GORBACHEV MUST MAKE A CLEAN BREAK WITH HIS ERSTWHILE ALLIES BEFORE HE WARRANTS WESTERN SUPPORT, AID

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(Washington, D.C.): Lest the end of
the coup in the USSR — and the imminent
restoration of Mikhail Gorbachev to power
— precipitate a binge of further Western
political, economic and technological
overinvestment in the Soviet President, the
United States and its allies must adopt a
new stance. If Gorbachev is to deserve
the mantle of democratic leadership the
West is determined to accord him and if
he is to be the recipient of further aid,
he must immediately take the following
steps
:

  • The institutions
    that perpetrated the coup (the
    KGB, the military and the
    Communist Party)
    not
    just their leaders who formed the
    “Committee on the State of
    Emergency”
    must
    bear the full consequences of
    their actions
    .
    Specifically:
    • The KGB must be dismantled
      as a “state within a
      state;” it must be
      stripped of its vast
      military and paramilitary
      forces; its network of
      millions of informers
      within the Soviet Union
      must be disbanded; and
      its subversive operations
      overseas must be
      terminated.
    • The military
      — including the troops
      of the MVD or Interior
      Ministry — must
      be massively reduced
      .
      This should be done with
      a view to bringing them
      into line with the
      legitimate defense needs
      of the Soviet Union,
      ending the
      military-industrial
      complex’s
      disproportionate
      consumption of Soviet
      resources and halting the
      unwarranted but
      continuing
      build-up
      of Moscow’s strategic and
      other weaponry. For
      starters, defense should
      be accorded no more than
      four-to-five percent of
      GNP (vice the 20-30% it
      has obtained under
      Gorbachev).
    • In addition, the
      KGB, the armed forces and
      the Interior Ministry
      should be placed under
      tight civilian control

      and subjected to the
      effective oversight and
      budgetary discipline of
      freely elected
      parliamentary committees
      as they are in genuine
      constitutional
      democracies.

    • The Communist
      Party throughout the
      Soviet Union must no
      longer enjoy its
      privileged political
      position
      in
      either the Kremlin, the
      military, the workforce
      or the society as large.
      It must compete for power
      in free, fair and
      pluralistic elections on
      an equal footing with
      other parties.
    • Such elections should be
      held at once
      for
      both the office of
      President of the USSR and
      for the Congress of
      Peoples Deputies and the
      Supreme Soviet.

  • Those who participated in
    the coup and their senior
    subordinates should be replaced

    immediately by individuals with
    unblemished records of commitment
    to urgent, wholesale democratic
    and free market reform.
  • A new Soviet Constitution
    should be swiftly drafted and put
    to a popular vote
    — one
    that provides sure guarantees of
    individual rights, political
    liberty and economic opportunity.
    In particular, this constitution
    should provide for an independent
    judiciary, capable of serving as
    a needed check-and-balance on the
    executive and a guarantor of the
    rule of law.
  • The first task of such an
    judiciary would be to
    conduct — perhaps in
    parallel with a
    parliamentary inquiry —
    an independent
    investigation of the
    possibility that
    Gorbachev himself was a
    participant in, as well
    as the principal
    beneficiary of, the
    abortive coup.

  • The Baltic States,
    Georgia, Moldavia and any other
    republic that wishes to secede
    from the USSR should be permitted
    to do so at once
    — and
    not in accordance with the
    torturous five-year process
    contemplated by the present,
    illegitimate Soviet constitution.
  • The All-Union Treaty
    should be opened for
    renegotiation
    — not
    rushed to signature as Secretary
    Baker has suggested. This should
    be done in order not only to
    clarify the full extent to which
    power would actually
    devolve from the center to those
    republics that wish to remain
    within the Soviet empire, but to
    expand the scope of such
    devolution.
  • The law that is supposed
    to codify the right of free
    emigration and movement within
    the USSR should be modified to go
    into effect immediately
    ,
    not on 1 January 1993.
  • Measures needed to
    legitimize private property, free
    enterprise, repatriation of
    profits, etc. must be swiftly
    enacted
    and the sort of
    half-steps and bureaucratic
    impediments to dismantling the
    command economy favored
    heretofore by Gorbachev dispensed
    with.

The Center for Security Policy finds
itself in surprising company as it agrees
with Vladimir Posner and Dmitri Simes —
two prominent Soviets with uneven records
when it comes to their support for
radical democratic and free market reform
of the USSR — that Gorbachev’s
day has passed
. His association
with the individuals and institutions
that ostensibly removed him, his past
service on their behalf and his
unwillingness to submit himself to a
popular election have discredited him. As
a result, his value to a nation in urgent
need of genuinely reformist leadership
has been undermined irreparably.

The Center believes that the
West should do nothing to help promote
Gorbachev over those whose popular
mandates and personal convictions prompt
them to pursue aggressively systemic
political and economic reform.

At the very least, he must
embrace that objective in deed
as well as word no less
wholeheartedly than have Boris Yeltsin
and his colleagues. This transformation
of Gorbachev has to occur before any
thought is given to further Western
investment in
him and his continued
rule.

Center for Security Policy

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