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How Eastern Europe Looks at Glasnost
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# : |
12634 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1987 |
4,431 Words |
| Author
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Peter Michielsen Peter Michielsen is a journalist for NRC Handelsblad, a
newspaper published in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. |
The Soviet Union is trying to reform. Under the term perestroika (restructuring), attempts are being made by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to get some movement in the rusty machine - politically, economically, and culturally. The process has until now been largely confined to the verbal field. Few practical breakthroughs have been reached, and no guarantees for success exist. Thousands of party and state functionaries have been purged but millions have not.
Glasnost (openness) is one of the most striking features of the new course. An average but attentive Soviet citizen is surprised day after day by impossibilities that have become possible: Newspapers write about problems in general; blundering bureaucrats, apparatchiks and managers; failures to carry out rational policies; even the Stalinist past. Disasters are reported; previously taboo subjects like the number of psychiatric patients, crime, prostitution, minority problems, corruption, and mismanagement are discussed; controversial books appear; films are shown after years on dusty shelves. Openness alone, of course, achieves no practical solutions - though it can introduce and facilitate them. But the process is breathtaking in itself.
The Eastern European states are following this process with special attention. After all, changes in Moscow never leave the small partners untouched. From Warsaw to Sofia, from East Berlin to Bucharest, whenever the wind from Moscow changes, the small socialist countries have to follow suit. This dogma may have lost some of its meaning because economic pressure from Moscow has been growing: The economically stagnating USSR needs the assistance of its allies - their technological help, manpower, consumer goods, and financial investments. And
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