Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 11 – Mikhail Gorbachev’s
current call for the “perestroika” of the international system is just as much a
“cynical political scam” as was his original one, something that led many to
conclude he wanted something more than just a more effective form of “authoritarian
modernization,” according to Yevgeny Ikhlov.
With the passage of time and given
what has happened in Russia over the last 15 years, Gorbachev’s reign has been “unusually
romanticized” by those who prefer not to notice that “the essence of perestroika
was the preservation of monopoly power of the communist nomenklatura while
seriously broadening the opportunities for consumption for the elite and
sub-elites.”
And many still are inclined to
forget that the Soviet president did so in order to “enter into the world democratic
establishment and re-legitimate his power through a certain ideological
maneuver” while avoiding “the danger of revenge from the neo-Stalinist ‘fundamentalist’
win in communist parties (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=54B2420D9E19B).
Whatever democracy Russians received
in August 1991 was the result not of Gorbachev’s plans but rather of “the
democratic revolution which began two and a half years earlier.” This was the
recapitulation of what happened in 1905 when civil society was legalized in the
Russian Empire “not because of Witte’s reforms but the October political
strike.”
Gorbachev’s
much-ballyhooed market reforms, Ikhlov argues, simply “gave the opportunity to
directors and minister to privatize profit while leaving the state with the
costs.” And his political reforms at bottom represented a chance for people to “freely
choose between the first and second secretaries of the oblast party committees.”
The place where
Gorbachev’s perestroika was successful – as Andrey Amalrik anticipated in his
writings – was in the non-European republics of the USSR where the regimes were
converted from totalitarian to “market-totalitarian” combined with “a
geopolitical and foreign economic re-orientation toward the West.”
Ikhlov points out
that there have been many examples of liberal and democratic reforms in “despotic
non-market societies,” but trying to do what Gorbachev did, “replacing the
decorations while preserving the totalitarian and non-market essence” of the
state was “a scam” and one destined to fail.
What Gorbachev was trying to do, the Moscow commentator
says, was equivalent to what would have been the case if Mussolini had been
replaced by “’the young and progressive’” Ciano who would then “begin to speak
about excesses in foreign and domestic policy and invoke the words of Gramschi
at meetings and erect a statue of him in the Grand Fascist Council.
As far as Russia
is concerned, Ikhlov says, “even Stolypin’s reforms were more radical than
perestroika to the extent that they created in the country a new social
category – a large class of free land owners.”
Examined “outside
of the cascade of democratic and national-democratic revolutions in the republics
of the USSR and in Eastern Europe,” he continues, “perestroika was only and
exclusively the change of political and ideological decorations significantly
less broad in comparison with those which existed than were even the those of
Khrushchev’s thaw.”
This should have
been clear at the time, but it wasn’t.
In October 1987, Boris Yeltsin began to speak out about what he called babbling
about perestroika. He was immediately attacked by both conservative and
progressive wings of Gorbachev supporters because Yeltsin “did not understand”
that this babbling was “not the profanation of perestroika but its essence.”
Now, Gorbachev is doing the same thing in foreign affairs,
Ikhlov says. “On what basis should a totalitarian Soviet empire have a voice in
the decisions of democratic nations, who defeated communism, on global
issues? On what basis should the Putin ‘federation’
… an aggressor country have the right to define the principles of a new world
order?
There
is of course one way in which Gorbachev is “in principle correct,” Ikhlov
concludes. “Only such cynical hypocrisy
could deserve to be called ‘the perestroika of international relations.”
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