Gorbachev and Yeltsin, Part IV

Gorbachev and Yeltsin, Part IV

So, after 3 days, the coup plotters simply climbed into their

limousines and drove off. “The attempted coup proved beyond

doubt that the system was braindead.” The Soviet Communists

were still in control of the world”s most formidable security

apparatus; but they could not bring it to perform the simplest of

operations.

The day the coup ended, and for days thereafter, the Communists

frantically (and futilely) tried to destroy the archives. Furious

demonstrators demanded the destruction of the Party and the

confiscation of its properties. The crowds who had defended the

White House now toppled the monuments of the regime. And

then the shredders began to jam and break. In their haste the

men of the Party had failed to remove the paper clips.

At Gorbachev”s first press conference he still spoke of his

allegiance to the “socialist choice” and the Party”s “renewal.”

His closest adviser, Aleksandr Yakovlev told him “The Party is

dead. Why can”t you see that?”

Meanwhile, Boris Yeltsin did his part to humiliate Gorby in front

of the Russian parliament, forcing him to read aloud a transcript

of the August 19th meeting at which all but two of the ministers

whom Gorby himself had nominated pledged their hearty support

of the coup. On August 24th Gorby resigned as general secretary

of the Communist Party, dissolved its Central Committee and

declared, in essence, an end to the Bolshevik era.

And as the statues were toppled, Marshal Akhromoyev,

Gorbachev”s military adviser, was found dead in his office, his

neck in a noose, a series of suicide notes laid out neatly on his

desk. “The first attempt didn”t work. I”ll try again.”

At the apartment of Boris Pugo, the Interior Minister, police

arrived to arrest him for his role in the coup. What they found

was gruesome. Pugo was dressed in a blue track suit with a

gaping bullet wound in his head; his wife was also shot, but half

alive. Pugo left a suicide note.

Nikolai Kruchina, a Communist Party official who administered

the finances of the Central Committee, jumped form his

apartment window to his death. There were at least 15 other

suicides of Party officials.

Finally, Gorbachev began to realize how he had played a

dangerous game with the Party for far too long. “I should have

forged a strong common front with the democrats,” he said.

However, he still envisioned a new Union with Moscow

retaining key functions like the common defense and foreign

policy. Yeltsin said the Union president would be ceremonial,

“something like the Queen of England.” And on December 26th,

1991, the Soviet Union was a half-remembered dream. Gorby

had resigned on Christmas Day as by then Ukraine decided to

pull out of the negotiations for a new Union, finally ending his

hopes for a place for himself as its president. Instead, the leaders

of Russia, Ukraine and Byelorussia patched together a new plan

for a commonwealth. When Gorby arrived at the Kremlin to

pack up, his nameplate had already been pried off the wall.

“Yeltsin, B.N.” was in its place. Yeltsin himself was behind the

desk. Gorbachev was furious, apparently forgetting that in 1987

he had dragged Yeltsin from a hospital bed and made him stand

before the Moscow city Party organization for hour after hour of

denunciations. When Yeltsin was given the chance to humiliate

Gorby, he grabbed it.

Gorbachev returned from a “victory” tour of the U.S. and the

West in 1992 to face a hostile Russian people. The intellectuals

as well as the common folk and Communist Party faithful had

nothing kind to say, nor, in the words of David Remnick, could

they define what he had been all about.

Remnick writes, “Gorbachev was not a moral prophet or an

intellectual giant. He was not even a man of exceptional

goodness. Above all, he was a politician. He combined a rough

sense of decency with a preternatural ability to manipulate a

system that had seemed, from the outside, unbendable.

From March 1985, when he began, until June 1989, when he

presided over the first elected legislature of the Soviet Union,

Gorbachev chipped away at the totalitarian monolith. From

there, his personal story became tragic. He was dragged along

by events and never seemed able to decide how to maneuver

from one day to the next without losing himself entirely.”

Yes friends, now you know all you ever need to know about

Mikhail Gorbachev. Just remember, when you”re at your next

cocktail party and the subject of Gorby comes up, mention this

site. Better yet, buy David Remnick”s book “Lenin”s Tomb” off

of the Borders link you can find to your left. I think I get about 2

or 3 cents off of each one sold. [Seriously].