reform & collapse in eastern europe and the ussr

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Reform & Collapse in Eastern Europe and the USSR Kevin Benoy

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Reform & Collapse in Eastern Europe and the USSR. Kevin Benoy. Reform in the USSR. Gorbachev inherited a mess. The Afghan war was bleeding military and economic resources. The economy was stagnating and corruption made it impossible to realistically evaluate its true state. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Reform & Collapse in Eastern Europe and the USSR

Kevin Benoy

Page 2: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Reform in the USSR

• Gorbachev inherited a mess.

• The Afghan war was bleeding military and economic resources.

• The economy was stagnating and corruption made it impossible to realistically evaluate its true state.

Page 3: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Reform in the USSR• Domestically, Gorbachev

sought to address the problem of a no-growth economy.

• He formulated a policy of Perestroika – restructuring. This would have 3 phases.

Page 4: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Perestroika• First, he would restore order to

the work place – this was to happen between 1985-87.

• An anti-alcoholism campaign was launched.

• Corrupt officials were to be disciplined – requiring a policy of Glasnost – openness – allowing public criticism of government officials.

• More scope was allowed for private enterprises.

• Investment in modern machinery was stepped up.

Page 5: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Perestroika• Between 1988 and 1990

Large enterprises were to get more independence.

• Managers were to become responsible for the success or failure of their enterprises.

• Failing or unprofitable enterprises would not be propped up.

• Prices were to reflect market forces more realistically.

• State bureaucracies were to be trimmed.

Page 6: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Perestroika

• By 1991 the whole economy should have been on the new system, with growth accelerating as motivation increased and investment came on stream.

Page 7: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Perestroika• Reform did not go

unchallenged.• Hard-line communists said

Gorbachev was destroying socialism.

• Liberals claimed he wasn’t moving fast enough.

• Managers did not know how to work in an open market and many did not care to learn.

• The system was geared to monopolies, so no real competition existed anyway.

Page 8: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Perestroika

• Workers also resisted change as job security was threatened.

• Prices rose faster than wages.

Page 9: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Perestroika

• Boris Yeltsin, a long time supporter of Gorbachev, broke with him, calling for faster reform.

• Gorbachev himself seemed to draw back as reform brought not increased, but decreased production and labour disputes grew.

Page 10: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Effects of Glasnost• Glasnost opened up old

wounds.• New questions were asked

about the role of the Communist Party in Stalin’s crimes.

• Nationalities also took advantage of the new openness to call for radical reforms.

• If reform was possible in the Soviet Union, what about in Soviet satellite states?

Page 11: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Poland

• In 1956 Poland caused the Soviets almost as much grief as the Czechs, but Gomulka knew when to draw back.

• In 1970 he was forced to resign after riots in Gydnia.

• 1979 saw the wildly popular visit of Polish Pope John Paul II.

• In 1980 trouble occurred after food shortages and industrial unrest erupted – particularly at the huge Gdansk Shipyard.

Page 12: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Poland

• The troubles forced the Polish leader, Gierek, to recognize the right to strike and to legalize the new independent trade union, Solidarity.

• Led by electrician Lech Walesa, the union won significant concessions.

Page 13: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Poland

• Soon after, Gierek was replaced by Kania, who was, in turn, replaced by General Wojceich Jaruzelski.

• Jaruzelski introduced martial law and tried to break the union. Walesa was imprisoned.

Page 14: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Poland• Try as he might, the General could

not break the union.• Key to its survival was the support

of the union by the Catholic church.

• Church leaders cooperated with the underground union, distributing its literature, providing communications and hiding equipment and activists.

• Eventually the Polish government decided to negotiate.

Page 15: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Poland

• Talks between the government and Solidarity union-led opposition resulted in semi-free elections in the country and a transitional government created.

• Soon a Solidarity based coalition came to power and Lech Walesa became the first non-Communist leader since the War.

Page 16: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Poland

• August 19, 1989 marked the date of the first non-Communist government in Poland since 1945.

• It was only possible because Soviet leader Mikhael Gorbachev refused to invoke the Brezhnev Doctrine.

Page 17: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Hungary

• The Hungarian road to greater freedom was less calamitous.

• The lessons of 1956 taught that only small steps to reform were possible (until the Gorbachev years), consequently Hungarian governments stayed clear of political change and focussed on greater consumerism – what came to be known as Goulash Communism.

Page 18: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Hungary• Events in Poland triggered change that

even Hungary’s goulash communists could not survive.

• In January, 1989 a Polish Communist leader announced that the events of 1956 were a “people’s uprising.” This was not approved by the politburo.

• Hungary’s communist leaders were divided, but radical reformers prevailed.

• On October 7, the Hungarian Socialist Worker Party dissolved itself and was refounded as the Hungarian Socialist Party – a western style social democratic party.

• Hard-line communists split off as the Hungarian Communist Worker’s Party.

Page 19: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• In the 1960’s Romania seemed to prosper, based on oil and wheat production.

• At the same time, its leader, Ceaucescu, tried to distance himself from the Soviet Union.– Russian was dropped as a

compulsory school subject in 1962.

– Ties with the West and China were increased.

Page 20: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• Ceaucescu’s gamble did not pay off.

• Borrowed western money was frittered away through corruption and incompetence.

• Ceaucescu’s regime became increasingly repressive, as other Eastern Bloc regimes opened up.

Page 21: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• Ethnic Hungarians were a particular target.

• Many fled to nearby Hungary.• Others risked all to protest in

the streets of their Transylvanian cities, most notably in Timisoara.

• Enraged by Securitate murders of demonstrators, peaceful demonstrations turned into riots.

Page 22: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• Riots turned to revolution as army forces joined the demonstrators.

• Ceaucescu was shouted down as he attempted to make a speech before a crowd of supposed supporters.

• Booing and whistling was followed by chants of “Ti-mi-soa-ra.”

• He retreated from the podium.

Page 23: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• Media announced the death of Defense Minister Vasile Milea.

• Milea had committed suicide, but the military believed him murdered for refusing orders to fire on civilians.

• Military support of the revolution went from spotty to general.

• Another attempt to speak to the people was turned back by stones and other missiles.

Page 24: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• The crowd now stormed the palace.

• Ceacescu, his wife and a few close supporters narrowly escaped by helicopter from the roof.

• Their escape was foiled when they were forced down by the army.

• Taken into custody, they were placed on trial on December 25.

Page 25: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Romania

• The result was as expected – condemnation and death by public execution.

• It was to have been televised, but the eager volunteers carried out the act too quickly for the television cameramen to film it. However, other film exists – see left.

• Ion Iliescu, a former communist, headed a government calling itself the National Salvation Front.

• Romania’s Communist Party simply dissolved.

Page 26: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Albania

• Originally willing to follow the Stalinist line despite not relying on Soviet troops to liberate it in WW2, the Albanians later chose to split from the Soviets.

• Albanian leader Enver Hoxha resented Khrushchev’s break from the Stalinist line. He severed relations with the USSR in 1968.

Page 27: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Albania• Albania did stay in the Warsaw Pact

until 1968 – but then achieved an alliance with China.

• This collapsed when China too went on a revisionist path under Deng Xiaoping.

• The Albanians were left alone – and were the last European Communist country to reject Socialism.

• Hoxha died in 1985 and some reform was introduced. Even hermitic Albania could not escape the calamitous events of 1989. Fearing the same fate as Ceacescu, Communist chief Ramiz Alia allowed free elections

Page 28: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Albania• The transition to a free

market was particularly difficult for Albania.

• The government collapsed in 1997 with the inevitable collapse of pyramid selling schemes.

• When the army attempted to put down rebellion, this too failed – due to corruption in the military.

• Eventually order was restored.

Page 29: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany

• Germans lived with, but were not reconciled to a divided country.

• Families were separated by a barbed wire and landmine filled border.

• It was increasingly clear that the West was prospering and the East stagnating.

Page 30: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• The failure of the Soviets

to push the West out of Berlin made the contrast apparent to all in the East.

• For years, many in the East wanted out and some were desperate enough to risk everything in daring breaks.

• 70 people lost their lives in the attempt

Page 31: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• In the 1980s the Cold War

began to that – largely through the efforts of Gorbachev.

• Reform in the Soviet Union had side-effects in the Soviet satellites as it was clear that Gorbachev was less and less inclined to enforce the Brezhnev Doctrine.

• In 1988 Gorbachev declared that the Brezhnev Doctrine was dead.

Page 32: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• Goulash Communism in Hungary

brought increasingly open borders between it and the West as Hungarian leaders saw travel as a safety valve.

• Many East Germans saw Hungary as a back daw to the West.

• West German television, watched in the East, announced Hungary allowed free movement between it and Austria.

• East Germans flooded into Hungary only to find that travel was not open for them. Many found themselves stranded there or in Czechoslovakia – another possible exit point.

Page 33: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany

• On October 6, 1989 East Germans were to celebrate their 40th anniversary as a country – with Mikhail Gorbachev in attendance.

Page 34: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• Gorbachev embarrassed

his hosts when he noted that STASI agents seemed to outnumber the public at official ceremonies.

• Gorbachev pushed E. German leader Honecker to initiate reforms, saying “life punishes those who lag behind.”

Page 35: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• On October 8 a protest

was staged in Leipzig with thousands attending.

• Similar protests elsewhere brought hundreds of thousands into the streets.

• The East German government was taken aback, not knowing what to do.

Page 36: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• As a gesture, many E.

Germans in Czechoslovakia were allowed to go on to the West.

• On November 9, East German television announced: “The citizens of the GDR are as from now free to move wherever and whenever they want.”

• This surprised everyone and so many E. Germans rushed out that cartoons encouraged the last to leave to turn out the lights.

Page 37: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany

• West Germany announced that DM100 would be given to every E. German arrival.

• Numbers grew larger as exhilarated “Ossies” celebrated their new freedom.

Page 38: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• Crowds of Ossies and

Wessies congregated around the Berlin Wall.

• On November 11 the first concrete slab was removed as the mob cheered.

• More and more openings were made to facilitate travel and the crowd helped tear away more with picks and sledgehammers.

• E. German border guards stood aside, not knowing what to do and waiting for directions that never came.

Page 39: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

East Germany• With the East German government

in complete disarray and no support from the Soviet Union forthcoming, the GDR leadership simply gave up.

• On November 28, West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl presented a bill before the Bundestag establishing a framework for the integration of the GDR into the Federal Republic.

• On August 31, 1990 German Reunification was agreed.

• October 3, 1990 was declared Unity Day.

• The real work of unifying two into one would be more difficult.

Page 40: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse

• The Soviet leadership found independent thinking hard to limit at home.

• Economic problems and disasters like Chernobyl and the Aral Sea meant many questioned authority.

Page 41: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse• Nationalist discontent

boiled over in the Soviet Baltic states as the 3 republics seemed to favour breaking away from the USSR.

• In the Caucasus Armenians and Azeris were locked in a bloody civil war.

• Gorbachev’s answer was to work toward creating a new union treaty for the USSR.

Page 42: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse• Many Soviet leaders felt

Gorbachev was letting everything spin out of control.

• Hard-liners finaly had enough when on August 18, 1991 the Soviet President was placed under house arrest at his dacha on the Black Sea – just as Khrushchev had been a quarter of a century earlier.

Page 43: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse• The Coup leaders sought to

assert control, but were not up to the task.

• They were inept and out of touch with the population.

• Worse, they faced a formidable opponent when Boris Yeltsin, President of the Russian Republic, stood up to them – with support from some of the Soviet military in Moscow.

Page 44: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse

• Yeltsin bravely called on the people of Moscow to resist the coup and to surround the Russian Federation headquarters, the so-called “white house,” with a human shield.

• Hundreds of thousands, perhaps more than a million, did so.

Page 45: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse• Coup leaders ordered Soviet

military forces to seize the white house and capture or kill Yeltsin.

• Instead, many hoisted Russian ensigns as a sign of their new allegiance, turning their gun barrels outward.

• It is claimed that two generals even threatened to bomb the Kremlin, where the coup leaders were located, if the white house were stormed.

Page 46: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse

• Yeltsin also garnered the support of foreign leaders.

• The coup fizzled and its leaders were all arrested or committed suicide.

Page 47: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse

• Gorbachev was freed and returned to Moscow – but the events of 1991 had marginalized him.

• The entire fabric of the USSR began to unravel.

Page 48: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse• Gorbachev tried to put

together a new union treaty, but it came to nothing.

• Yeltsin and Ukrainian President Krawchuck sought a looser federation – the Commonwealth of Independent States.

• They got what they wanted.

Page 49: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

The Soviet Collapse• A new federation existed in

name, but in reality it was largely a fiction.

• Nationalism was triumphant – leading to trouble between successor states.

• The future of the Soviet Black Sea fleet hung in the balance – along with its high tech nuclear arsenal.

• Territorial boundaries were disputed between many newly independent republics.

Page 50: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Conclusions• Soviet Communism and its

Eastern European derivatives proved unable to adapt to much needed reforms.

• Overly bureaucratic in politics and economics, it simply could not overcome inertia without toppling completely.

• At its heart, the foremost members of the CPSU had lost faith in their own ideology as it was practiced.

Page 51: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Conclusions• New technologies made it

impossible to keep out information.

• Satellites and photocopiers, fax machines and modems rendered censorship nearly impossible.

• Magnitizdat replaced Samizdat.

• Reformers promised the world; hard-liners promised only more of the same stale menu.

Page 52: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Conclusions• When the coup leaders –

Yanayev, Yazov, Pugo and others tried to restore Stalinism, they lacked the resolve of the long dead Georgian. Yanaev spent most of the coup days in a fear induced alcoholic stupor.

• Besides, Gorbachev’s changes had affected the Soviet Union more than any of them could understand.

• Even the KGB refused to shed blood in their name.

Page 53: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

Conclusions

• Centrifugal forces, long suppressed under communism, resurfaced and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was no longer strong enough to contain them.

• The result was collapse. What would replace it?

Page 54: Reform & Collapse in  Eastern Europe and the USSR

finis