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May 18th, 2024

Insight

After Gorbachev's death, Putin wants the world to know he is the 'anti-Gorbi'

Trudy Rubin

By Trudy Rubin Philadelphia Inquirer/(TNS)

Published Sept. 8, 2022

After Gorbachev's death, Putin wants the world to know he is the 'anti-Gorbi'
In early 1990, when Mikhail Gorbachev's efforts to liberalize Soviet life were in full flower, I was on a journalistic exchange with a Russian newspaper — Moscow News — at the apex of the glasnost ("openness") campaign.

When the news broke of Gorbachev's death, my mind flashed back to the excitement of those days in 1990, and to the lost dreams of my Moscow News colleagues, who had hoped for a "normal" country. Instead, most of those journalists — who became editors, anchormen, and reporting stars in the 1990s — have now been silenced by Vladimir Putin's media crackdowns, or fled the country after his invasion of Ukraine.

Gorbachev's death and Putin's refusal to attend his funeral illuminate a frightening reality: The Russian leader wants the world to know he is the anti-Gorbi.

Not only has Putin restored repression at home, but he seeks control over the countries that were the former Soviet empire. And unlike Gorbachev, who rejected the use of force to hold the empire together, Putin is willing to invade his neighbors and use nuclear threats to intimidate them — and the world.

So rather than enumerate Gorbachev's failures, it is important to focus on his achievements — and how Putin seeks to reverse them.

Of course, one major achievement was Gorbachev's opening up of information access to the Russian people. Before glasnost, restless Russian journalists were confined to using so-called Aesopian language, ambiguous terms that hinted of criticism but were designed to avoid censorship. At every newspaper, a government KGB intelligence officer sat in a special office — at Moscow News, right next to the room I worked in — and reviewed all the copy.

But by the time I arrived at Moscow News, they had more freedom, so every issue was an adventure, trying to unmask topics that journalists had never been able to cover, from scandalous conditions in government-run maternity hospitals, to revelations about the KGB, to debates on privatizing the economy.

In 1993, Gorbachev even helped found a leading independent newspaper, Novaya Gazeta, with part of his 1990 Nobel Peace Prize money. This newspaper paid a huge prize for its independence. Since Putin became president in 2000, six of its journalists and contributors have been murdered, including top investigative reporter Anna Politkovskaya. They are among the many journalists and opposition figures killed, poisoned, or jailed under Putin.

Novaya Gazeta suspended publication after Putin's invasion of Ukraine, along with virtually all independent media outlets inside Russia.

Russian news now consists mainly of vitriolic state propaganda that convinces the public that Ukraine is run by Nazis who want to destroy Russia with the help of NATO. The public appears to buy the propaganda (which ignores Russian losses and blames Kyiv for Russian murder of civilians).

This enables Putin to continue his brutal, imperial war.

Contrast that with one of Gorbachev's greatest achievements: He didn't believe in using force to maintain an empire.

Although he intended only to restructure the Soviet Union, turning it into a federation of equally sovereign states, he unintentionally triggered the transformation of 15 Soviet republics into independent states. Yet the Soviet leader seemed to recognize that reluctant republics could no longer be ruled by Moscow's armies or diktat.

Gorbachev also refused to use force when the Berlin Wall fell to maintain control of East Germany and keep Warsaw Pact countries under Moscow's domination. "He was convinced that the time to resolve issues of the world order by force had passed," wrote Dmitry Muratov, editor of Novaya Gazeta (and himself a 2021 Nobel Peace Prize winner), in a tribute.

Putin, on the other hand, has famously called the Soviet breakup the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the [20th] century." Referring to that collapse on the day he invaded Ukraine, he declared: "We lost confidence for only one moment, but it was enough to disrupt the balance of forces in the world."

Putin's attempt to seize and/or destroy Ukraine is an effort to restore that "balance of forces" — by military might.

Imagine how different the 20th century might have been had Putin been ruling in 1989.

Muratov also cited perhaps Gorbachev's greatest achievement. "He gave both the country and the world an incredible gift — he gave us thirty years of peace without the threat of global and nuclear war."

Gorbachev worked successfully with Ronald Reagan on nuclear arms control, effectively ending the Cold War. "A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought," both men proclaimed in 1985 in a joint statement at a Geneva summit.

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Putin, on the other hand, uses the nuclear threat as blackmail. He and Kremlin mouthpieces have repeatedly raised the threat of nuclear war to deter the United States and NATO from helping Ukraine.

Russian troops have been using captured Ukrainian nuclear reactors to raise the specter of an atomic disaster. They have finally permitted U.N. inspectors to reach the endangered plant in Zaporizhzhia but may not allow them to do their vital work there.

Gorbachev's death reminds us that Putin is indeed his polar opposite when it comes to world peace and nuclear safety. The West should be under no illusions that catering to Putin's demands on Ukraine will change the behavior of this dangerous man.

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Trudy Rubin
Philadelphia Inquirer
(TNS)

Previously:

08/26/22: 6 months after Russia's war vs. Ukraine began, the West still won't give Kiev the weapons to win

08/15/22: Ukraine's civilian volunteers work to give aid and rebuild, even as Russia continues to bomb them

08/08/22: A trip near the front lines finds Ukrainian troops ready for a battle that could decide the war

06/13/22: The critical battles for Ukraine and for America are being fought right here, right now

05/02/22: Save Odesa to save the world from hunger and high food prices

05/02/22: Bloodless Ukrainian War, not utopian fantasy says one-time largest foreign investor in Russia

04/11/22: The only way to end Putin's war crimes

03/28/22: Don't let Putin's nuclear and chemical threats stop us from giving Ukraine what it needs

03/24/22: An elegy for Mariupol, where I walked six weeks ago. Now razed by Russian bombs

03/18/22: Zelenskyy's brilliant speech should impel Biden and Congress to protect Ukrainian skies

03/11/22: Mariupol's bombed maternity hospital exemplifies why NATO should protect Ukraine's skies

03/10/22: No 'no-fly zone'? Then NATO must find another way to protect Ukraine's skies

03/07/22: The third World War has already started in Ukraine. Europe and the US should wake up

03/04/22:Putin must be stopped from turning Kiev into Aleppo

03/02/22:Why is Belarus helping Russia invade Ukraine? An explainer on the latest in the conflict

02/25/22: What the UN should finally do about Russia

02/24/22: Why Putin's Ukraine aggression will change the world --- an explainer on how we got here

02/10/22: Ukrainian civilians train for war with cardboard guns: 'We are scared but we are ready

01/13/22:Putin wants to reestablish the Russian empire. Can NATO stop him without war?

12/10/21: Can Biden and NATO prevent Putin from invading Ukraine? Summit puts it to the test

12/02/21: Boris Johnson stirs up new Irish Troubles for his own personal political gains

11/22/21: Xi Jinping thinks America is on the rocks. Is he correct?

08/18/21: President Biden, get our Afghan allies on evacuation planes

08/18/21:The horror of Afghan women abandoned by Biden's troop pullout

08/09/21:China is pushing a big COVID-19 lie that makes a new pandemic harder to prevent

05/27/21: Punish Belarus leader for Ryanair hijacking before air piracy becomes dictators' new tool

04/14/21: Can Beethoven temper the political tensions between US and China?

06/01/20: US must stand with Hong Kong against Beijing's efforts to crush its freedoms

05/20/20: COVID-19 offers a chance to halt Iran's hostage diplomacy

05/21/14: Newscycle spurs visit to country my family fled

04/21/14: Blind to Putin's strategy?

12/24/13: Obama's Syrian indifference has led to more death and destruction. Meet some real heroes

12/13/13: Where liberals have come to love the military

12/09/13: The China strategy

11/05/13: Return to Iraq is worth a close look

10/01/13: Obama's call to Iran: Who was really on the line?

09/11/13: How Obama got Syria so wrong

07/24/13: It's time for Obama to tell Putin 'nyet'

05/15/13: What Russia gave Kerry on Syria --- very little


Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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