Posted on 01/19/2003 5:09:33 PM PST by TheMilkMan
Confusion and euphoria about changes in the Soviet Union have given birth to many misconceptions and fallacies about Gorbachev and 'perestroika'. Even if bankrupt Western methods of analysis cannot be held responsible for all these fallacies, they still fail to provide serious correctives to them.
THE FIRST FALLACY: The origin of 'perestroika'
This is the belief that 'perestroika' was a consequence of President Regan's military pressure on the USSR and the potency of the American capitalist example. Believers in this fallacy, who insist that the West 'won the Cold War', do not suspect that 'perestroika' and its timing are the product of long-range strategy, planning and long-term preparation. [In Sun Tzu's terms, they have become arrogant].
THE SECOND FALLACY: The domestic character of perestroika
This is the belief that 'perestroika' is a purely domestic attempt to correct repressive practices, to revitalize the flagging Soviet economy and to adapt the Soviet Union to the necessities and norms of the modern world. Believer do not suspect the Soviet intent to expand 'perestroika' beyond the borders of the Communist world and to achieve the world victory of Communism through 'restructuring'.
THE THIRD FALLACY: Western-style democracy in the Soviet Union
Believers think that Gorbachev is trying to introduce Western-style democracy. They do not realize that he is extending 'Communist democracy' - that is to say, a new more mature phase of socialism in which only the appearance of Western-style democracy is created and maintained.
THE FOURTH FALLACY: The decline of ideology
Believers think ideology is dying or already dead and that Gorbachev has abandoned the class struggle and taken the 'capitalist road'. They do not realize that perestroika is an expression of ideological strategy and a practical means of reviving ideology. It is not the abandonment of class struggle but a finesse to secure the defeat of capitalist democracies by the use of capitalist weapons.
The class struggle will yet have its bloody feasts.
The Western elite believe they are helping the cause of democracy. In fact they are financing their own demise and digging their own graves. The tragedy is that they will probably not see it until it is too late.
THE FIFTH FALLACY: The ideological victory of capitalism
Believers think that the West has won the war of ideologies. The irony is that, through 'perestroika', the Soviets have captured the strategic and political initiative on the global stage and have begun to carry out their long-nurtured designs against the West which threaten its survival.
THE SIXTH FALLACY: That the Cold War is over
Believes think that the Soviet Union is no longer dangerous and that the Cold War is over (21). They take the deadly flirtation for the romantic marriage. The West perceives the Cold War to be over, and Communism to be dead; but from the Soviet side the Cold War will accelerate and become more deadly, especially for the political right which is being targeted as never before with the intention that it should suffer total obliteration.
THE SEVENTH FALLACY: 'Perestroika' is a blessing for the West
Believers think that perestroika serves Western interests and that Gorbachev should be helped. In the United States, even a learned man like Jeremy J. Stone, President of the Federation of American Scientists, has fallen for this fallacy. In a recent article in The New York Times entitled 'Let's Do All We Can for Gorbachev', he called on Americans to help the Soviets because 'Mr Gorbachev is, from our viewpoint, the best General Secretary we could dream of seeing'.
Believers in Western Europe go even further, advocating a new Marshall Plan to restore the economies of the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. It was one thing to restore war-ravaged economies of Western Europe, West Germany and Japan, to shield them from Stalin's armies and to nurture their democratic systems. It is quite another to provide massive economic aid to the ideological enemies and gravediggers of Western democracies at the very time when they are launching and consolidating their strategic, political offensive against the West.
THE EIGHT FALLACY: Fear of 'perestroika's' failure and the fall of Gorbachev
Those who lionize Gorbachev express exaggerated concern for his survival and the success of 'perestroika', which they see as the best hope for the West. They fear that Gorbachev's departure would lead to a crackdown on 'reformers', rebellion and possible anarchy in the Soviet Union. They would do better to focus on solving their own problems and preserving their societies from Gorbachev's 'restructuring'.
THE NINTH FALLACY: A declining need for American military-political alliances
Believers think that the Soviet Union is becoming more peaceful, the Gorbachev can be trusted and the America's political and military alliances are superfluous. They need to be awakened to the dangers of the Soviet strategy of 'perestroika' which demand as never before the maintenance and strengthening of these alliances.
Major Golitsyn of the KGB defected in Dec. 1961, and proved a difficult character to debrief. But as early as 1963, he was warning of a long-term Soviet-planned mass deception (although not quite what he wrote in 1989): Golitsyn.
Do you know anything about the Social Democratic Party and what kind (if any) of influence they have in Russia and the CIS?
Can't argue with that.
America's Fifth Column ... watch Steve Emerson/PBS documentary JIHAD! In America
New Link: Download 8 Mb zip file here (60 minute video)
Thank you for your welcome and thanks for the link, lots of stuff to read on up.
What I have noticed thus far, is a couple of posts where FReepers struwwelpeter and WOSG state that Perestroika was a 'bandage' to save Communism and the USSR. Is that not what Golitsyn suggested in this article from March of 1989? Does this show Golitsyn was correct in that aspect and if so, what does that say of his other analysis?
Gorby was an unreconstructed (neperestroen) communist, his plan (actually his mentor Andropov's plan) was to try and breath some life back into a decaying Soviet Union. Despite all the CIA projections of Soviet military and industrial might, the Central Committee members knew they were circling the drain. Reagan and Thatcher embraced perestroyka only so far as it would let the Pandora of freedom out of her box.
Sort of like both Bushes' approach to China.
Boris Yeltsin was an opportunist who, like Putin, was in several right places at the right times. He was the governor/mayor of the Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg) district and ordered the excavation and release of the Romanov family's remains. This got him noticed, slid him into the "President of Russia" position, a ceremonial post in the Soviet Union. Gorby fell during the hard-line commie putsch - soft-line Gorby hurt some feelings with "Glasnost" (open critique of corrupt officials) and by pulling out of Afganistan.
Yeltsin seized this opportunity, jumped on a tank with an uncommitted army unit and declared the Soviet Union dead. The other army units would not fire on their brethren, and by default only Russia remained.
Yeltsin stood for election, and through Chicago-style chicanery was elected and re-elected. I could spend megabytes of space describing the Byzantine relationships between his family members and the oligarchs, but suffice to say Moscow looked a lot like Cook County Illinois is those days. Everything in Russia that could be stolen, was. A billion US dollars left Sheremetevo for Geneva every day. When Duma deputies tried their own putsch, Yeltsin's tanks opened fire and burned the parliament.
But Yeltsin filled an important position - he gave a very sick Russia some bedrest, gave the people a chance to get used to some ideas besides Marks-Engels-Lenin, and the first taste of social and economic freedom in their entire history.
Putin is a cipher. He is aesthetic, with a taste for martial arts, Vysotskiy, and eschews alcohol. He may seems less corrupt, but his history in pre-Yakovlev Petersburg reads otherwise.
As president, Putin went after a few oligarchs and reopened the Chechnyan question that Yeltsin swept under the rug, but IMO he is not firmly intrenched. I see that he still bows now and then to Russia's traditional troyka of king-makers: the nobility (aka communist party, oligarchs, monopolists, gangsters, etc), the general staff, & the secret police. Russia acts as if she had a monolithic nation and foreign policy, but foreign policy is but a game for a politician to play to enhance his domestic standing. Whatever policy keeps the daggers in their sheaths is what a Russian leader uses. If LUKoil stands to lose tons of money in Iraq, or army egos are suffering because Russia is selling out its formerly very close friends in Iraq, Putin will toss them a bone. Probably one that American tax-payers bought.
Putin's reign will probably be as long as Yeltsin's, but the politics will be more like NYC than Chicago. FWIW.
Hence these 'fallacies' are, in my humble opinion, not fallacies but facts. The USSR is basically dead and buried, and it had been dead for quite some time ....it just had not realized it (just like a cockroach that gets its head chopped off yet remains alive for over a week). The system espoused by the Soviets just could not work, and it was essentially a matter of time before the whole system imploded under its own weight.
And do not get me wrong ....i am not saying the Soviets were no threat. Actually according to most delvings into the matter before Reagan took office the Soviets had a substantial military edge over the US. Some even say the US troops in Germany would have been overwhelmed by a Soviet thrust before they could do anything (i guess that is why nukes can be a good thing since it can make the other side think twice or thrice).
However when Reagan came in he basically shocked the Soviets into overspending! Whether it was through Reagan implementing such stuff as Starwars that made the Soviets shovel state funds into missile counter-measures .....or when the latest US hunter-killer submarines started coming out that were just deathly quiet (eg the LA class) and could shadow Soviet boomers (nuclear ballistic-missile subs) from the moment they left the port, and yet the Soviets were not able to reciprocate since the US subs were just too darn stealthy .....or even the lesser known but still important (when it comes to draining the coffers of Soviet money) case of the Buran! The Buran was the Soviet answer to the NASA Space Shuttle (it looks exactly like the Shuttle apart from instead of having a US flag it has the CCCP markings .....and as an aside the Soviets copied a lot of Western designs ranging from the Tu-144 which is a Concorde copy to even IR AAM designs .....one case that i found particularly interesting was when during the 60s some KGB agents managed to steal a SideWinder, in the 60s that was a big steal, and cut it into little pieces and send it to Moscow ....and the darn customs agents never wondered what the heck the cylinders sticking out were?)
Anyways back to the main point! Once Reagan came on line the USSR discovered that it could no longer match spending power with the US. After all the US was the largest capitalist nation in history, and the USSR was a floundering central economy! It was just a matter of time ....and when you add the Soviets trying to match submarine tech (i managed to retrieve a report that listed that particular area as one of the major areas that bled Soviet money as they tried to paly catch-up) and even the Buran (not as major as the Sub faux pas, but it dried up virtually all the money of the Soviet space program, just when Reagan's Star Wars was being yapped about and scarying every Communist general East of the GreenWich Meridian LOL).
Now Gorbachev implements Perestroika but by then it was just too darn late. End result: No more Soviet Union!
However today Russia has a great chance to re-invent itself, and it is doing so. In another 10 years the mention of the word 'Russia' may once again have a major clout and reverberence around the globe! Russia's economy is one of the fastest growing in the globe, and in most years since 1993 it has been the fastest. Even with the Mafiya (Russian Mafia) and the Oligarchs (like the behemoth Oneximbank) and their Semibankirschina (rule of 7 bankers where nepotism rules) the Russian economy has been booming! Even though the perception by most is that it is cash strapped it is actually growing quite fast ....and much better than the Zastoi (stagnation) of the Soviet era. And when it comes to the military there have been changes meant to make it leaner and more efficient. Most of the pictures of rotting rusting ships posted on FR are just of the obsolete ships being retired and moth-balled from the Black-Sea fleet! If you check you can notice that the Russians are actually churning otu new designs ranging from a new boomer sub to an advanced concept guided-missile hovercraft corvette (armed witht he equally new Yakhont missiles that have no analog in the world). However pics of such stuff never pop up here ....just the rusted shells of discrepit ex-Soviet ships.
However the important thing is that Russia is set to become one of the US's greates allies in the future. The whole Cold War 'I am gonna nuke ya if ya nuke me' era is dead and gone! Russia's best bet is to stick close to the US (although expect some occasional loggerheads over some stuff ....but nothing serious). And the US has a lot to gain from Russia due to things like its oil reserves and the fact that a strong Russia is a great deterrent to China if Beijing smokes too much Opium and decides to act foolishly!
And talking of China ....instead of wondering about Soviet stratagems that will never be people should be looking at China!
China will be the greatest threat to the US this century, both militarilly and economically. And while China is not yet a direct threat to the US (right now if they tried anything fishy we could still manage to nuke the heck out of them, and then have sufficient nukes left to nuke them all over again several dozen times) the main Chinese advantage is the way they have been stealing (or been given) US industry and secrets, and also their long-term patience (meaning they can wait until a Clintonesque president is elected and implements stupid policies). The Chinese basically have very protracted time-frames .....some ranging in half-centuries. With good POTUS' like GW this inherent danger is negated ....however inevitably a president like Clinton will be elected who seems more willing to help the Chinese that Americans, and hence the Chinese will get some extra 'aid' (maybe instead of nuclear warhead tech maybe this time they might get a next-generation US submarine).
Whooo ....let me stop. Basically this whole Soviet-stratagem thing is just a fallacy. The USSR is dead and gone, and Russia will be an ally not an adversary.
Now China on the other hand .....
Ah, Buran. Last I saw it, it was languishing in "Park Kultury" (aka Gorkiy Park).
I agree that Russia will probably never be an enemy again. We always had a lot in common with them - vast space-faring superpowers, with very similar pop cultures. I believe, however, that Russia will continue to assert herself independently - if only to prove that she is not Uncle Sam's mistress.
From PRAVDA.RU:
12:49 2001-11-23
MIKHAIL GORBACHEV CONFIRMS HIS INVOLVEMENT IN UNIFICATION OF RUSSIA'S SOCIAL DEMOCRATS
The Russian United Social Democratic Party (ROSDP) will take part in the unification process of Russia's social democrats, Mikhail Gorbachev, the party's leader and first president of the USSR, said at the third party congress, on Friday. Mr. Gorbachev confirmed ROSDP's participation in the unification congress, which is scheduled to take place in Moscow this Saturday. Mr. Gorbachev stressed that the Russian Party of Social Democrats headed by the governor of the Samara Region, Konstantin Titov, Socialist Party of Russia, Union of Realists, and Spiritual Heritage Movement are also involved in the unification process.
"According to preliminary estimates, the new party will comprise 30,000 people," Mr. Gorbachev emphasized. He added that representatives of social and social-democratic parties from a number of European countries, which are members of the Socialist Internationale, had been invited to come to the upcoming unification congress.
"...Papich learned the details of what Golitsyn called the Soviets' "long-range plan."
Greatly simplified, this plan called for massive political warfare, buttressed by secret intelligence deceptions. At the 20th Communist World Congress, in 1959, the USA had been designated the Main Enemy, but at the same time it had been decided to try a new approach. There was to be a thaw in relations, and a return to Leninist deceptions like the Trust and the New Economic Program (NEP), which had once convinced the U.S. that the Soviets were reforming. The KGB was to be reorganized to project an image of disunity and weakness in the communist world. By playing up false splits between communist nations, the Soviets would hope to divide and confuse the West, ultimately weakening it. Over the short term, the objective was economic aid to the communist world; over the long term, the objective was to end the Cold War, which would cause the U.S. to disarm."
Well you are right. . . and for us to imagine that Russians just turned on a dime to a Capitalist mentality and philosophy would surely be a mistake. . .and no question they can bite the hand that feeds them and have; but do not see that we have a choice.
That money, along with our 'venture Capitalism' in Russia can be a seeding of sorts; that may be the best we can do. The alternatives are not very attractive either. Do think, we should be able to 'follow the money' more carefully once it leaves the 'hands of America' however.
Also demonstrates why it is so important to have a government at home that appreciates the freedom of a Capitalistic philosophy and the moral ground to support it; vs an amoral 'left-wing White House' that gives lip service but in fact favors the anti-individual, anti-business Marxist model of economics and where our money and efforts simply become more 'bad seeds', simply thrown onto fertile, familiar ground.
Real elections and no Politburo vs. Sham elections by the Politburo. Capitalism (sort-of) vs. five-year plans.
Long time no see (or read in this case). Hope you are fine and alright.
Great post by the way. Also are any of the papers you wrote on the web?
Also where do you see Russia 20 years from now (I would also appreciate your opinions on that one Struwwelpeter)?
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