An Introduction To The Soviet Political System
An Introduction To The Soviet Political System
An Introduction To The Soviet Political System
1
An Introduction to the Soviet
Political System
It is safe to say that when Mikhail S. Gorbachev became General Secretary of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union in March 1985, no serious scholar antici-
pated the imminent collapse of communist rule in Eastern Europe, much less the
disintegration of the Soviet Union itself. Yet, in less than five years, the Soviet
empire was gone, and by the end of 1991, the CPSU and the USSR itself were
relegated to the dustbin of history.
1
Over the next two years, as Gorbachev initiated economic and political
reform under the slogans glasnost (openness), perestroika (restructuring), and
demokratizatsiya (democratization), Western observers predictably engaged in
debate over the likelihood those reforms would prove successful. These reforms
were Gorbachevs response to the years of stagnation, as both Russian and
Western experts referred to the decline in the Soviet economy that began in the
late 1970s. It was not just a stagnation of economic growth but also of ideas and
of the officials who clung to them. Change and innovation had become anath-
ema to every aspect of Soviet rule. Gorbachev, sensing a looming, systemic
crisis, initiated his reforms to reinvigorate what had become a stagnant system
through and through.
Some, who continued to see the totalitarian underpinnings of the system
Stalin created, predicted utter failure due to that systems basic inflexibility.
2
Any
attempt to upset the apple cart was doomed to failure, and Gorbachev would
suffer the same fateremoval from his postas the earlier reformer Khrushchev.
3
They did not, as a rule, forecast that these efforts would topple the party and the
regime itself. Rather, they anticipated an era of retrenchment internally and hos-
tility toward the West externally.
These were a distinct minority in the West, however. The vast majority of
experts on the Soviet Union were swept away by a general infatuation with the
idea of the reforms and with the leader himself, who projected an innovative,
82 roiirics i russia. a rtantr
dynamic, modern image. Gorbachevs image in the West, enhanced by media
and academic accounts alike, was of a brilliant renaissance man, a liberal akin to
the American Founding Fathers. He stood not just for peace with the West but
for real integration with the liberal, democratic, and capitalist world. Hard to
believe in retrospect, but this was the public perception of him and was reflected
in his receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.
4
Though widely scorned and even
hated at home at all ends of the political spectrum, he was beloved in the West.
I witnessed this disconnect personally in October 1990, when working as an
accredited Moscow correspondent for Crains Communications, a news and
media group specializing in business and trade publications. At a banquet in the
most exclusive hotel restaurant in Moscow designed to support the fledgling
advertising and public relations industry just emerging in Russia, I was seated
next to the companys matriarch, Gertrude Crain, then in her late seventies. On
the other side of me sat a twenty-something female Muscovite, an artist and
aspiring advertising designer, sporting a nose ring and short, spiked purple hair.
Gorbachev had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize earlier that day, and a posi-
tively ecstatic Mrs. Crain asked whether everyone in Russia was excited by the
news. Turning to the hip, young woman on my left, I asked dryly, She wants to
know what people here think about Gorbachevs receiving the Nobel.
Her large eyes bugging out and shaking her head, she simply stated, Uzhasniy
koshmar.
I translated for Mrs. Crain, She says it is a terrible nightmare.
The look of utter incomprehension on the face of this powerful, stately
woman was one I shall never forget. The local experience with Gorbachev was
chaos and breakdown brought about by half measures and unfulfilled promises.
This initial exchange triggered a fascinating education of a news powerhouse by
a wannabe punk artist on the intricacies of the late-Soviet socioeconomic milieu.
For, by October 1989, the Soviet Empire in Eastern Europe was spinning out of
control as the communist regimes were falling like dominos. Across Russia, the
masses found their earnings had become largely worthless, while store shelves
were becoming barren. Hour-long lines for meager basics were the norm as
black-market prices topped unreachable levels for most of the Soviet people.
Where Gorbachev had promised growth, modernity, and the strengthening of
the country, the people experienced exactly the opposite while observing their
leader being indecisive, erratically switching course, and generally demonstrat-
ing incompetence. The attempt at educating the wealthy, American media
mogul failed entirely. After about twenty minutes, a flabbergasted Mrs. Crain
shook her head and, ending the conversation, stated, It does not make any
sense. He has made everything so much better. He has brought so much change
for these people and peace to the world.
The Collapse of the Soviet Union 83
Perhaps the normative bias in the West regarding the direction of events in
the USSR, reflected in Gertrude Crains incomprehension, blinded people to
the harsh realities that the mass of the Soviet population experienced as the
demise of the empire and the collapse of the country approached. While we in
the West were celebrating the end of the Cold War and the triumph of liberal,
capitalist democracy, we failed to grasp the realities of systemic collapse in
Russia. People were in fear during hyperinflation in the late 1980s and early
1990s that they would go hungry, that there would be another famine. It was
existential fear.
But what is, in retrospect, truly bewildering is that the total and rapid demise
of all of the communist regimes across Eastern Europe in the second half of
1989 did not shake the widespread perception of Gorbachevs success, much
less raise anticipation of a pending collapse of the Soviet political system.
Gorbachev was making the world more peaceful with unilateral force cuts,
troop withdrawals, and accelerated arms control negotiations with the United
States. His reforms advanced within the Soviet Union the cherished Western
liberal ideals of political and economic freedoms. These domestic and interna-
tional changes produced euphoria in the Westthings were changing in ways
that the United States and its allies wanted. Writers, musicians, and artists
were free to produce and disseminate their work. How vibrant the cultural
space was becoming! People were able to espouse their political views without
fear. How dynamic the political space was becoming! The military standoff
between East and West was receding. How peaceful the world was becoming!
It was understandably easy to get carried away and to equate all of these
changes with success.
And, so, the abrupt demise of the Soviet Union following the unsuccessful
coup against Gorbachev in August 1991 came as a shock to virtually everyone in
the West. The coup, in which eight government officials, including Gorbachevs
Vice President, Interior Minister, KGB Chief, Minister of Defense, and the head
of the parliament, petered out as the erstwhile leaders and the army units
deployed into Moscow lacked the resolve to open fire on the small group of citi-
zens and politicians, including Russian President Boris Yeltsin, who gathered in
protest of the action. In the wake of the Soviet collapse, scholars have surveyed
where the study of that country went wrong and why so few foresaw the end.
5
These discussions probed the interesting question of whether any reform strat-
egy in a Soviet-type political system could have succeeded or whether such sys-
tems were immutable to reform and, if there were paths to reform that could
have succeeded, why other choices were made.
The following selections provide an overview of the myriad challenges the
Soviet Union faced in its final years, a review of the reforms Gorbachev initiated
84 roiirics i russia. a rtantr
that sought to address these challenges, and explanation of why that attempt so
spectacularly failed. Most of these analyses directly link to the wider literature on
transitions to democracy, as Gorbachevs response to systemic crisis was a
series of reforms designed to open up the Soviet system, to ease controls, and
to provide a wider scope for individual action and individual responsibility. They
were liberalizing measures designed to resolve crisis that instead triggered an
explosion of antisystem sentiment. Because the Western expectation was that
these measures would succeed in transforming the Soviet Union, the ultimate
collapse sparked inquiries attempting to explain the failure. Katherine Verdery,
in What Was Socialism and Why Did it Fail? offers a compelling overview of
the failure of the Soviet political economy as it was first and foremost economic
failure that sparked Gorbachevs reformist orientation. Verderys is a thorough
analysis of why Soviet-style economies fell behind so catastrophically, with
insights into both the internal and external challenges that made the situation so
dire. By contrast, Alexander Dallin, in Causes of the Collapse of the USSR
offers an overview of various political explanations for the causes of the Soviet
collapse. My own piece, Glasnost Gutted the Party, Democratization Destroyed
the State, seeks to reevaluate the role of Gorbachev himself, evaluating his lead-
ership, the decisions he made, and the forces he unleashed in an attempt to dem-
onstrate how far the results deviated from his own goals. In the end, one comes
away impressed that the systemic, circumstantial, and individual variables all
contributed substantially to the unraveling of the Soviet political system, to the
disintegration of the empire, and to the dismemberment of the state.
For Further Reference
Books
Valerie Bunce, Subversive Institutions: the Design and the Destruction of Socialism and the
State, Cambridge University Press: 1999.
Mikhail S. Gorbachev, Memoirs, Doubleday: 1996.
Ken Jowitt, New Word Disorder, University of California Press: 1992.
Boris Kagarlitsky, The Disintegration of the Monolith, Verso: 1992.
Yegor Ligachev, Inside Gorbachevs Kremlin, Pantheon Press: 1993.
Michael McFaul, Russias Unfinished Revolution, Cornell University Press: 2001.
Steven Skolnick, Stealing the State: Control and Collapse in Soviet Institutions. Harvard
University Press: 1998.
Gale Stokes, The Walls Came Tumbling Down: The Collapse of Communism in Eastern
Europe, Oxford University Press: 1993.
Ronald Suny, The Revenge of the Past: Nationalism, Revolution, and the Collapse of the
Soviet Union, Stanford University Press: 1993.
The Collapse of the Soviet Union 85
Journal Articles
Journal of Cold War Studies special issues on The Collapse of the Soviet Union, Vol. 5,
No. 1 (2003); Vol. 5, No. 4 (2003).
Novels
Slavenka Drakulic, How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed, Harper: 1993.
David Remnik, Resurrection, Vintage: 1988.
Films
Little Vera
Repentance
Taxi Blues
Notes
1. The phrase was coined by early Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky, who hurled it at less
radical socialist competitors in Russia who walked out on a meeting of communists during the
Revolution in 1917. You are pitiful isolated individuals; you are bankrupts; your role is played
out. Go where you belong from now on into the dustbin of history! Trotsky shouted at them.
(See Leon Trotsky, History of the Russian Revolution Vol. 3 [Chicago: Eastman], ch. 10.)
2. Most famous and controversial among these was Z [Martin Malia], To the Stalin
Mausoleum, Daedalus, Vol. 119, No. 1 (1990), pp. 295344.
3. Marshall Goldman, in particular, routinely predicted in public talks that Gorbachev
would be removed from power within six months. He began making this prediction in mid-
1987. See an account in Los Angeles Times, December 7, 1987, titled The Washington Summit:
Enigmatic Gorbachev Taxes Kremlinologists Skills.
4. This was clearly the dominant position in the West, with far too many representative
sources to identify as leading. Stephen Cohen and Katrina vanden Heuvels Voices of Glasnost
(WW Norton, 1991); Seweryn Bialers Inside Gorbachevs Russia: Politics, Society and
Nationality (Westview Press, 1989); and Ed A. Hewett and Victor H. Winstons Milestones in
Glasnost and Perestroika (Brookings, 1991) are all edited volumes with selections of leading
scholars of Soviet politics, economics, and society, who without exception hailed the dawn-
ing of a new age.
5. For a nice exchange laying out varying approaches to the Soviet crisis and their strengths
and weaknesses, see George Breslauer, In Defense of Sovietology, in Post-Soviet Affairs, Vol. 8,
No. 3 (OctoberDecember 1992), pp. 197238; and Ken Jowitt, Really Imaginary Socialism,
in East European Constitutional Review, Vol. 6, No. 23 (Spring/Summer 1997), pp. 4349.