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#11 - JRL 2006-188 - JRL Home
Russia: The Fading Legacy Of The Failed 1991 Soviet
Coup
By Luke Allnutt
Copyright (c) 2006. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
PRAGUE, August 18, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Through the winter of 1990-91 the glue
that held together the Soviet Union was becoming unstuck.
On August 20, 1991, a meeting was scheduled to sign a union treaty that would
give the republics more independence. But two days before, Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev's chief of staff and other Politburo members arrived at the
presidential dacha in Crimea putting the president and his family under house
arrest.
This move unleashed a chain of events that threatened to engulf the country
in a bloody civil war.
"I call on you, my comrade officers, soldiers, and sailors, do not take
action against the people -- against your fathers, mothers, brothers, and
sisters," Russian Soviet Republic Vice President Aleksandr Rutskoi, a decorated
hero of the war in Aghanistan, appealed to the Soviet armed forces on August 19,
1991.
"I appeal to your honor, your reason and your heart. Today the fate of the
country, the fate of its free and democratic development, is in your hands,"
Rutskoi said.
Rutskoi's plea was for the most part heeded. Tanks took up positions, but no
soldiers fired on the thousands of Muscovites who had taken to the streets to
oppose the plotters.
Organizing The Resistance
"Just after 8 a.m., [human rights activist] Yury Samodurov rang and told me
to switch on the television," activist Yelena Bonner, widow of Nobel Prize
laureate Andrei Sakharhov, told RFE/RL. "I switched it on and saw all those
people and everything that was happening. I began to phone everyone. It emerged
that I was now the center of a rather large circle of people. I told them all:
'Go to the Moscow City Soviet.' Nobody really knew what was going on. Then,
around 9 or 10, they called from the City Council to say that a lot of our
people were there and that they were heading for the White House. Of course, I
went to the White House as well."
Russian Republic President Boris Yeltsin provided the defining symbol of
defiance. Standing on top of a tank, with the Russian flag in the background, he
called for mass resistance.
Gradually, the tide turned. The coup crumbled and Gorbachev returned to
Moscow from Crimea to find a starkly changed balance of power.
And as Yeltsin told Radio Liberty just after the coup, the Soviet Union had
changed in Gorbachev's absence.
"I think it is important too that President Gorbachev has returned to a
different Russia, to a different country," Yelstin said. "It seems to me -- and
yesterday I spent half the day with him discussing the future course of reforms
and economic transformation -- that he has at last understood that without
democracy, without the development of democracy, without radical reforms -- and
not the sort of quiet reforms during which coup d'etats of this sort can happen
-- that we can't go further. It seems to me too that he has understood the need
in fact to end the ruling role of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union."
After The Coup
But building democracy in Russia -- to say nothing of most of the other
post-Soviet republics -- has proved a daunting task.
The war in Chechnya, clampdowns on media and NGOs, the Yukos affair, the
appointment rather than election of regional governors, the hobbling of all
political opposition are all black marks against Russia's democratic record in
the last 15 years.
James Nixey, the manager of the Russia and Eurasia program at Chatham House,
thinks Russia's experiment with liberal democracy is over.
"If you look at President [Vladimir] Putin's very high approval ratings and
if you look at the fact that living standards have risen quite considerably
since 2000 and the fact that you have a leader who is strong and independent and
doesn't give off the same kind of vibes as President Yeltsin, then that is
actually far more important to [Russians] than the appointment of governors or
NGOs," Nixey says.
No More Us And Them
And gone today is the neat demarcation between the plotters and those camped
outside the White House, between democrats and their opponents.
In 2004, Putin awarded one of the coup plotters, former Soviet Defense
Minister Dmitry Yazov, Russia's Order of Merit medal for "high achievements in
useful, societal activities."
A recent poll by the Moscow-based Levada Center shows that, with the benefit
of hindsight, people's attitudes toward the plotters and the August 1991 events
have changed somewhat.
Fifteen years after the events, 52 percent of Russians say that both the
plotters and Yeltsin had been in the wrong.
Yury Levada, the head of the polling agency, says that democracy these days
is not high on Russians' list of priorities.
"People don't [think] of democracy and democratic institutions, universal
elections, and other [things] as very important," Levada told RFE/RL. "The
subject of concern for Russian people is family, the economic situation,
finances, inflation, unemployment, criminality, and other [things]."
Looking Toward The Future
The question of Putin's succession and the 2008 presidential election will be
a test for Russian democracy.
"Whether or not President Putin stays in power, and changes or adjusts or
abolishes or alters the constitution to enable him to stay in power will show us
an awful lot about the true nature of Russia," analyst Nixey says.
After 15 years of a rocky transition, Russians for the moment appear content
to waive their human rights in return for stability and rising living standards.
The drama of 1991 seems as much a part of history today as the Soviet Union
itself.
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