Armageddon Averted

Kotkin, Stephen

REAGAN DIDN'T DO IT The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000 Stephen Kotkin Oxford University Press, $27.50,235 pp R. Scott Appleby Best we become distracted by the specter of global terrorism with an...

...Strictly speaking, Kotkin points out, this was not corruption, "which presupposes the prevalence of rule-regulated behavior, so that violators are identified and prosecuted...
...Significantly, in a few short paragraphs, John Paul II receives top billing among cultural and religious figures...
...Military commanders, too, were seduced by the opportunities of republicanism, and became dependent on local authorities for resources...
...Alexander Solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago appears in a list of glasnost triumphs, as one among other previously buried indictments of Soviet-era atrocities, alongside the abortion epidemic, massive poverty, drug addiction, the Afghanistan war, and the Stalin-era massacres and deportations of entire nationalities...
...It is a lesson Americans would do well to remember as they face hard political choices in response to the challenges posed not only by Islamic terrorists and the Iraqi dictator, but by a Commonwealth of Independent States that is still searching for a political culture and set of governing institutions that are truly liberal as well as democratic...
...The unintended consequences of the hasty privatization of industry were no less disastrous...
...Rather, this was 'pre-corrupt,' a condition whereby everyone to varying degrees was a violator, but only the weak were targeted...
...The theory of historical change on display in Armageddon Averted acknowledges precious little substantive role for culture or for religion...
...As the 1980s opened, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, buoyed by the discovery and export of Siberian oil, had low foreign debt and an excellent credit rating...
...Once the party was unable to sustain the comfortable lifestyles to which its members had become accustomed, Russian, Uzbek, Kazakh, Georgian, and other elites proved themselves no less pragmatic than their American business counterparts, and they bolted...
...In addition, when Gorbachev stopped short of permitting real-market prices to dictate winners and losers in the new "reformed" economy, he inadvertently undermined progress toward business autonomy and the cultivation of a psychology of profit and loss...
...Although the major command structures proved resilient, in the final analysis Gorbachev's socialist romanticism precluded anything that resembled Stalinism or Brezh-nevism, including domestic military crackdowns...
...The institutions and dynamics of the planned economy, particularly its rust belt of inefficient industrial plants ("ten time zones of antiquated heavy industry") staffed by workers accustomed to meeting quantifiable goals rather than developing innovative products, constituted an insurmountable obstacle to reform...
...After all, the Soviet system still commanded the largest, most powerful military in history, replete with a vast storehouse of chemical and biological weapons, and enough nuclear weapons to destroy or blackmail the world...
...Going halfway towards the benefits of market criteria," Kotkin observes, "turned out to be no way...
...Gorbachev and his comrades did not foresee, or desire, the collapse of the Soviet system, which followed rapidly upon the first stages of perestroika and glasnost...
...But the disintegration was inevitable, as seems clear in hindsight...
...He is rightly credited with galvanizing Poland's Solidarity labor union, reinvigorating the Polish Catholic Church, and thereby opening fissures in the Soviet model that brought the socialist system "to the point of liquidation...
...The republics became a refuge from the Union...
...Kotkin is concerned, however, with the values underlying the political culture of perestroika...
...The general secretary was forced to rely on recalcitrant bureaucrats to implement an improbable decentralization that would entail a significant loss of their authority...
...The Soviet citizenry enjoyed full employment and a stable regime...
...The system imploded as officials cannibalized the Soviet infrastructure, selling off technologies, goods, and export licenses to the highest bidder...
...Why, then, did Mikhail Gorbachev, upon being named general secretary of the Communist Party and head of the Soviet government in 1985, attempt to democratize the party, revive the radical-democratic system of Soviets (councils), and reform the planned economy...
...Kotkin demonstrates that the attempted pace of reform as well as expectations for its success were entirely unrealistic, especially in light of the halfway measures Gorbachev undertook to realize his goals...
...Good government, in turn, is measured by its diligence in protecting the civil liberties, economic opportunities, and human rights of all the citizens of the state...
...Like many contemporary states struggling for a cohesive political identity, Russia lacks good government-strong governing institutions and officials who understand intuitively that open, honest, and vigorous government "is not the enemy of liberty but its sine qua non...
...REAGAN DIDN'T DO IT The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000 Stephen Kotkin Oxford University Press, $27.50,235 pp R. Scott Appleby Best we become distracted by the specter of global terrorism with an Islamist face, the continuing threat of Saddam Hussein, or the plethora of civil wars deepening political instability in dozens of weakening nation-states, the Princeton historian Stephen Kotkin has written the scholarly equivalent of a murder mystery about a historical and geopolitical matter of even greater significance: Who-or what-killed the Soviet Union, and why did it go so quietly...
...He opened the way for small-scale, service-sector "cooperatives," encouraged citizens to form associations outside the Communist Party, and allowed workers to elect factory managers...
...The dissident physicist and human-rights advocate Andrei Sakharov rates only brief mention, as do advocates of religious freedom, the great majority of the dissidents who suffered at the hands of the regime...
...The party, it turned out, had been the glue holding the republics together...
...Rather, the interpretive key to the great puzzle is found in the rise to power of a post-Stalinist, Khrushchev generation of Soviet leaders, represented most powerfully by Gorbachev, who were romantic idealists intent on reviving "socialism with a human face...
...Coaxing Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush to accept steep reductions in nuclear arsenals, Gorbachev channeled funds once targeted for the military into economic reconstruction and wooed Western investment...
...Why didn't the army intervene...
...Perestroika under Gorbachev, accordingly, was an "economic halfway house...
...Mistakenly, Gorbachev attempted to foster democracy without liberalism...
...Perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost were the instruments of this revival...
...It also precluded the Chinese option of introducing a market economy gradually while maintaining political control through repression...
...In 1987-88, Gorbachev shepherded through the polit-buro a series of far-reaching laws designed to stimulate "autonomy" and cooperation among industrial firms to maximize "profit" and reduce "loss" (novel concepts in the managed economy...
...Most significant, why did the Soviet elite-a formidable bastion of power numbering more than 2 million members of the party, state bureaucracy, military, and KGB-allow Gorbachev to preside over the loss of Eastern Europe and the eventual secession of the Soviet republics...
...Kotkin's analysis of the Soviet collapse is primarily in terms of structure and ideology...
...The challenge facing Russia today is therefore not cultural, strictly speaking, or economic, but institutional...
...He discounts as "grossly inflated" the influence of democratizing social movements, supposed cultural deficiencies, "imagined" nationalism, evil oligarchs, and Western pressure...
...Reform idealism, as Kotkin puts it, unleashed the basest opportunism...
...Why, further, did he inaugurate an era of glasnost, or "openness," which, in the accumulation of media exposes, amounted to a public acknowledgment that the Communist government for decades had systematically repressed its people and mismanaged the economy...
...He failed to create an effective regulatory civil service, a reliable banking system, and an independent judiciary capable of enforcing the rule of law, property rights, and the accountability of officials...
...The undermining of the Communist Party, which Gorbachev initiated and Russian president Boris Yeltsin subsequently accelerated, also contributed, quite unexpectedly, to the unraveling of the Soviet Union...
...Perestroika sought to replace the centralized planned economy with a market-friendly variant that would be competitive with the West and transcend the superpower confrontation...
...Glasnost opened the system to self-scrutiny, stimulating democratic reforms within the party such as the creation of the Congress of People's Deputies in 1989...
...as well as democratic...

Vol. 129 • January 2002 • No. 2


 
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