On my FB feed I came across an article that tries to put together a down-to-the-bottom story of how communism was actually overthrown in the USSR from within and,together with it, the whole world socialist system, the lynchpin of which was the USSR.
Based on interviews with insider veterans, this article argues that 
the overthrow of the communist regime in the USSR originated or was 
mainly harbored within the KGB and that's the phase of the transition 
already started at least under Andropov already. The first off-shore, 
shell companies were found back in 1981, 1984. The early form of the 
plan (one of its key teams was led by Chubais) foresaw a Pinochet-like 
dictatorship for the transition (counter-revolution). From the very
 beginning, it was neo-liberalism (in its Russian form) which was 
adopted the model to pursue to the exclusion of all the other 
alternatives, including the "Swedish model," which for the KGB was for 
some reason not interesting (too sensible?). 
Andropov's original 
template was also strictly oriented against the communist party as an 
organization. The KGB believed that the party outlived itself. Thus to 
change the system, the original expectation was that the communist party
 would be banned and dissolved and, in case the trade union would 
resist, they too would be abolished. 
The only thing, which, in the article, indicates any of the possible 
reasons of why the KGB became attached to neo-liberalism within the 
communist system is that, as people with exclusive access to Western 
ideas and schools at that time, they came to believe that ne-liberalism 
was the most modern of available systems and that all the others were in
 that regard outdated.
In the face of the tremendous scope of the
 task, in the end, the KGB decided to strike a compromise with the other
 factions of the elites or nomeklatura provided that they agreed to 
embrace the new liberal order.
The
 August Coup was for most part a phony, orchestrated coup, which allowed
 Gorbachev to disband the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which was
 the main goal. The 1993 shelling of the parliament was forcible 
suppression of resistance to the regime change
 from elected deputies (the article also says as much on this). The 
article argues that the main (but not sole) force for the regime change 
was, indeed, in the KGB.
The August (largely phony) "coup" allowed Gorbi and the new liberal ex-communists (still communists formally though) to dissolve the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which had nothing to do with the coup anyway. But some reason was needed. Had the Communist Party not been outlawed, the dissolution of the USSR in the next few months might have a tiny bit harder, though, since the party was much of a huge corpse anyway. Not much. But precaution needed to be taken.
After the story moves close to our more recent time, the article also says: "Поэтому и фамилия у него все-таки Путин. Он, я думаю, обеспечил 
максимальный уровень западничества, на который была согласна силовая 
элита, которая, в свою очередь, обеспечивает проведение модернизации." The article thus argues here that Putin's goal was to achieve maxim possible Westernization of Russia, which the new post- and anti-communist elite built around the KGB, which turned to oligarchy, would be able to stomach and support.
The
 article says that by 2000 the only two real candidates for Russian 
president were two KGB officers--Primakov and Putin. Primakov became 
Punti's mentor. 
 If
one wants to go back further, you can start with Stalin who effectively 
ossified the party and changed it into a dead order-executing machine. 
However, when we talk of how the USSR and its communism were destroyed 
in the 1980s, 1990s, then the story above is directly relevant.
Gorbachev was no dupe. Only those who believed him were.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment