Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 20 – Nikolay Leonov, a retired KGB lieutenant general who in 1991 was in
charge of that institution’s analytic administration, said that KGB officers
did not defend the Soviet Union during the August 1991 putsch because they knew
that the people of the country were against the regime.
There
are several reasons that the KGB did not come out in support of the Soviet
system, Leonov says. “Above all” it was because “we clearly understood the
attitude of society which rejected the existing political leadership and also
then-existing economic and political model of the state system” (versia.ru/v-avguste-91-go-po-moskve-xodili-60-tysyach-vooruzhyonnyx-chekistov).
Not to take these
attitudes into consideration, the former KGB general says, would have been
impermissible. Indeed, earlier in 1991, he says, he advised KGB officers in
Lithuania that they “must not fight with their own people” because “this would
be a crime.”
“We must be true to the Motherland and not to that
political circle which in this case is exercising leadership of the country.” In
other states, elections change governments because people change their minds.
In the case of the Soviet Union, the KGB knew that the people were no longer on
the side of the regime.
The
KGB of course had the capacity to act, but it chose not to, Leonov says. There
were 60,000 armed KGB personnel in Moscow alone, but they did not leave their
barracks or offices and on August 21, Leonov says, he ordered all the KGB
personnel there to turn in their weapons for safekeeping lest something go
wrong.
It
was very important, he continues, to send a clear message that he and the
others intended “to participate in the political struggle only via peaceful
means … Arms are not an argument in civilian arguments. For this, there exists
the media and political parties, for this, there exists a parliament. That is where
it is necessary to conduct a discussion.”
At
the same time, the general says, he and his officers were prepared to defend
the Lubyanka if the crowds had tried to storm it. That didn’t happen because
Boris Yeltsin calmed the crowd. Leonov adds that he and others protected
classified information against those, like Oleg Kalugin who later went into
emigration, who wanted to seize it.
Leonov
says he not only resisted their efforts but also destroyed the most sensitive
documents, continuing a policy he had promoted without success in the former
Warsaw Pact countries after 1989.
Obviously,
the former KGB general has an obvious interest in putting the best face
possible on the activities of the organs during the coup. But much that he says
rings true and helps to explain why the events in the Soviet and Russian
capital did not dissolve into violence. As such, they are worthy of note.
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