Posted on 05/29/2006 8:15:23 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
All empires have come to an end sooner or later, usually as the result of long decay culminating in military defeat. The decline and fall of the Roman Empire took at least two centuries; even after its collapse, its successor state in the East, Byzantium, survived for another thousand years. The tsarist empire lasted for more than four and a half centuries; its agony, accompanied by a succession of military debacles and the emergence of an aggressive revolutionary movement, spanned half a century. But the Soviet Union disintegrated at the seeming peak of its world influence, without a shot being fired, almost instantaneously.
No wonder, therefore, that the causes of this occurrence have intrigued many minds, the more so that hardly anyone had foreseen it; the consensus of expert opinion held that the Soviet Union was here to stay, a stable regime capable of coping with any challenge. This perception provided the theoretical underpinning of the policy of détente; like it or not, we were told, we must accommodate ourselves as best we could to the existence of the USSR and its bloc.
Before proceeding to discuss the various explanations of the Soviet collapse, a few words need to be said about the problem of historical "causes." Probably no issue is harder for the historian to deal with because causes are disparate: they may be incidental, they may be substantive, or they may be long term; in any case, in each humans play a progressively diminishing role.
Surveying the secondary literature on the fall of the Soviet Union, one finds each author focusing on a particular cause as decisive for the outcome: some stress incidental factors, others substantive ones, and others yet systemic ones, embedded in the nature of the Soviet regime. As we will see below, a variety of causes contributed to the eventual collapse. Ultimately, though, the Soviet Union collapsed because it was inherently weak, unstable, and fatally susceptible to shocksboth internal and externalthat a healthy regime is able to withstand.
THE PEBBLES ON WHICH THE SOVIET UNION STUMBLED
Among the incidental factors, three stand out: Afghanistan, Chernobyl, and Mikhail Gorbachev.
One observer argues that the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan was a major cause of the unions collapse because it undermined public support for aggressive foreign policies, inhibiting Moscow from resorting to military force to crush the so-called counterrevolution in Poland, which facilitated the unraveling of its East European empire.
The explosion of a nuclear reactor at Chernobyl in April 1986 undermined the authority of the government not so much because it revealed the inadequate safety of Soviet reactors but because the government, even though committed to glasnost, lied about it. It took Pravda ten days to report the disaster, and then it did so only because it could no longer prevaricatethe disaster had become widely known from foreign broadcasts. That delay cost many lives because it slowed down evacuation efforts and thus brought discredit on the government.
The intervention in Afghanistan and the Chernobyl incident are excellent examples of incidental causesthe kind that can trigger a chain of catastrophic events but only if the body politic is already unwell. Both could most likely have been checked had the Soviet Union been as sound as the majority of experts claimed it was. After all, the far more costly and contentious U.S. intervention in Vietnam did not bring down the U.S. government or even inflict lasting damage on it.
A third example of an incidental cause is the personality of Mikhail Gorbachev. Chosen to head the party and the state after a succession of decrepit leaders, he was expected to infuse fresh blood into an anemic regime without changing its essential features. But Gorbachev turned out to be a weak, vacillating politician, unable to decide between progress and stability. In the end, against his own wishes, he eviscerated the system that still had some life left in it.
MAJOR CAUSES
When we turn to the next more-profound level of causation, we confront factors that, although not immune to manipulation, were more difficult to cope with because they were either embedded in the system or lay outside the rulers control. Resolving them, where possible, could only have been accomplished by tampering with the system, which carried obvious risks. Among these, three stand out: economic stagnation, the aspirations of the national minorities, and intellectual dissent.
That the Soviet economy in the 1980s was in deep trouble was a matter of common knowledge. The CIA forecast virtually zero growth, and even within the Soviet Union voices were heard calling for major changes in the way the economy was run. A heavy and unanticipated blow was the sudden drop in the price of petroleum, the countrys leading export commodity and the prime earner of hard currency; the decline in earnings from this source forced Moscow to resort to heavy borrowing abroad. Attempts to liberalize and rationalize the way the economy operated encountered staunch resistance from the bureaucracy, whose livelihood depended on its perquisites. The bureaucracys defiance, passive and active, impelled Gorbachev to seek popular support by introducing representative institutions. This effectively destroyed the partys monopoly on political powerthe essential feature of the regime instituted by Leninand soon brought the whole edifice down.
Forged during and immediately after the civil war, the Soviet Union was an empire in the fullest sense of the word, even if, in contrast to European empires whose colonies lay overseas, its territory was contiguous to the metropolis. After World War II the USSR expanded to include most of Eastern Europe. In contrast to Western empires, which subjected exclusively non-Europeans to colonial rule, the Russian empire also subjugated European nations. In an age when all other empires had been broken up, either voluntarily or by force, the Russian empire could not last; history was not likely to make it a unique exception to the worldwide process of decolonization.
But the Soviet authorities preferred to ignore this reality, pretending that they were not an empire but another "melting pot" in which diverse ethnic groups dissolved their ethnic identity in a common "Soviet" nationality. Of course, this was fiction; unlike the United States, whose population consisted overwhelmingly of immigrants, the Soviet Unions inhabitants occupied their historic homelands. Letting go of the empire was exceedingly difficult for the Russians because their nation-state had grown up concurrently with the empire to the point where the two had become indistinguishable. Furthermore, they had traditionally compensated for their poverty and backwardness with the proud awareness that they had the largest state in the world.
So they did nothing and things soon got out of hand. The instant the politicians of the non-Russian republics sensed the center wobbling, they began to clamor for national rights. Georgia, Lithuania, and Estonia declared their independence in March 1991; Latvia, in May; Russia, Uzbekistan, and Moldova, in June. Ukraine, the largest and most populous of the non-Russian republics, and Belorussia declared themselves sovereign states in July 1991, a decision that was ratified on December 1 by more than 90 percent of Ukraines population. In a desperate attempt to preserve the union, Gorbachev drafted a new constitutional charter that would have maintained the substance of the old imperial arrangement while making some formal concessions to the subject nations, but he was overtaken by events. The formal dissolution of the USSR took place in December 1991 as a result of an agreement among the heads of state of Russia, Belorussia, and Ukraine. Thus in the literal sense the collapse of the Soviet Union was directly caused by the nationalities.
But then where in the hierarchy of causes are we to place intellectual dissent? Lenin well understood the need for securing full control of the media; the very first act of the dictatorship that he set up on October 26, 1917, asserted a monopoly of the Communist Party on the press. His government was as yet too weak to enforce this measure, a throwback to the reign of Nicholas I, but within a few years communist control of the printed word was complete. My impression, gained on many trips to the USSR from 1957 onward, was that the Soviet authorities did not much care what their subjects thought; their concern was exclusively with what they said. They strove to create a spurious unanimity of opinion in order to convey the sense that dissent from the official line was an aberration, which had the effect of driving independent thought inward, creating a condition akin to intellectual schizophrenia. The regime never came close to enforcing unanimity of opinion, but it was eminently successful in eliminating any public expressions of dissent from the officially sanctioned "line."
Immediately after Stalins death, when his successors began to loosen the bonds of censorship, information about the country and the world at large began to seep in, first in a trickle, then in a stream, and finally in a torrent. Why they relaxed the censorship is not clear, but it must be assumed they thought they could do so without endangering their authority. For a while this was true. But unexpectedly in the 1960s independent dissident voices emerged that confronted the regime head on. In the 1970s, following the signing of the Helsinki accords, in which the USSR committed itself to tolerating a certain amount of freedom in exchange for foreign guarantees of its European empire, these voices became bolder. Amplified by foreign broadcasts that, despite intense jamming, managed to get through, those dissident voices broke the spell. With each passing year, fewer Soviet citizens were afraid to speak out. By the late 1980s, censorship had broken down altogether and a remarkably diffuse range of opinion burst into the open. Here then we have three more causes of the Soviet Unions collapse, each contributing its share, although it would be futile to try to determine which carried greater weight.
Last but not least among these factors must be mentioned the policy of containment pursued by the United States jointly with its allies from 1947 until the Soviet regimes end. It was only partly successful. With the conquest of China by the Communists in 1949, the communist empire broke out of its Soviet enclave. Subsequently, pro-Soviet regimes, subsidized and propped up by Moscow, sprang up in other parts of Asia, in Africa, and in Latin America. Still, the determination of the Western powers, especially the United States, to thwart this expansion cost Moscow dearly. The large sums spent on financing proxy regimes made a serious dent in the Soviet budget, strained as it already was, while the break with China cast doubts on the claims of communist unity and the unstoppable advance of the communist cause.
A MISGUIDED UTOPIA
On reflection, however, the decisive catalystthe cause of causes, the one that ensured that the Soviet regime would fall sooner or later, whether slowly and gradually or suddenly, no matter what it did and no matter what was done to itappears to have been the utopian nature of its objectives.
When we use the adjective utopian we mean something that "is too good to be true," in the words of the dictionary, something "impossibly ideal." But, as a matter of fact, virtually all utopias depict an environment of dreary coercion in which the citizens live under unrelenting control and face dire punishment for disobedience.
Why utopias are coercive presents no mystery. Their common striving is to dissolve individual human beings in the community in order to achieve perfect equality. Experience indicates that it is impossible to attain such a condition except by coercion and even then for a limited time only. The problem with utopian schemes is that they presume to determine what people should want rather than respond to what they actually do want. And since, beyond basic survival of themselves and their families, peoples wants vary enormously, force must be applied to have them want the same. This is why utopian communities have always failed and why such communities imposed from above, rather than formed voluntarily, are even more liable to failure.
The experiment at utopia launched in Russia in October 1917 was the grandest, most audacious attempt in human history completely to refashion society and individuals, to create a "new man," and in the process to subvert virtually the entire heritage of human history. The question arises: Why was this attempt made and why, of all places, in Russia?
Liberal thought placed its reliance on legislation and instruction, that is, on nonviolent means of transforming human personalities and behavior. Socialism was prone to rely on violence because it assumed that the decisive factor in history was property relations and that no permanent changes could be effected without the abolition of private property in the means of production. This required coercion since the owners would not willingly give up their belongings. In the West, where the traditions of legality and property were strong, socialism over time tended to lose its revolutionary character and turn into evolutionary social-democracy.
It was different in Russia and other non-Western countries where these traditions were missing or weakly developed. In Russia socialism acquired at once a coercive character, blending with the legacy of autocratic rule and hostility to property. No European socialist would have defined the "proletarian dictatorship" as did Lenin to mean "nothing else than power that is limited by nothing, by no laws, that is restrained by absolutely no rules, that rests directly on coercion." There were no bounds to the Bolsheviks ambition because there was no culture of moderation in Russia and no society able to resist effectively their plans to remake the country from top to bottom.
Lenin was aware that the violence that he intended to apply to fundamentally alter human nature had its limits. In a secret communication to the Politburo written in March 1922 in which he ordered mass executions of Orthodox clergymen, he noted:
One wise writer [Machiavelli] on matters of statecraft rightly said that if it is necessary to resort to certain brutalities, they must be carried out in the most energetic fashion and in the briefest possible time because the masses will not tolerate the prolonged application of brutality.
Unfortunately for him and his successors, the application of brutalityin other words, terrornever succeeded in creating the new man or the new society that was its avowed aim. Terror, therefore, became a regular component of the government apparatus, creating a condition of permanent tension between state and society.
In their pursuit of utopia, the Communists violated everything we know from anthropology that human beings, even in the most primitive circumstances, desire and practice. They virtually outlawed religion, property, and free speech, which are common to all societies, regardless of their level of civilization. Any regime that deliberately sets out to repress these institutions is inherently unstable and therefore prone to be fatally affected by adverse developments, whether of an incidental or substantive nature, developments that normal societies readily absorb.
That's the problem the left has - they don't want to give Reagan and his team any credit for forcing the Soviet Union into a race it could not win and would eventually lead to its demise. They dismissed Reagan as a mad cowboy and ignored his genius as a leader and planner. Reagan spelled everything out to them in the 60s in that famous speech, but none of them listened!
"But Putinistas insist that it was Russians that overthrew the non-Russian controlled Soviet Union and that Gorbachev dimantled the Soviet Union because he was the first Russian to be its leader."
Putinistas? Rubbish label.
Nobody I know has declared the "Russians" overthrew the non-Russian controlled Soviet Union. The Russians, Ukrainians, Balts, Georgians, etc., threw out the SOVIETS. Until you learn the difference you'll never fully understand the problem.
This article credited the drop in oil prices as having great effect in the collapse but failed to mention that it was Reagan who convinced the Saudis to pump more oil and thus decrease the price.
"Soviet Union was state created as result of Civil war 1917-22 between Russian nationalistic White Movement and international commie forces. Latter won and created Soviet Union. They named in differently of Russia with deep sense. They knew who was thier mortal eebnmy dduring Civil war so to emphasized thier victory and that thier new sate is NOT former Russia they remaned it. Soviet Union was run by Lenin, Stalin, Khruschev, Brezhnev and at the end - Gorbachev. The last one was ONLY russian in charge of Soviet Union. He ended it." - 94 posted on 03/29/2006 2:32:41 PM CST by RusIvan
More:
"Russians are not Soviets. And mudjahadeens didn't drove Soviets broke. They accually lost 1.5 mlns against soviet 15000 casualties. 100:1. Soviet Union failed because of Gorby the first russian national in charge of Soviet Union. - 36 posted on 02/09/2006 3:05:33 AM CST by RusIvan
"If not Gorby and ethnic russians then USSR would stand there today as ever. Look on China. Still stands there even became stronger. But USSR was much stronger then China in 1991. So "fairy tale" about "Reagan broke Soviet Union" isn't withstand facts. But I agree it is great propaganda story." - 16 posted on 01/17/2006 1:55:08 AM CST by RusIvan
Their elitism and snobbery extends to those who actually had to live in the USSR and don't care for Gorby but love Reagan--"We know better than you because EVERYONE knows Reagan was the anti-Christ and was going to bring World War III to us! Good thing Gorby INTENTIONALLY screwed up the Soviet Union before Ronnie Raygun could get his finger on the button!"
Watching them try to prove that increasing the military budget somehow was not a factor in the collapse, while Gorby's attempts to SAVE the system were the true, INTENTIONAL key to the fall, is pretty amusing.
You know TGJ you're a pretty ignorant man - "wannabe Russians" Let me tell you again my background - U.S. military 23 year vet trained Russian specialist. Think about that carefully before you, a person who REFUSED to serve their own country say someting assinine again. Not only did I serve my country, I picked a specialty that put me face-to-face with the Soviet threat. We won. You sat on the sidelines - now you try to disparage those who answered the call.
In reality, all you have is your "internet fantasy" and know nothing about what it actually takes to recognize a threat, face that threat and DEFEAT that threat. Now you post complete b.s. trying to lessen the achievements of a great man like Ronald Reagan. Disgusting.
True - Pipes and others like to play down Reagan's involvement. Unfortunately, I've become so used to it, I don't even notice it anymore. All I need is to hear die-hard old crusty commies yelling about Reagan and it confirms his victory. It's a shame that there are some on FR who fall lockstep into thought with those who want to discredit Reagan.
Despite your completely unwarranted slanders, I give full credit to Ronald Reagan for bringing about the collapse of the Soviet Union. I don't need to have "faith" that it happened because for me there never was any doubt. It is unfortunate that the Russians are quite ungrateful to America and Reagan for liberating them and have managed to totally squander any good will between our nations that came about at the end of the cold war. Even now that Communism has collapsed, Russia continues to support America's terrorist enemies all around the world.
Tell us more about how you are a more eminent scholar on Russian affairs than the likes of Richard Pipes and Robert Conquest.
Pipes or Conquest - first all, unlike Conquest, I was never a member of the Communist Party and I'm not in the employ of a Ukrainian nationalist organization (look it up).
Second of all, unlike both of them, I'm fluent in Russian and have worked in archives previously closed to them. I also don't need someone else to tell me "how the Russians think" because I can ask them myselves. Neither of those two men have also traveled as extensively as I have throughout the former Soviet Union. Therefore, while I would never claim to be as "Scholarly" as they are, I do have considerable more time in country among the "masses" and can tell you exactly what they're thinking and why. And as such, I know when these guys, or Ariel Cohen, for example, are incorrect in their assumptions.
Show me where Pipes correctly pointed out how Reagan's plan brought the Soviets to their knees? He doesn't.
Now, does that mean I frequently disagree with Pipes?? Nope - he called the end of the Soviet Union long before others did and he has a pretty good handle on what Russia's capabilities are today. For example:
"Despite the dangers posed by Russia's chronic identity crisis, Dr. Pipes expressed doubts that calls to reconstitute the empire would amount to anything more than rhetoric. He said the "post-colonial elites" of the newly independent states would make it impossible without all-out war ("Too many clerks have become ministers, and too many sergeants have become generals for the clock to be turned back," quipped the historian), adding that the present conflict in Chechnya proves Russia is incapable of managing one successfully."
Now, when I or GarySpFc, or x5452 post a viewpoint almost exactly the same as this you and your brethern call us "Putinistas" or "Kremlin lackies." Why? Because it contradicts your "the Soviet Union is just sleeping" and the "Russians are out to get us" bogeyman tinfoil theories.
A. Mikhail Gorbachev.
B. Jimmy Carter
C. Usama bin Laden
D. Ronald Reagan
And on that we have total agreement. BTW, OBL is WAY overrated in his role against the Soviets in Afghanistan. Carter is one of the worst, if not THE worst president we've ever had and surely the worst "ex-president" (althought Clinton still has time) we've ever had. Gorbachev tried to stem the flow and did nothing to help the collapse except to play right into our hands.
More from Pipes that I agree with - but based on some of your posts (and others) you might not agree with:
"While dubious about Russia's progress towards a genuinely open society, Dr. Pipes was certain it would not revert to the extremes of Stalinist totalitarianism. The reasons he gave for his relative aplomb: on the economic front, privatization had advanced too far; while on the political front, nobody has the stomach for a terror campaign of the scale necessary."
And what is your view of this?:
"Prompted from the audience, the former National Security Council advisor cautioned that an expansion of NATO at this point would be completely counterproductive and only feed Russian paranoia. He said he believes in Western political and economic engagement with Russia, coupled with insistent pressure to reveal and moderate any build-ups in military capability."
I too have no doubt that the nationalist elites of the former Soviet republics will stand in the way of any Russian revanchism. I'm proud that America stands firmly with those nations which broke free from Soviet tyranny, and against Russia's blackmail and intimidation of its former vassals.
Ha! Exactly the type of spin I would expect from you. I have a more realistic viewpoint of it - I "understand" why the Russians are doing it and think they can be countered in a different manner than we currently are. There is no need to get too cozy to the likes of Aliev and Nazarbaev. Sooner of later they will be out of power and we don't want to make the same mistakes Putin and co are making vis-a-vis Akimov.
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