Beyond Gorbymania

Published March 11, 2015
mahir.dawn@gmail.com
mahir.dawn@gmail.com

IN the midst of what looks very much like another Cold War, it seems remarkable that just three decades have passed since the beginning of the end dawned for the last one. It somehow feels more distant than that, almost like a different lifetime.

It was, however, on March 11, 1985, that the Kremlin suddenly ceased to resemble a geriatric ward. The new general secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was the youngest member of the Politburo.

Mikhail Gorbachev’s elevation to that key post wasn’t a huge surprise. His candidacy had been mooted the previous year when Yuri Andropov died barely 15 months into his tenure, having succeeded the long-serving but also long-ailing Leonid Brezhnev. Instead, the ruling party opted for Konstantin Chernenko, who was even older than Andropov and clearly not in the best of health.


Three decades ago the Kremlin stopped resembling a geriatric ward.


By the time he died 13 months later, Chernenko had probably spent more time being tended to by doctors than attending to affairs of state. During that period Gorbachev was seen as effectively the second in command and the obvious successor.

He was nonetheless something of an anomaly, and it was no doubt partly to allay alarm among the septuagenarians in the hierarchy about the new kid on the block that Andrei Gromyko, serving at the time as the ceremonial president, declared that there were teeth of steel behind the new general secretary’s charming smile. He wasn’t entirely wrong. Gorbachev was a determined man. But his chances of rising to the top would almost certainly have been stymied had the nature of his determination been evident back then.

Gorbachev had decided that the Soviet Union could no longer continue along the unimaginative trajectory that had become the default following the overthrow of Nikita Khrushchev two decades earlier. The woes of a faltering economy had been compounded by the consequences of the stupid decision to invade Afghanistan, which inevitably included heightened tensions with the West.

Inevitably, there was considerable resistance to reform on both the political and the ec­o­n­omic fronts. In some ways, though, the for­mer yielded more dividends than the latter.

Breaking up the Communist Party’s monopoly on power proved to be a broadly popular endeavour, notwithstanding the nomenklatura’s undisguised dismay at the erosion of its hitherto unchallenged powers. Pluralism began to take root. With glasnost, the blank pages in Soviet history began to be filled.

In economic terms, however, a feasible alter­n­ative to state-run enterprises proved harder to figure out. Privatisation was anathema to all too many people, often for perfectly valid reasons — as the post-Soviet experience demonstrated. Workers’ democracy was not the sort of concept that could be introduced by decree. There was talk of ‘market socialism’, and Gorbachev eventually evinced considerable interest in the Swedish model of a mixed economy. But not much good came of it all.

The pace of reform, meanwhile, emerged as a key bone of contention, with rival wings represented by Yegor Ligachev on the conservative side and the rather more popular Boris Yeltsin, who was more than a bit bolshie back in the day, demanding rapid change — albeit not from the neoliberal point of view he subsequently embraced.

Gorbachev strove for balance, but it wasn’t easy to strike. Eventually a pincer movement of sorts doomed his project to failure. The conservatives conspired to stage a coup, but it was a crude attempt and Muscovites in their hundreds of thousands demonstrated their unwilli­ngness to accept any kind of regression.

With Gorbachev under house arrest in a Crimean dacha, it was Yeltsin, by then the Russian president, who emerged as a heroic figure, buoyed by Western support, and thereafter proceeded to negotiate a federation treaty that sealed the Soviet Union’s fate.

The USSR’s demise was an unintentional consequence of the forces Gorbachev had set in motion. His domestic popularity had substantially diminished by then, but remained high overseas. There are two aspects to this.

Viscerally anti-Soviet Western leaders such as Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher saw in his ascendancy an opportunity for undermining their most formidable foe. Ordinary Westerners, on the other hand, were thrilled by a Kremlin boss who exuded charm, seemed amenable to reason, and rendered meaningless the concept of a communist military threat. The extent of his popularity gained a name: Gorbymania. And the spurts of excitement wherever he put in a public appearance became known as Gorbasms.

The idea of socialism with a human face attracted widespread appeal. That wasn’t the outcome, though, either in Russia and other former Soviet states, or in the Eastern European satellites where, in the late 1980s, communist regimes fell like dominoes. But much of this occurred without a great deal of violence, which seemed like a blessing. Who could have thought that 25 years later eastern Ukraine would be a war zone?

mahir.dawn@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, March 11th, 2015

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