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Tuesday, March 12, 1985 Newsday UN Bureau This much is known: Mikhail Gorbachev is the youngest
Soviet party leader since Vladimir Lenin and has, managed to charm almost
every westerner he has met. That does not reveal anything, however, about what his
swift accession to the top position in the Communist Party central committee
means for the Soviet Union's ruling elite, for the nation's potential
for internal reform, or for the future course of East-West relations. Soviet analysts agree that, if change is forthcoming,
it will not be anytime soon. It will take Gorbachev time to consolidate
power, if indeed he can. “I think he understands the problems of modern society,
West or East,” said Geoffrey Pearson, a Soviet expert who knows
Gorbachev well, having served as Canada's ambassador to Moscow from 1980
to 1983. “He is educated, low key and non-ideological. He is willing
to listen and I am very pleased about his appointment. “But it won't make a fundamental difference. I don't
think personalities change the politics of great powers overnight.” Gorbachev celebrated his 54th birthday March
2. He is the Politburo's youngest member, born after the Russian Revolution
and spared the taint of party service under Stalin. At the age of 15 he went to work as a machine operator
at a machine and tractor station. He joined the Communist Party in 1952.
Three years later, after the usual five-year course, he graduated from
Moscow State University's law department and in 1967 he took a specialty
in agronomy at the agricultural institute in his native Stavropol region,
south of Moscow. He rose through the ranks of the party's youth wing and
through the regional party organization, becoming a member of the party
central committee in 1971. In 1978, he was elected secretary of the party
central committee, transferring to Moscow to take the agricultural portfolio
in the central committee secretariat. A year later, he became an alternate
member of the Politburo, meaning he attended meetings but was not allowed
to vote. In 1980, he became a full Politburo member and thus one
of the small circle of eligibles to assume the party's top spot of general
secretary. For the past year, he has been the man touted to assume
control after Konstantin U. Chernenko and that the appointment was announced
a mere five hours after Chernenko's death was made public indicates that
the decision already was well in the works. So sure was Gorbachev's position that in a recent conversation
with a West European correspondent, Pravda's editor-in-chief referred
to him as “the second secretary.” There is no such position. By the time he visited Britain in December, his profile
was high. As a public relations exercise, the trip was masterful, complemented
by his wife Raisa Maximovna, whose unanticipated sense of style — suede
boots and pearl drop earrings — won over the British. The late Soviet
leader Yuri Andropov, said to be Gorbachev's promoter and mentor, was
not even known to be married until his widow appeared at his funeral. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said she liked Gorbachev
and added matter-of-factly, “We can do business together.” The official news agency Tass detailed Gorbachev's long
service to the state and described him as a man who “works with
energy and selflessness, gives all his knowledge, wealth of experience
and organizing talent to the implementation of party policy . . .”
thus stressing his experience over his relative youth and his commitment
to the collective policy. Pearson, now executive director of the Canadian Institute
for International Peace and Stability, had long meetings with Gorbachev
five or six times before and after the Soviet official's highly successful
but little publicized 10-day visit to Canada in May, 1983. Gaining foreign
experience, Gorbachev wanted to see how the Canadians managed their successes
in grain production with such a small population. Ironically, Gorbachev presided over one of the most disastrous
periods in Soviet harvests, though he clearly has not been held personally
responsible. “I don't think any person could have done much,”
Pearson said. “Assuming he is there for a while, there will be
more dialogue, more negotiations — not necessarily on arms control but
on the whole span of East-West relations. But he will not become a patsy
or a liberal. Or he wouldn't be where he is.” Pearson said Gorbachev is not really anecdotal. “He's
not like Khruschev. He doesn't crack jokes. But he has a sense of
humor. “He wants change in the way Yuri Andropov wanted
change, but it isn't going to happen right away. He is not ruthless. He
won't be doing away with people right and left. But, ultimately, we won't
be dealing with the same people,” Pearson said. Accepting the powerful party post yesterday, Gorbachev
pledged to strive for arms control and “cardinal improvement of
relations” with China. “We would like our partners in the Geneva negotiations
to understand the Soviet Union's position and respond in kind. Then agreement
will be possible. The peoples of the world would sigh with relief,”
he said. But he stressed the need to “maintain the defense
capacity of our motherland at such a level that potential aggressors would
know well . . . “ On the domestic front, he called for a “decisive
turn in transferring the national economy to the tracks of intensive development.” Under his predecessors, as overseer of economic policy,
Gorbachev supported plans to give enterprises and their managers greater
autonomy within the centrally planned Soviet system. He spoke last year of the need for a “bold, creative
search, freshness of thought and an energetic struggle against everything
hypocritical and obsolete.” Of Gorbachev's stylishness and charm, longtime Soviet
analyst Edward Luttwack of Georgetown University's Center for Strategic
and International Studies, warned not to be taken in. “He may wear better clothes, but he is one of them,”
Luttwack said. “When Khrushchev started wearing smart Italian suits
was when he went back to Stalinism.” |
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