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A direct course of the Soviet collapse was Gorbachov's perestroika - the medicine of the (then perhaps indeed) perceived ills of the Soviet system. The disintegration went forward like a train - "no one" could have planned it faster. The system hardly showed any wish of survival; even the August coup was the lousiest possible. Communist insiders profited the most, as if there was nothing unimaginable to them. Say what you will, to me the Soviet collapse looks increasingly like a willful break-up of their social system. (And you know, I have good reasons not to cheer anything Soviet.)
Was the Soviet system workable, I think? It was not the best society network disintegrated by free-market reforms. But if the problems were clear, Soviet bureaucrats gave up very easily.
In 1988 even this wasn't working as a decade of zero capital investment caught up with things. The Party asked the elder brothers for a sharp increase in subsidies and were turned down since the Soviets had financial issues of their own. That meant that living standards had to drop again. Given that the Party had zero popular legitimacy at that point, this left two choices. Either get the legitimacy from the opposition (unlike elsewhere in the Bloc you had a large well organized mass opposition movement operating underground - the legacy of 1980-81) or to resort to large scale bloodshed (and the unrest would have made the economic crisis even worse).
Moscow did not want its new and improved image in the West getting destroyed, so in late 1988 it greenlighted formal high level negotiations on a power sharing agreement that led to the legalization of trade unions, an opposition press, and most importantly semi-free elections in June 1989. One third of the decisive lower house was up for grabs, and all of a new, weaker upper chamber. The expectation was that you'd get a national unity government with Solidarity as junior partners.
Except it turned out that the Party was even more unpopular than anyone realized, even the Solidarity leadership itself, and the Party and its allied 'independent' candidates lost all except one of the seats that were open. To make matters worse, the gimmick of allowing several Party candidates to contest the closed seats turned out to have real consequences as voters systematically crossed whichever candidate was higher up in the Party hierarchy, meaning that the Party leadership was mostly unrepresented in the suddenly important parliament. Solidarity now had veto power over the choice of President (elected by the combined chambers and quite powerful) and used that to force a Solidarity led government with only the 'power ministries' in Party hands, plus an agreement that the next elections would be fully free. By the end of the summer the Party apparatus was disintegrating and the secret police was burning mountains of documents in anticipation of dissolution. The regime was dead and the only way it could have been revived was through a Soviet invasion with no guarantees about what the Polish Army would do.
Hmmh, somewhat of a long comment, sorry about that.
The Polish communists were that unpopular for a reason. On the other hand, they returned soon to power for a reason as well.
How much were the Polish people agitated by the price hikes and increased poverty due to the infamous shock therapy?
How much were the Polish people agitated by the price hikes and increased poverty due to the infamous shock therapy
They were very agitated, but the communists returned largely because of the rapid disintegration of the opposition into multiple strands, a result partly due to different ideologies having been papered over out of combined hatred for the regime, and partly personal cliques and rivalries. First the 'wojna na gorze' between Walesa (backed by the twins, the right in general, and the bulk of the working class anti-communist opposition activists) and Mazowiecki (backed by the the bulk of the organized intellectual opposition that had emerged in the seventies as well as some of those working class activists that had worked with them pre-Solidarity) in 1990, then the splintering of the pro-Walesa groups over the first half of 1992.
The post-communists won the election with twenty percent of the vote, better than the twelve percent they'd gotten in 1991, but not exactly a resounding popular endorsement. The post Solidarity parties got a good fifty percent, but the right wing ones were mostly shut out of parliament because they were so splintered they didn't make it past the threshold.
Gorbachev's reforms aroused fierce opposition amongst many in the nomenclatura who rightly feared that these reforms would be their own undoing. The Soviet system never considered that the whole system could be taken down by a determined General Secretary. Gorbachev used events to put allies into key positions. My sense has been that, while he wanted to steer a more moderate course, in the face of resistance from hard-liners, Gorbachev essentially ended up using the political power he had as General Secretary to bulldog the existing system by pushing through a new Constitution, holding elections, breaking the political monopoly of the Communist Party, breaking up state enterprises into smaller private enterprises and shedding the buffer states.
I suspect that he thought he could more successfully influence the future direction of the Russian state and society and its relations with the former buffer states than in fact proved possible. Less drastic reform efforts may well have failed and left the old system largely intact. I consider Gorbachev to be a great historical figure. We need a similar determined reformer in the USA. May we be so fortunate as to have one. "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
I hadn't noticed much of the fierce nomenclature opposition to him from the contemporary media or behavior of officials. It seemed that Gorby had control right from the start; the media promoted him quite innovatively (by the Soviet standards). He did change a lot of top party officials... stirring some "unheard" national tensions, in particular... if that goes for a democratic change. The election of Gorbachev himself is said to be controversial.
Seeing how much bullshit posting is there in today's politics, I am more ready to consider the possibility that some of the glorious historic events (like the end of the Cold War) have elements of Potiomkin village in them. Gorbachev did everything right for break-up of the Soviet model (for better and worse). If he left a vacuum, there was once wild force ready to fill it in.
How did Gorbachev know not-so-totalitarian alternatives, and new economic relations?
I agree that the demise of the Soviet Union, when and how it died, was largely the result of Gorbachev's actions. I do not think it turned out anything as well as he would have liked. He certainly put his own position and the future of his family in play and is probably fortunate to have emerged as well as he did. I give him credit for having the courage to push his society in the direction of greater openness and of detente with the USA in the face of great uncertainty.
Meanwhile, Reagan was posturing for public approval with his "evil empire" rhetoric and doubling the national debt of the USA with military spending. I think Gorbachev saw that neither side could win the Cold War militarily, while the Republicans in the USA claimed that this is exactly what they had done. Point Gorbachev. Absent a credible geo-political rival, US triumphalism under "W" inflated to gigantic proportions and then proceeded to pop, like a giant bubble gum balloon, all over our face and society, unfortunately smothering the world economy in the process.
Gorbachev could have elected to "stay the course" and try to keep a lid on change in Soviet society. Hard to know how that would have worked out. He could have taken a course more like that of China, but I think that is what he had in mind when overtaken by events. The Chinese undoubtedly found the Soviet example instructive. I think what Gorbachev needed was better domestic rivals and a way to slow down the process. A sober Yeltsin might have helped. The USA was fortunate at its founding to have a number of first rate players and the luxury of time in which to hash out a 2.0 version of our government.
I watched these events from afar and through English language coverage. I do not know your reasons not to cheer anything Soviet, but you appear to have had a closer perspective. "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
I've read somewhere (tm) that he envisioned a transformation into a Scandinavian welfare state. Sweden's finest (and perhaps only) collaborative, leftist e-newspaper Synapze.se
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