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Gorbachev's 'Reforms': Tightening the Screws
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10859 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1986 |
2,588 Words |
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Jan Sejna Jan Sejna is former first secretary of the Communist Party of
the Ministry of Defense in Czechoslovakia and chief of staff
of the Czech Ministry of Defense. Before he defected in 1968,
Major General Sejna had direct access to the Soviet "Strategic
Plan" for the global projection of Soviet military power. His
books include: We Will Bury You and Decision-Making in
Communist Countries (with Joseph D. Douglas). Sejna is an
expert on Soviet military and political strategy. |
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will begin "cleaning house" very soon among the ruling elite of the Warsaw Pact countries. Based on recent remarks made by Gorbachev in Kiev and at the recent Communist party congress in Moscow, we should see the removal of the "over - 70" crowd of Eastern European party bosses like Gustav Husak of Czechoslovakia, Janos Kadar of Hungary, Erich Honecker of East Germany, and Todor Zhikov of Bulgaria by 1991, if not sooner. The "crown princes" to succeed three of these bosses will almost certainly be: Vasil Bilak in Czechoslovakia, currently number two man in the party there; Karoly Nemeth in Hungary, and Egon Krentz in East Germany.
What does this mean against the backdrop of Soviet global, political-military strategy? These Warsaw Pact leaders will be sent quietly into retirement because neither they nor the peoples of Eastern Europe have enthusiastically embraced the "new" Gorbachev reform program. Actually, there is nothing novel about the reforms, which were actually initiated by the late Yuri Andropov and are just being carried forward by Gorbachev, his willing protégé.
Gorbachev's call for stepped-up production in the factories and in agriculture was well received by the communist parties of the East bloc satellites. But most of them have completely ignored the demands for action against alcoholism, corruption, and sloppiness in the workplace - major problems in the Soviet Union, where the political bureaucracy is strangling the economy and driving people to drink their problems away. These social ills are not major problems in Eastern Europe, and programs to deal with them cannot be forced on the people there as the KGB is now doing with great gusto in the Soviet Union. There are more people
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