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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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1990
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<text>
<title>
(Sep. 09, 1991) Into the Void
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 09, 1991 Power Vacuum
</history>
<link 03624>
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<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 26
SOVIET UNION
Into The Void
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Suddenly the old Soviet Union is gone. Now new leaders are
improvising on a grand scale to shape a new nation--or nations--from the chaos.
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by James Carney and John Kohan/
Moscow and William Mader/London
</p>
<p> No Soviet Union? That huge blob of blood red that dominated
maps of the Eurasian landmass for 70 years now broken up into a
crazy quilt of squirming lines enclosing a kaleidoscope of
colors? The concept is even harder to grasp than the idea of a
noncommunist Soviet Union. There had once--for centuries, in
fact--been something like that, in the form of the Russian
empire. But no monolithic state covering that immense area--none at all?
</p>
<p> Well, could be. Almost anything might yet emerge out of the
chaos that has followed the second Russian Revolution. But on two
central facts everyone is agreed: the old unitary state in which
the Kremlin tightly controlled every aspect of life is dead; the
Other Superpower that overshadowed the 20th century--and the
American imagination as long as most of us have lived--is no
more. "The former Union has ceased to exist, and there is no
return to it," says Leningrad Mayor Anatoli Sobchak, a prime
mover in attempts to devise some arrangement to replace it.
</p>
<p> Something new is being born, improvised on a grand scale. But
its final shape has yet to be chiseled. Even the greatly
diminished degree of control from Moscow foreseen under the
Treaty of Union, worked out between the Kremlin and nine of the
Soviet Union's 15 constituent republics in June, suddenly seemed
far too much. Two weeks ago, the treaty looked so radical that it
triggered a coup attempt by communist hard-liners, nostalgic for
the bad old days of dictatorship, who figured they dared not let
the pact go into effect. Now, in the wake of the popular upheaval
that defeated the putsch, the treaty has become a dead letter,
judged totally inadequate to slake the republics' suddenly
sharpened thirst for independence. At barest minimum, what was
still officially one country on Aug. 19 will be four. The center,
as Soviets call the government in the Kremlin, is no longer even
trying to keep the three Baltic republics in any kind of union. A
rapidly growing list of foreign governments last week formally
recognized Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia as independent countries
and even began talking about seating them in the United Nations.
But the headlong trend toward dissolution did not stop there. At
last count, seven more republics--the number last week was
changing almost daily--had also declared independence, and they
include such keystones of the Union as Ukraine and Belorussia.
Ukraine, if it actually goes all the way, would be the fifth
largest nation in Europe (pop. 51.8 million).
</p>
<p> Nor is there any guarantee that the remaining five republics
will hold together. Carried to its illogical extreme, in fact,
the movement toward disintegration could splinter the former
U.S.S.R. into upwards of 40, mostly mini, countries--the 15
full republics plus some of the 20 autonomous republics, eight
autonomous regions and 10 smaller autonomous areas. Most are
homelands of distinct ethnic groups that cherish ambitions to
become autonomous in fact as well as name.
</p>
<p> To be sure, nobody expects the dissolution to go that far.
Last week, indeed, saw the beginning of a countertrend toward
formation of some kind of new union, spurred by somber warnings
against self-destructive splintering of authority. Mikhail
Gorbachev threatened to resign as Soviet President if some sort
of union is not preserved, and Sobchak called a complete
dissolution of the union "suicidal." Delegations of the giant
Russian republic and Ukraine pledged to work out at least
military and economic cooperation and invited the other republics
to participate. At week's end a Russian delegation got the
signatures of the leaders of Kazakhstan on a similar agreement-
to-try-to-agree.
</p>
<p> Even if successful, such efforts may not create anything that
could properly be called a central government. Some planners
envision no more than a small secretariat that would coordinate
the policies of what would be in effect independent nations.
Nursultan Nazarbayev, president of Kazakhstan, favors a
confederation, to be called the Free Union of Sovereign
Republics, so loose that it would have no central parliament or
Cabinet of Ministers at all. Moscow would retain responsibility
for only a handful of functions, including border protection,
communications, interrepublic transport, and carrying out a joint
foreign policy that would be formed in consultation with the
republics. About the only resemblance that this creation would
bear to the present Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is that
the Cyrillic initials of its Russian name would be the same:
C.C.C.P.
</p>
<p> Other models for a union of sorts include an economic common
market like the 12-nation European Community; or a military
alliance patterned after NATO, which for most of its 42 years has
been an explicitly anti-Soviet grouping; or even the
Commonwealth, whose member nations rarely do anything together
anymore except talk.
</p>
<p> What remains of the present Soviet government, meanwhile, is
dissolving at breakneck speed. Institutions that had seemed both
immutable and central to Soviet life are vanishing into thin air
or being turned inside out at a dizzying pace. A citizen who
returned last week from a fortnight out of the country might
think he had awakened from a decades-long Rip van Winkle sleep,
so totally had the country changed in his absence.
</p>
<p> The Communist Party virtually disappeared overnight, its
leadership disbanded, its offices padlocked, its funds frozen,
its publications silenced--though Pravda reappeared Saturday as
an independent paper purportedly reflecting a "civic consensus."
By a 283-to-29 vote, with 52 abstentions, the Supreme Soviet
suspended party activities throughout the U.S.S.R., formalizing
what had already been accomplished by decree in the individual
republics. The Soviet parliament also dismissed the entire
Cabinet of Ministers, which numbered around 70, after President
Gorbachev announced with unaccustomed succinctness, "I cannot
trust this Cabinet, and that is that." That leaves what is being
called a "transitional government"--transition to what is the
question of questions--to be run by a variety of makeshift
executive bodies. The most important of these is a four-member
commission headed by Ivan Silayev, prime minister of the Russian
republic, that is charged with drawing up an economic-reform plan
for the whole Soviet Union. In addition, Silayev will oversee the
ministries of finance, defense, internal and foreign affairs, and
the KGB.
</p>
<p> That dreaded octopus was both shrunk and beheaded. The KGB's
230,000-strong armed forces were put under the control of the
regular army and its governing collegium was dismissed. Remaining
bosses of the agency that for decades terrorized millions of
Soviet citizens were put on notice that they would themselves be
investigated to determine their roles, if any, in the coup. New
Defense Minister Yevgeni Shaposhnikov had earlier pledged to
remove most of the ministry's collegium, its top leadership.
</p>
<p> The moves added up to a sweeping purge that apparently still
has some way to go. Fourteen alleged coup plotters, including all
seven surviving members of the so-called Emergency Committee that
ran the putsch, were formally accused of treason, an offense
punishable by imprisonment or death. The latest to be arrested
was Anatoli Lukyanov, former chairman of the Supreme Soviet, who
was taken into custody on Friday. During a session of the
parliament earlier in the week devoted largely to finger pointing
or to attempts by some members to convince others that they had
nothing to do with the conspiracy, Lukyanov's voice was one of
the shrillest. "I could never be a traitor to a man I've known
for 40 years," he said, referring to his law-school classmate.
Gorbachev obviously did not believe Lukyanov--he refused even
to acknowledge his old comrade when they passed in a corridor--and others have fingered Lukyanov as the ideological mastermind
of the plot. So many other suspected conspirators are being
investigated that Moscow Mayor Gavril Popov felt obliged to issue
a public appeal: no citizen should denounce another as a coup
supporter in order to settle a private score or to get rid of a
boss whose job the informer wants. Such denunciations were among
the most infamous features of Stalin's purges.
</p>
<p> An impromptu air of back-and-forth confusion marked many of
last week's activities--understandably, since the democratic
upheaval was the result not of any plan but of a spontaneous
popular explosion that succeeded faster and more completely than
anyone could have dreamed. One of the more endearing
manifestations of revolutionary improvisation occurred on
Wednesday night, when television viewers turned on their sets
expecting to watch the official news show Vremya (Time). Instead
they first saw a taped session in the office of Yegor Yakovlev, a
reformist newspaper editor who had just been named head of state
radio and television. Yakovlev had invited in several newscasters
who had been barred from the airwaves by his predecessor, the
hard-line Leonid Kravchenko, and asked them to put together a new
evening news program, with almost no time to prepare. They did,
fumbling through news copy and fluffing an occasional cue, but
vowing repeatedly to tell the truth and only the truth.
</p>
<p> Less engaging were some of the maneuvers of Russian
Federation President Boris Yeltsin, the anticoup hero who, like
many other politicians, found it easier to lead a popular
uprising than to form a government. In the name of protecting
democracy, Yeltsin issued a blizzard of decrees asserting Russian
control of many central government functions. He went far enough
to endanger his new partnership with Gorbachev, who accepted the
first batches of decrees but protested that later ones were
"unacceptable."
</p>
<p> Worse, representatives of some other republics feared that
the decrees, combined with the fact that nearly all newly chosen
officers of the Soviet government are Russians, meant that they
had got rid of communist totalitarianism only to be swept up into
a new Russian empire. "God save us from the nationalism of the
Great People!" cried Genrikhgityan, an Armenian Deputy, during
one Supreme Soviet debate. Apparently realizing that he had
overreached himself, Yeltsin late last week rescinded some
decrees, including one asserting Russian control of state banks.
That only added to the confusion: Viktor Gerashchenko, head of
the Soviet central bank, Gosbank, was replaced one morning by
Andrei Zverev, a deputy Russian finance minister, only to be
reinstated before the day was out.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin's retreat, however, could not stem the stampede of
republics to declare independence. Fear of Russian domination is
far from the only reason for this secessionist wave. Some
republics may want only to strengthen their hand in bargaining
on the configuration of a new, looser union. Certainly not all
republics are prepared, or want, to go all the way to true
independence, with their own flags, parliaments, currencies,
foreign policies and seats in the U.N. Most specifically disclaim
any intention of creating their own armies, other than perhaps
small militias to serve as a kind of national guard.
</p>
<p> Nor are all devoted to democracy; some may even be declaring
independence in order to avoid it. The leaders of Belorussia are
widely suspected of seceding so that they can keep the republic
under the tight control of the Communist Party--under a new
name, to be sure. Zviad Gamsakhurdia, president of Georgia, seems
quite genuine in his fierce desire to escape control by Moscow,
but within his republic he has curbed the opposition press and
has been accused of putting political opponents in jail.
</p>
<p> Much of the secessionist spirit reflects real ethnic
hostility--and indulging it could be a recipe not just for
chaos but for bloodshed. Dividing the Soviet Union along ethnic
lines will not be much easier than unscrambling an omelet and
returning the eggs to their shells. The U.S.S.R. contains more
than 100 distinct ethnic groups, intermixed in such a way as to
create minorities within minorities. Some of this mixing was
done deliberately in an attempt to weaken local loyalties; some
resulted from the mass deportations carried out by Stalin to
punish population groups he suspected of lacking fealty to
Moscow. In the little republic of Moldavia (pop. 4.4 million) the
predominant Romanian ethnic bloc wants the independence declared
last week to be a prelude to absorption by Romania. Such a union
is fiercely opposed, to the point of rioting, by minorities of
Russians and Gagauzi. In Georgia 60,000 South Ossetians long to
secede from the secessionist republic and join an Ossetian ethnic
enclave across the border in Russia.
</p>
<p> The Institute of Geography of the Soviet Academy of Sciences
considers that of the 23 borders between Soviet republics, only
three are not contested. The institute counts 75 border disputes,
the great majority entangled with ethnic conflicts.
</p>
<p> The world knows how inflamed these can become. Over the past
two years, only the appearance of the Soviet Army kept Azerbaijan
and Armenia from full-scale war over Nagorno-Karabakh, an
Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan. Last week Yeltsin went so far
as to threaten to "review" the Russian republic's borders with
any other republics leaving the union; an aide specified that he
meant that Kazakhstan and Ukraine could not take with them border
areas populated mainly by Russians. The outcry was so intense--Kazakhstan's president Nazarbayev grumbled darkly about
"interrepublican wars"--that Yeltsin hastily backed down and
pledged to respect the territorial integrity of both.
</p>
<p> Another threat raised by the chaotic independence movement is
the specter of economic collapse, possibly leading to outright
famine this winter and shortages of fuel to warm the homes of
people in the brutally cold northern reaches. Soviet production
and distribution of food, fuel and virtually everything else are
already in a deep slump because the old system of central
planning and economic commands has long since broken down and
nothing coherent has taken its place. A splintering of political
authority among seven, 10 or heaven knows how many republics, by
hindering movement of goods across republic borders, could make
the situation much worse.
</p>
<p> At a minimum, political fragmentation would delay, if not
defeat, the Silayev commission's attempts to draft a
thoroughgoing reform of the whole economy. It is no secret what
the group is likely to recommend. Said Silayev in an interview
with TIME: "We are supporters, I would cautiously say, of the
classic scheme of a market economy." A plan he drafted last March
for the Russian republic proposed a balanced budget,
convertibility of the ruble, freeing of prices, and most
important, eventual private ownership of state industries and
farmlands, all to be done in stages. But how could such a plan be
put into effect throughout the U.S.S.R. if it had to be done by a
congeries of quarreling republics? Says a U.S. State Department
analyst: "Two years ago, maybe. But now, nothing written in
Moscow is going to happen. The republics are doing what matters."
</p>
<p> One thing all the republics do agree on, though, is that they
have to conclude an economic agreement almost immediately. Most
simply cannot live without one another's products; even the
Russian republic could do so only with extreme pain. To cite just
one example, the CIA notes that "the Soviet Union's entire output
of potato-, corn- and cotton-harvesting machinery comes from
single factories--all in different republics." Nor would the
republics have to agree on a division of political authority to
form a common market; the European Community is uniting the
economies of 12 independent nations. Even the Baltics might join
an economic union while having nothing to do with any other
remnants of the old Union. Recognizing the need for an economic
pact, however, is not the same thing as negotiating one, only an
indispensable first step.
</p>
<p> Another point on which nearly all the republics are agreed is
the necessity of some sort of common defense policy. Nazarbayev
of Kazakhstan suggests a NATO-like unified army to be composed of
contingents contributed by and under the control of each
republic. He adds, however, that it could be activated only to
face a common threat--as if a unified army could be thrown
together overnight, even if 12 republics agreed that there was
such a threat. Various other ideas for a defense alliance exist;
one is for a single army in which soldiers from any republic
serve, in peacetime, only within that republic.
</p>
<p> Beyond that, and between the two extremes of four and 40-odd
countries, an almost endless variety of combinations and
deconstructions is foreseeable. Some experts expect whatever
union emerges to be less a country than a web of bilateral
treaties between republics. One group of republics might form
some sort of central government, though a weak one. That group
might link with other republics in an economic market, and with
different ones in a military alliance. Still other republics
might be totally independent. Moldavia might indeed be willingly
swallowed up by Romania.
</p>
<p> Alternatively, of course, there is the possibility of
complete chaos, civil war or both. Sovietologists almost
unanimously bring up the unhappy example of Yugoslavia, which is
courting all-out civil war as its republics struggle for a new
identity. Though Russia by sheer size is bound to dominate any
grouping of former Soviet states, however loose or tight,
scholars express a fervent hope that it does not try to be as
overbearing as Serbia has been in Yugoslavia.
</p>
<p> All of which presents a dilemma to Western supporters of the
new Russian revolution. Recognizing the Baltics was the easy
decision--even though the U.S. will not get around to doing so
until this week. They had been independent countries until 1940,
when they were incorporated into the Soviet Union by force, and
most Western countries had never recognized that annexation to
begin with. But when and under what conditions--if ever--should foreign nations recognize the independence of Ukraine, or
Kazakhstan, or Moldavia? The question of aid is also sticky. The
revolution has prompted some renewed interest, at least in the
U.S., in the Grand Bargain, a trade of massive Western economic
aid for thoroughgoing Soviet reform creating a true market
economy. In one way, the upheaval has increased prospects for
such a deal. It broke, presumably completely and for good, the
power of doctrinaire communists who opposed capitalism out of
Marxist principle and used their network of party cells in
factories, collective farms and distribution facilities
throughout the country to frustrate the partial reforms that were
attempted.
</p>
<p> But the revolution, and the chaos that has followed it, has
also raised a new argument for delay. Says Neil Malcolm, a
Sovietologist at the London-based Royal Institute of
International Affairs: "We do have to wait with massive financial
aid till things are sorted out in the Soviet Union. We don't even
know at this point whom the money should be sent to." Should it
be distributed through a central government that is losing power
every day but is still the legally constituted authority in the
country? Or should it be channeled directly to the republics,
regardless of their new arrangements? And if so, how can the West
decide which republics should get how much and under what
conditions?
</p>
<p> Basically, the West is still split along the lines that
emerged at a July meeting of the seven strongest industrial
powers in London a month before the upheaval. Now, as then,
Germany, France and Italy are urging the start of an immediate,
coordinated program of massive aid--$30 billion a year over
five years is the most frequently cited figure. They argue that
quick action is needed to nurture the nascent Soviet democracy.
Now, as then, the U.S., Britain, Canada and Japan are insisting
that such a program should not be begun until the aid givers can
be assured that the money will not be wasted; sweeping economic
reform must really be carried out.
</p>
<p> The seven have unbent to the extent of preparing to make
major food and medical-aid shipments this winter to save lives.
For the first time they intend to bypass the center and
distribute at least some of it to the republics. But when British
Prime Minister John Major visited Kennebunkport last week, George
Bush repeated some other conditions for a more general aid
program: substantial cuts in Soviet military spending and a
reduction in Moscow's aid to Cuba. Major agreed, and was prepared
to pass along that message on a Sunday visit to Moscow, where he
was slated to become the first Western head of government to
confer with both Gorbachev and Yeltsin since the failed coup.
</p>
<p> Whatever is done about aid, though, outside powers have only
marginal ability to influence what happens inside what must be
called the former Soviet Union. Soviet citizens must decide their
fate themselves, while the world holds its breath. The failed
coup and the turmoil that has followed are fundamentally
enormously hopeful events. If the immediate results are chaotic--well, revolutions by their nature cannot be tidy. The trouble
is that the most democratic revolutions can so easily degenerate
into lasting chaos, out of which a new dictatorship can be born.
Remember the February 1917 revolution that overthrew the Czar,
the chaos that followed, and the November 1917 Bolshevik coup,
which established the tyranny that has only now been broken--maybe.
</p>
<p>RISING STARS
</p>
<p> NURSULTAN NAZARBAYEV, 51, Kazakh
</p>
<p> Considered one of the most powerful politicians in the Soviet
Union today, the president of Kazakhstan rose rapidly through
party ranks after enrolling in 1962. Gorbachev originally blocked
his appointment as leader of the republic in 1986 because he
wanted a Moscow apparatchik as local boss, but Nazarbayev was
finally named to the post in 1989 and elected president last
year. Although a Communist Party member until his postcoup
resignation, he has cultivated a sophisticated style and
recently characterized himself as a centrist in politics and a
reformer in economics. He has traveled widely seeking foreign
investment, showing particular interest in South Korea's success
in establishing a flourishing market economy within an
authoritarian system. As the only central Asian leader with a
high profile, he is a counterbalance to the dominating Russian
presence.
</p>
<p> ANATOLI SOBCHAK, 54, Russian
</p>
<p> The law-school graduate and former faculty head has been on
the political fast track since his election to the Congress of
People's Deputies in March 1989, where his debating skills have
shone. His scathing, sometimes sarcastic attacks on
conservatives, his support for a multiparty system, and his legal
expertise made him a key participant in efforts to draft a new
constitution. Elected mayor of Leningrad in May 1990 as an
advocate of economic reform, he proved his mettle by immediately
decrying the coup and persuading the military not to enter his
city during the coup attempt. He has no deep roots in the
Communist Party, to which he belonged for only two years before
quitting in July 1990. A founding member of the Democratic Reform
Movement, he has worked closely with Yeltsin, but his cultivated
style and background make him more palatable to the
intelligentsia. Last week Sobchak's was a coolly rational voice
warning the country "not to do things hastily, superficially,
carried along by this wave of emotion." Although he can appear
arrogant, his compelling abilities will make him a formidable
presence as the country tries to rebuild.
</p>
<p>THE NEW ECONOMISTS
</p>
<p> IVAN SILAYEV, 60, Russian
</p>
<p> A product of the Old World, he has embraced reform and now
heads the team trying to lead the Union. An engineer from the
military-industrial complex, a party member since 1959, he became
Soviet Deputy Prime Minister in 1985. He was selected by Yeltsin
as Russian prime minister last year, and showed his capacity to
change this March, when he presented a bold plan for radical
economic reform in the republic that permitted private ownership
of land and industry.
</p>
<p> GRIGORI YAVLINSKY, 39, Russian
</p>
<p> In the land of plans, Yavlinsky is king. An economic whiz
kid, he was one of the authors of last year's rejected 500-day
program for shock-therapy reform. Seeking a more receptive boss,
he moved on to serve as deputy prime minister of Russia, only to
resign in frustration last October. He was next sought out by
Kazakhstan's President Nazarbayev in February for help in
designing that republic's economic program, and he later joined
forces with American economists to draft the so-called Grand
Bargain plan to swap Western aid for market reforms.
</p>
<p> ARKADI VOLSKY, 59, Russian
</p>
<p> A tough and resourceful Gorbachev aide, he has spent most of
his career working for the party. He founded an influential
organization of top managers of state and private enterprises in
1990 to promote the market system. Although loyal to Gorbachev,
threatening at an April plenum to resign if the Soviet leader was
ousted, he joined other reformers in founding the Democratic
Reform Movement. A member of the new team, Volsky will be
responsible for industry, transport and communication.
</p>
<p>YELTSIN'S TEAM
</p>
<p> GENNADI BURBULIS, 45, Russian
</p>
<p> His ties with the Russian president go back to Sverdlovsk,
Yeltsin's original power base. Trained as a philosopher, Burbulis
came to Moscow in March 1989 when he was elected to parliament,
where he quickly joined the reformers' wing. Low key and
efficient, he has been described as Yeltsin's eminence grise and
righthand man, and was chosen to run the president's successful
election campaign in June. Recently appointed as Russia's first
secretary of state, he was never far from Yeltsin's side during
the coup.
</p>
<p> ALEXANDER RUTSKOI, 44, Russian
</p>
<p> Flamboyant and fearless, he was a combat pilot in
Afghanistan. He entered politics in 1989 as a firm imperialist,
but later became a leader of the Communists for Democracy
movement in the Russian parliament, which helped enact Yeltsin's
programs. He was rewarded with the job of Russian vice president
in June. During the coup he was made responsible for the defense
of the Russian Parliament Building, putting his ties with other
reform-minded officers to good use to avert an attack.
</p>
<p> RUSLAN KHASBULATOV, 49, Chechen
</p>
<p> A brilliant economist, he was made Yeltsin's first deputy as
chairman of the Russian supreme soviet in 1990. The combative
proponent of a market economy has become one of the president's
most prominent aides, arguing that the transition to capitalism
can be achieved without any decline in living standards. He grew
up in Kazakhstan, where his ethnic group was exiled by Stalin,
and has long favored republican sovereignty. He is one of the few
Soviet officials who actually use the computers installed in
their offices.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>