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Glasnost: Genuine or Illusory?
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12632 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1987 |
2,317 Words |
| Author
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Vladimir Bukovsky Vladimir Bukovsky, now president of Resistance International,
spent 12 years in Soviet prisons and psychiatric hospitals
before being released and sent to the West in 1976. |
How long will the so-called changes of Mikhail Gorbachev continue? Policies instituted now might be irreversible if they lasted for five years.
Glasnost represents a big advantage to the Soviet leaders. In allowing Andrei Sakharov to speak, Gorbachev appears to be a liberator. But if Sakharov is still speaking freely five years from now, he would create a tremendous problem for the Soviets. A network of contacts and connections would have organized around him, as happened in the 1960s and 1970s when his human rights campaign started. A network around Sakharov would be an alternative structure, something the Soviet Union would not tolerate.
The Soviet system is so absolutely unmovable and unchangeable that the smallest deviation from it is considered radical and revolutionary. For instance, if Gorbachev liberalizes the election rules within the Communist Party, the people of the Soviet Union will have something in common with the black people in South Africa, with 7 percent of the Soviet population (Communist Party members) voting for themselves. But if that liberalization continued for more than five or 10 years, it could lead to a split in the ruling party.
The current campaign is not calculated to continue very long, and the Soviet rulers know it. Glasnost is simply a short and very intensive effort to get through the current crisis.
Kremlinologists in the West are confused about how to define this new Soviet leadership. Some experts call them Stalinists. Others tag them liberal and pragmatic. Frankly, I don't see much of a contradiction in
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