HOME


THE CENTURY IN REVIEW

Y2K
Hey, You In That Bunker, You Can Come Out Now!

INDICATORS 
World Population: Six Billion and Counting

Indicators of the Century

WORKSHEET:
Maps and Graphs in Focus


PERSON OF THE CENTURY
Albert Einstein: Person of the Century

Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Runner-Up

Mohandas Gandhi: Runner-Up

WORKSHEET:
Voices of the Century


NATION

CAMPAIGN 2000
Primary Questions

How to Tell Them Apart

WORKSHEET:
Portrait of a Candidate


CONGRESS
Mutually Assured Destruction

PERSON OF THE YEAR
Jeff Bezos: King of the Internet

BUSINESS
AOL and Time Warner: Happily Ever After?

WORLD

GLOBAL ECONOMY
Rage Against the Machine

RUSSIA
No Tears for Boris

MIDDLE EAST
Men At Work

EAST TIMOR
On The Razor's Edge

WORKSHEET:
East Timor's Independence Struggle


JAPAN
The Japan Syndrome

PANAMA
Giving Up the Ship?

CUBA
A Big Battle for a Little Boy

ENVIRONMENT
Greenhouse Effects

WORKSHEET: Current Events in Review

Answers

     
R  U  S  S  I  A  

     


By PAUL QUINN-JUDGE / MOSCOW


New year's addresses, dull ceremonial affairs for most heads of state, have a habit of taking a dramatic turn in Russia. On Christmas Day in 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev announced the end of his presidency and, simultaneously, the end of the Soviet Union. Three years later, Boris Yeltsin raised his glass to the Russian army, which was at that moment storming the Chechen capital of Grozny. As the President's New Year's greetings were being broadcast, a 1,000-man unit of the Russian army was annihilated in the streets of Grozny. This year, with Russian troops again trying to fight their way into the Chechen capital, Yeltsin dropped a bombshell of his own. "Today, on the last day of the outgoing century, I am resigning," he said grimly and slowly.

His resignation took force immediately. Within a few minutes of the address being aired, he had handed over the powers of officeÐincluding control of Russia's strategic nuclear forcesÐto 47-year-old Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. Russian TV showed Yeltsin, already wearing his overcoat, holding the door of his ornate Kremlin study open for his successor. "Your office," he told Putin, with a stiff sweep of the arm. Soon afterward, the traffic in central Moscow was stopped, perhaps for the last time for Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin, as his convoy sped to his country residence. And a couple of hours later, Putin issued one of his first presidential decrees: "On Guarantees for the President of the Russian FederationÉand Members of his Family." The decree provided bodyguards, pensionÐand total immunity from prosecutionÐfor Yeltsin. Putin, a veteran of the KGB and its successor, the Federal Security Service (FSB), will be Acting President until new elections are held, on March 26. By then, the people who organized Putin's lightning thrust into the Kremlin expect to ensure that he becomes Russia's next elected President.

The rapid change surprised Russians and astonished the rest of the world. U.S. officials had heard hints of an early transfer of power, but the idea seemed improbable. Yeltsin, they felt, was determined to stay. This was partly why the top officialsÐeven as they bade Yeltsin goodbyeÐwere struggling for a consensus on Putin, who has risen from deputy mayor of St. Petersburg to President in less than four years. Some administration officials thumbnail him as a "smooth cop"Ða man tough enough to clean up Russia but charming enough to keep ties to the West. Other analysts, however, particularly at the Pentagon, are worried about Putin's disregard for democratic practices and his reliance on a war in Chechnya to boost his popularity ratings. "All we know is that he rode to power on the back of brutalizing Chechnya again," an Army colonel said. "I don't know if that's the kind of guy we want to get too close to."

Early resignation was not how Yeltsin wanted to go. In his farewell speech he stressed that he had dearly hoped to stay on until the end of his term, next June, and to hand over power in keeping with the timetable laid down by the constitution. But, he said, "I have come to understand that it is necessary" to leave early. There is a new "powerful man, worthy of being President," he said, referring to Putin. The speech left the eerie impression of a despondent leader who had been persuaded, gently but firmly, that it was time to go. This would explain the defeated tone that at times crept into his speechÐhis apology to the Russian people for the hardships they had suffered during his rule; the admission that he had been wrong in thinking Russia could be transformed in one sweep from its "gray, stagnant, totalitarian past to a bright, rich and civilized future." In fact, "I believed this too," he added poignantly.




Continue>



TIME EDUCATION PROGRAM -- Teaching With Time