't get away with it?
Like scientists pondering the limits of an anomalous but potent
force of nature, Kremlinologists speculated about the existence
of a "red line" that Gorbachev could not cross without reaping
the whirlwind.
</p>
<p> Could he really introduce genuine democratic choice in Soviet
elections, terrifying and infuriating apparatchiks from one end
of the U.S.S.R. to the other? Did he dare abandon the Communist
Party's monopoly on political power? Could the system tolerate a
free press? Could the Soviet people stand to hear the truth about
their own past? Could they adjust to some version of free-market
economics?
</p>
<p> And what about the Soviet empire? Could Gorbachev
unilaterally end the decade-long occupation of Afghanistan? Could
he pull the plug on Soviet support for the Sandinistas in
Nicaragua and pressure them into elections they would lose? More
crucially, could he permit "fraternal" regimes to topple in
Eastern Europe, giving up the buffer zone that Joseph Stalin had
created after World War II and retiring the Warsaw Pact?
</p>
<p> The answer, he kept demonstrating to the astonishment of all
and the dismay of many, was yes.
</p>
<p> Many experts thought, if a red line existed, it ran along the
860-mile boundary of barbed wire, concrete and minefields between
East and West Germany. Surely Gorbachev could not let the people
of what used to be the German Democratic Republic defect en masse
to the Federal Republic, taking their whole country with them.
And even if he dared let something so unthinkable happen, he
couldn't possibly accept the membership of a united Germany in
NATO.
</p>
<p> Yet, once again, he did all that, and more. In his attempt to
break the ministries' stranglehold on the economy, Gorbachev made
decentralization one of the cornerstones of perestroika. Under
the slogan of demokratizatsiya, he created conditions around the
country for popular local leaders, frequently outspoken
nationalists, to defeat Moscow's minions. As a result of
glasnost, the Kremlin faced up to some of the uglier truths of
Soviet history, including the illegality of Stalin's annexation
of the three Baltic republics.
</p>
<p> Most important, by dismantling the Ministry of Fear,
Gorbachev made it possible for people to voice their grievances
against "the center" and their desire for self-determination.
</p>
<p> Throughout 1990, Gorbachev's initiatives and their
consequences, intended and otherwise, began to call into question
whether the Soviet Union could survive in anything like its
existing form. Gorbachev's daredevil act was veering toward a new
red line: the 39,000-mile border around the periphery of the
U.S.S.R. Ideology, economics, foreign policy, military alliances,
they were one thing; real estate was something else. Could
Gorbachev actually give up what many of his colleagues in the
leadership and the Soviet power structure considered to be pieces
of the motherland?
</p>
<p> For three days last week, the answer seemed to be no. By the
beginning of this year, it was clear that if Gorbachev's policies
continued, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania would eventually leave
the U.S.S.R. and re-establish their independence. Gorbachev
repeatedly said he accepted "in principle" the Baltics' right to
independence. He was always quick to add his insistence that the
leaders in those republics pursue their goal by "constitutional
means." Everyone knew what that phrase meant: a slow process
during which the central government would try to control both the
throttle and the brake.
</p>
<p> In Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius, nationalists indignantly
rejected the notion that they should play by the Kremlin's rigged
rules. But in Moscow, Gorbachev's apparent willingness to accept
even the idea of Baltic freedom further antagonized the hard-
liners and set in motion the chain of events that led to last
week's coup d'etat.
</p>
<p> At first Gorbachev and the reactionaries tried to co-opt each
other. One of Gorbachev's aides, fluent in the earthy idiom of
American politics, paraphrases a favorite line of Lyndon
Johnson's: "Mikhail Sergeyevich felt it was better to have the
camels inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing
in. He wanted to keep them where he could see them and where they
would have to take his orders. He also wanted to use them to put
pressure on the Balts." That arrangement was fine with the
reactionaries, since they had considerable latitude in how to
interpret and execute Gorbachev's orders.
</p>
<p> Gorbachev met frequently with Boris Pugo, who had become
Interior Minister on Dec. 2, 1990. In these conversations Pugo
was careful to steer clear of the fundamental issue of whether
the Baltic republics were entitled to independence. Instead he
stayed within the bounds of his responsibility for law and order.
With the Baltics acting as though they were already sovereign
states, he said, the situation was "spinning out of control"; if
the Baltics succeeded in defying Moscow, other republics would be
encouraged to do the same.
</p>
<p> Pugo was a Latvian who had been the KGB chief in Riga in the
early '80s. He knew that Gorbachev believed all nationalities in
the U.S.S.R. should be united by Soviet patriotism. In his
conversations with Gorbachev he evoked this sentiment repeatedly,
in effect offering himself as an example of a good Balt as
opposed to ungrateful, unreasonable troublemakers like Vytautas
Landsbergis, the brave but reckless president of Lithuania.
</p>
<p> Pugo simultaneously played to Gorbachev's own Russianness by
warning that the many ethnic Russians who lived in the Baltics
were subject to harassment and perhaps even persecution at the
hands of local nationalists. Choosing his words carefully, Pugo
asked for, and received, authority to take "the measures
necessary to assure that constitutional norms are upheld and the
rights of minorities are respected."
</p>
<p> On Jan. 11, something called the "National Salvation
Committee of Lithuania" announced its existence, presumably to
replace the government of President Landsbergis with quislings.
Soviet troops advanced on the republic's main television station.
People poured into the streets and surrounded both that building
and the parliament. Outside, citizens kept vigil into the night.
</p>
<p> In the early hours of Sunday morning, Jan. 13, Soviet units
attacked the television tower. The various assaults left 15
civilians dead, three of them mangled by tanks, and several
hundred wounded. Appearing on Soviet television, Pugo charged
that the Lithuanians had started the fight by "flashing bayonets"
at members of the National Salvation Committee, who had no choice
but to appeal for outside help. This accusation was particularly
ludicrous, since the demonstrators were unarmed and no member of
the committee had yet to show his face or reveal his name. On
Jan. 20, a similar clash in Riga left five dead.
</p>
<p> In the midst of this crisis, Boris Yeltsin traveled to
Estonia, where he signed a "mutual support pact" with all three
Baltic governments. He also urged troops from the Russian
Federation stationed in the Baltics not to obey any "order to act
against legally created state bodies, against the peaceful
civilian population that is defending its democratic
achievements."
</p>
<p> Back in Moscow, Gorbachev was in a state of impotent fury. On
the one hand, he was apoplectic with rage at Yeltsin, calling
him, at one point, "That son of a bitch!" Some of Gorbachev's
advisers winced when he talked this way, since he sounded like
Henry II asking, in his exasperation at Thomas a Becket, "Who
will free me from this turbulent priest?"
</p>
<p> Fear quickly spread in Moscow that Gorbachev's reactionary
tentmates might behave less like incontinent camels and more like
attack dogs that had received a hand signal from their master.
There was an anonymous threat to blow up a plane on which Yeltsin
was scheduled to travel. Several ministers in the Russian
Federation increased their bodyguards, started carrying sidearms,
and sent their families to dachas in the country--as though
that would put them out of harm's way if the KGB decided to round
them up.
</p>
<p> At the same time, however, Gorbachev was convinced, in the
words of a close aide, that the massacres in Vilnius and Riga
were a "provocation" against him personally, "an attempt by
reactionary forces to derail the process of reform." He publicly
denied responsibility for the decision to send in the tanks and
issued a new order forbidding the military to make further all-
out attacks on civilians.
</p>
<p> In retrospect, the conflagration in the Baltics bears an
eerie similarity to what happened last week in Moscow: hard-
liners attempted a coup d'etat and found themselves faced with an
unexpected show of people power as well as the personal courage
of Yeltsin; a popular, democratic leadership survived, albeit
under siege, while Soviet armored troops milled around menacingly
on the streets.
</p>
<p> The halfhearted and inept spasm of official violence in
Lithuania and Latvia was a preview of last week's drama in Moscow
in another respect too: instead of being the beginning of the end--the final, decisive crackdown that so many had long feared
might be coming--it was a standoff between the forces of the
center and of secession, the forces of repression and of
continuing reform. It was also an enactment of the conflict going
on within Gorbachev himself.
</p>
<p> Gorbachev was appalled at the bloodshed in the Baltics and
devastated by the criticism that rained down on him at home and
abroad. When he met with a group of international peace
activists, instead of radiating his usual sense of command, he
all but threw himself on the mercy of his visitors. He promised
he was still committed to making the U.S.S.R. a "law-based
society." He portrayed himself as a victim of tumultuous events
and historical currents, compared himself to a voyager who was
"out of sight of land." He was, he remarked, feeling seasick.
</p>
<p> The episode further damaged him politically. By allowing Pugo
and the military to use violence, Gorbachev caused many of the
democrats and nationalists to give up on him. Yet by not allowing
the hard-liners to finish what they had started on Bloody Sunday
in Vilnius, he alienated them as well. He still commanded the
middle ground between right and left, but his position was
becoming increasingly lonely and precarious.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, there was a war in the Persian Gulf, and Gorbachev
had reason to fear that he might end up among the losers. During
the last five months of 1990, largely under the influence of
Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, the Soviet Union had sided
with the U.S.--and most of the rest of the world--in
demanding that Saddam Hussein withdraw his army of occupation
from Kuwait. For reformers like Shevardnadze, Saddam was a
grotesque example of the kind of Third World thug whom the
Kremlin had too often supported over the decades. One of
Yeltsin's closest deputies, the foreign minister of the Russian
Federation, Andrei Kozyrev, called Saddam "the child of our
totalitarianism, who was nurtured under the care of our ideology
and with the help of huge arms shipments."
</p>
<p> At the other end of the political spectrum, Soviet
reactionaries regarded Saddam as the victim not only of American
bullying but also of Soviet betrayal. They saw Soviet votes in
favor of the U.S.-backed resolutions in the United Nations as a
symbol of a willingness to surrender Moscow's global influence
and accept subservience to Washington. After Shevardnadze's
resignation in December, hard-liners in the Party Central
Committee and the military pressured Gorbachev to name as the
new Foreign Minister a professional bureaucrat rather than a
relatively independent, personally powerful figure in the
Shevardnadze mold. Gorbachev obliged them by picking Alexander
Bessmertnykh, a career diplomat.
</p>
<p> However, just as Bessmertnykh took office, the coalition
launched the air war against Iraq. An English-speaking Soviet
major interpreted for a group of senior officers from the General
Staff who had assembled in the Defense Ministry to watch the
televised daily briefings from the Pentagon and coalition
headquarters in Riyadh. Most of Iraq's antiaircraft batteries
were made in the U.S.S.R. and manned by personnel trained by
Soviet advisers. Yet the coalition's fighter-bombers and cruise
missiles achieved perfect surprise, then set about to clobber
Iraq with near impunity for six weeks. There was much cursing and
gnashing of teeth among the Soviet officers glued to the tube in
Moscow.
</p>
<p> For them, the ground war was even worse. As the Iraqi army
collapsed, a number of senior military officers told Gorbachev
they feared that the U.S.-led forces would march to Baghdad and
arrest Saddam, just as Uncle Sam had done a little over a year
before with Manuel Noriega in Panama. That, said one general,
would be "an unacceptable blow to our prestige."
</p>
<p> In one Kremlin session, a top official of the Defense
Ministry predicted that U.S. forces would "stay in the gulf
region indefinitely," constituting a "new threat" to Soviet
security. In effect, and perhaps in intent as well, he continued,
the U.S. was taking advantage of the end of the cold war by
moving its heaviest concentration of manpower and firepower from
Europe to the soft underbelly of the U.S.S.R.
</p>
<p> Thus the gulf war made the military more receptive than it
might otherwise have been to appeals by reactionary elements in
the Communist Party, the KGB and the government bureaucracy that
they should all make common cause against Gorbachev.
</p>
<p> By mid-spring, the hard-liners were feeling confident and
assertive. Vladimir Kryuchkov, the chairman of the KGB, relished
repeating to anyone who would listen the charge that the CIA had
been covertly trying to destabilize Soviet society. The
unmistakable implication was that advocates of radical reform
were dupes, if not agents, of sinister foreign forces. In a
meeting with Westerners in March, Kryuchkov stressed that there
were still "fundamentally conflicting interests" between the U.S.
and the Soviet Union in a wide variety of areas around the world.
He was making clear how little use he had for the Gorbachev
slogans of "new thinking" and "mutual security." Kryuchkov also
complained bitterly about "our eagerness to take historical
shortcuts"--a thinly veiled reference to the program of radical
reform--and warned that "democracy is no substitute for law-
and-order."
</p>
<p> There were still a few reformers at Gorbachev's side, such as
Anatoli Chernyayev, the President's personal foreign policy
adviser, and Georgi Shakhnazarov, one of the principal architects
of the liberation of Eastern Europe. But both of them confided to
friends that they were deeply worried. In a wry parody of
Marxist-Leninist jargon, Shakhnazarov commented, "I fear perhaps
the correlation of forces is turning against us."
</p>
<p> Of the original Gorbachev loyalists and brain trusters, only
Alexander Yakovlev still seemed to have much fight in him. Asked
in March why he had been left off the newly created Kremlin
Security Council, he replied, "It's very simple, and it doesn't
bother me in the least. President Gorbachev had to accommodate
our reactionaries. A certain amount of maneuvering is inevitable.
But it's maneuvering on the path of the same objectives--reform
and democracy."
</p>
<p> On March 17 citizens throughout the U.S.S.R. went to the
polls to vote on a Kremlin-sponsored referendum on the future of
the country. While the wording was vague, the stakes were clear:
a positive vote would be taken as a mandate for Gorbachev to
continue the process of redefining the relationship between the
center and the republics according to his own timetable, his own
political instincts and his own sense of what compromises were
required with the conservatives. A negative vote might be an
expression of support for Yeltsin, who has favored accelerated
reform. Yeltsin had by now established himself not only as the
leader of the Russian Federation but also as the principal
spokesman for the eight other republics that were willing to
remain autonomous (or "sovereign") members of a loose Soviet
commonwealth and as the champion of the six republics--the
three Baltics, Moldavia, Armenia and Georgia--that wanted
complete independence.
</p>
<p> The referendum resulted in something close to a draw. But
the effect was to strengthen Yeltsin's position. A number of
Gorbachev's aides, including his Vice President, Gennadi Yanayev,
stepped up their efforts at engineering a rapprochement between
the Kremlin and the Russian Federation headquarters, known as the
White House. "Gorbachev can take a step toward Yeltsin," said
Yanayev shortly after the referendum. "Actually, he has no choice
but to do so."
</p>
<p> Meanwhile followers of Yeltsin announced that they would hold
a rally in central Moscow on March 28. In a meeting at
Gorbachev's office, Pugo conjured up the specter of
"neo-Bolsheviks storming the Kremlin." The rally was a direct
challenge to Gorbachev's personal authority, said Pugo. Gorbachev
agreed to prohibit all rallies and to back up the ban with a show
of force by bringing troops and tanks into the capital.
</p>
<p> Yakovlev tried several times to dissuade Gorbachev from this
course. Rather than intimidating the democratic opposition, he
warned, a showdown would confirm the widespread suspicion that
Gorbachev had, in his desperation, thrown in his lot with the
reactionaries. And even if disaster was avoided, a decision to
pit the military muscle of the center against peaceful
demonstrators would backfire against Gorbachev, strengthening
Yeltsin's popular base.
</p>
<p> This time, unlike during the Baltic crisis in January,
Gorbachev took personal control of the forces amassed in the side
streets around Red Square. He kept them in check, and the huge,
orderly demonstration came off without serious incident.
</p>
<p> Yakovlev commented immediately afterward that even though he
was relieved Gorbachev had made sure the troops held their fire,
the attempted intimidation of Yeltsin's followers was Gorbachev's
gravest mistake to date. Gorbachev may have jeopardized not only
his chance to make common cause with Yeltsin, said Yakovlev, but
perhaps "his place in history" as well.
</p>
<p> Gorbachev too was shaken by how narrowly disaster had been
averted. For the second time, he had taken the advice of Pugo,
Kryuchkov and the hard-liners--and for the second time he had
seen that their methods would have led only to blood in the
streets.
</p>
<p> "March 28 was not just a turning point--it was the turning
point for Mikhail Sergeyevich," says one of his aides. "He went
to the abyss, looked over the edge, was horrified by what he saw,
and backed away." In so doing, Gorbachev moved closer toward a
new and fateful alliance with Yeltsin and the democrats.
</p>
<p>Dancing with Wolves
</p>
<p> "These are people I have trusted," Mikhail Gorbachev declared
apologetically last week. "They have turned out to be not only
the participants against the President [but also] against the
Constitution, against the people, against democracy. It was my
mistake." There was little else Gorbachev could offer in defense
of the glaring fact that most members of the vosmyorka--the
conservative Gang of Eight who made up the State Committee for
the State of Emergency--owed their high positions to him. The
same was true of their powerful accomplices. In the wake of the
failed coup, all of the surviving "gang" was under arrest. What
remained was the mystery of Gorbachev's faith in them.
</p>
<p> Vladimir Kryuchkov
</p>
<p> Appointed KGB chairman by Gorbachev in 1988, Kryuchkov made
efforts to burnish the organization's image. Gorbachev explained
last week that he appreciated Kryuchkov's "certain level of
cultural erudition, the ability to conduct dialogue." But the
liberalism was largely tactical. He insisted after his arrest,
"I don't think I have done anything in my life that my motherland
can hold against me."
</p>
<p> Dmitri Yazov
</p>
<p> Opposed by Supreme Soviet deputies, Yazov won reappointment
as Defense Minister in 1989 only with the help of Gorbachev, who
was impressed by the general's level-headedness and his support
for strict military professionalism. The stony-faced World War II
veteran backed the call for the restructuring of society. But he
also attacked glasnost for allowing civilians to criticize the
army.
</p>
<p> Boris Pugo
</p>
<p> Responding to complaints early last year that a liberal
Interior Ministry had led to public disorder, Gorbachev appointed
the hard-nosed Pugo as the country's top cop. Pugo's pedigree--he is the son of a prominent Latvian communist--combined with
his devotion to the Soviet Union helped elevate him in
Gorbachev's eyes as the ideal citizen, untainted by ethnic
animosity. His methods, however, seem to have been as nefarious
as those of some of his predecessors. A former Latvian KGB chief,
Pugo may have instigated violence in the Baltic republics in an
attempt to force a crackdown by Moscow. After the coup's failure,
he and his wife apparently attempted a double suicide. His wife
survived.
</p>
<p> Gennadi Yanayev
</p>
<p> The quintessentially malleable apparatchik, Yanayev became
Vice President only after two excruciating rounds of votes in the
Congress of People's Deputies--and tremendous lobbying by
Gorbachev. A sop to the Communist bureaucracy that created him,
Yanayev nevertheless obediently parroted reformist policies--though observers noted that his heart was not in the performance.
He proved equally unconvincing at projecting strength.
Journalists at the junta's press conference laughed out loud at
his lame answers and at his trembling hands. Said Gorbachev
last week: "I see that the Congress was right when they did not
accept the Vice President in the first round."
</p>
<p> Oleg Baklanov
</p>
<p> A weapons expert, the Ukrainian bureaucrat is not only first
deputy on the shadowy but influential Soviet Defense Council but
is also an important member of the nation's powerful military-
industrial complex, a sector of the economy threatened by
Gorbachev's reforms. Two other members of the gang of eight--Vasili Starodubtsev, an advocate of collective farming, and
Alexander Tizyakov--were among the 12 conservative signatories
of an open letter in July recommending a military takeover.
</p>
<p> Valentin Pavlov
</p>
<p> As Prime Minister, Pavlov was openly critical of Gorbachev's
policies. The President, however, believed he could safely ignore
the economist's rhetoric. Any Pavlovian clout had to emanate from
the Supreme Soviet, whose powers would be sapped by the union
treaty. Nicknamed "Porky the Hedgehog," Pavlov was widely
unpopular. As the coup faltered, he checked into a hospital
suffering from "hypertension."
</p>
<p> Anatoli Lukyanov
</p>
<p> An old schoolmate and close friend of Gorbachev's, Lukyanov
had recently assumed the role of the Soviet leader's conservative
doppelganger--and likely successor. As Chairman of the Supreme
Soviet, he had used his power to delay liberal legislation, going
so far as to turn off the mikes of some Deputies to keep them
from being heard. In the early hours of the coup, he reportedly
gave the plotters support by claiming that Gorbachev approved of
their takeover. Others charge that he was the brains behind the
putsch.
</p>
<p> Valeri Boldin
</p>
<p> Aside from the actions of the vosmyorka, Boldin's betrayal
was perhaps the most shocking to Gorbachev. The ethnic Russian
had been a close aide since 1981, when Gorbachev was a rising
star. At Gorbachev's ascension to power, the Soviet leader
handpicked Boldin to join his inner circle. Though known to
favor conservative policies, Boldin had enough of Gorbachev's
trust to be named chief of staff, in charge of his agenda and
his appointments. He became the President's Judas.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>