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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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oct_dec
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10119922.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(Oct. 11, 1993) Sorry State Of Siege
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RUSSIA, Page 47
Sorry State Of Siege
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Yeltsin has a serious mess on his hands as the political crisis
refuses to end
</p>
<p>By JOHN KOHAN/MOSCOW
</p>
<p> They marched in the crisp gold sunlight of a perfect autumn
afternoon. Some 10,000 strong, they chanted "Soviet Union, Soviet
Union," "Yeltsin is Dead," as they braved a hail of rubber bullets
and tear gas from troops loyal to Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
Breaching police lines, the demonstrators recaptured the plaza
behind the barricaded White House, where 100 or so deputies
of the disbanded Russian Parliament, along with their aides
and security men remained in defiance of Yeltsin. Former Vice
President Alexander Rutskoi, a brief case held protectively
before his chest, addressed the mob in fiery language, commanding
them to "stand up, take positions...and attack." With that,
the tense stand-off that has paralyzed Russia for nearly two
weeks teetered into total chaos.
</p>
<p> Overwhelming troops from the Interior Ministry, the demonstrators
grabbed shields and guns from their opponents, commandeered
several military vehicles, and swarmed south to the mammoth
high rise that houses Moscow's mayor. Within an hour, the mob
had seized control of the building. They then moved on to Ostenkino,
the national television broadcasting center and seized it without
any apparent resistance from pro-Yeltsin troops.
</p>
<p> By nightfall, forces loyal to Yeltsin finally began to muster
their response. Yeltsin, who had left Moscow for an afternoon
in the country, rushed back by helicopter to personally direct
the counter offensive declaring a state of emergency. However,
troops inexplicably refused to maintain their defenses by force.
</p>
<p> In Washington a worried President Clinton was briefed on the
chaotic situation in Moscow. "It is clear that the violence
was perpetrated by the Rutskoi-Khasbulatov forces. President
Yeltsin has bent over backwards to avoid excessive force and
I still am convinced that the United States must support him
and the process of bringing about free and fair elections."
</p>
<p> Earlier in the week, a dozen defenders of the White House peered
out over a makeshift barricade of cobblestones and scrap metal,
welcoming visitors to "the First Boris Yeltsin Concentration
Camp." Striving to be heard above the din, Vladimir Chernov,
one of the Deputies holed up in the White House, stepped to
the edge of the cordon to shout out the latest news from inside.
He dismissed any talk of compromise. "How can you trust them?"
he asked. "They have made these young boys take up arms against
their own people."
</p>
<p> In the streets, the pushing and shoving between government troops
and supporters of the parliamentary holdouts grew rougher. Flak-jacketed
riot police lashed out at protesters, swinging truncheons and
body-size shields as they charged stocky babushkas, or grandmothers,
who yelled "Shame!" at the rows of Yeltsin forces. "If you were
my sons," shrieked a hysterical woman, "I would strangle you
with my bare hands, you traitors!"
</p>
<p> As the political crisis dragged into its second week, one thing
was clear: Yeltsin was facing the crisis of his life. If the
President thought his hard-line enemies in the legislature could
be easily pushed aside after he issued his decree dissolving
the parliament, he was mistaken. The Kremlin enticed some parliamentarians
out with promises of new jobs, then sealed the building off
with police lines, water trucks, and razor-sharp coils of barbed
wire. But the hard core of Deputies remaining loyal to Rutskoi
and Khasbulatov simply refused to budge.
</p>
<p> Only the mediation efforts of Patriarch Alexiy II, head of the
Russian Orthodox Church, who offered his services last week
as a go-between, brought some hope for ending the impasse. After
two days of tough negotiations at Moscow's Danilovsky Monastery,
representatives from the Kremlin and the White House agreed
last Saturday to work out a step-by-step plan for a joint reduction
of weapons and guards at the parliament over a two-day period.
They also discussed the issue of "safety guarantees" for the
defenders of the White House. One key obstacle remained: any
accord would have to be approved by parliament, which rejected
an earlier peace plan. As Deputy Mikhail Chelnokov put it, "The
most important question to be discussed is not weapons but Yeltsin's
coup d'etat."
</p>
<p> It was certainly possible that if the Deputies turned down the
latest disarmament deal, the Kremlin might feel forced to launch
an assault on the White House, but a bloody outcome could rebound
against Yeltsin, shifting Russian sympathies toward the martyred
Deputies. He also has his international image to think about.
As the deadlock continued, Western governments grew nervous
about what his next move might be: they have swallowed Yel-tsin's
violations of the constitution so far, but any violence could
scare democratic governments away. After Washington expressed
concern about possible violations of "human rights" last week,
Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev felt obliged to state once again
that "there was no intention and is no intention to use force."
</p>
<p> The danger for Yeltsin is that his hold on power would be eroded
the longer the siege goes on. He is already struggling to keep
the conflict from spreading into Russia's 88 republics and regions,
as Khasbulatov claimed that "dictator Yeltsin does not control
the country outside of Moscow." The President's strength is
shakier among the regional legislatures dominated by former
Soviet apparatchiks who share parliament's distaste for radical
reform. In a warning signal of troubles to come, lawmakers in
Siberia vowed to set up their own republic, withhold tax revenues
and even disrupt the Trans-Siberian Railroad if Yeltsin did
not end the White House blockade. Conservative legislators from
60 republics and regions gathered in Moscow's Constitutional
Court building to condemn the President's decrees. These politicians,
eager to stake out their own authority beyond Moscow's weakened
government, have demanded that Yeltsin grant them a major role
in organizing elections and rewriting the constitution.
</p>
<p> Presidential adviser Sergei Filatov insisted that Yeltsin still
commanded popular support in the provinces as well as the allegiance
of regional administrators he appointed. But the President was
taking no chances last week as he dispatched Kremlin envoys
from the Urals to the Pacific coast for eight separate meetings
with regional leaders. Yeltsin may need his supporters in the
hinterlands to contain the political damage caused by the siege
at the White House. He has summoned his Federation Council,
a consulting group of provincial leaders, to meet next week,
and could use the forum as a kind of interim parliament.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin got plenty of advice about how to end the conflict from
centrist political parties and Russian Constitutional Court
chairman Valeri Zorkin. All the compromises hinged on holding
simultaneous elections for both the parliament and the presidency--the so-called zero option that Yeltsin has long opposed and
roundly dismissed as "extremely dangerous." He believes the
President ought to remain in office during the legislative vote
to prevent a power vacuum from forming, and then stand for election
later. Yeltsin has to be seen as winning his point about holding
an early vote for a new parliament or the whole exercise in
suspending the legislature will appear to have been a farce.
</p>
<p> As the crisis lurched toward some undefined denouement last
week, Yeltsin could still claim the upper hand. He appeared
to have the army and the security services under firm control.
Public opinion remained on his side, in no small measure because
of heavily slanted press reports. Even as angry supporters of
the parliament, numbering in the thousands, staged nightly street
clashes with riot police, most Muscovites continued to watch
events from the sidelines, swearing at the massive traffic jams
that snarled center-city boulevards. Yeltsin had to ask himself
how long he could let the standoff continue before ordinary
Russians began to doubt the wisdom of his power play and lambaste
him for being too weak or question his commitment to democratic
reforms. It all came down to a far from simple question: Were
all hopes of compromise now dead?
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>