With the advent of perestroika, the USSR witnessed a wave of activism called the “informal movement.” In 1987, along with chess and sports clubs, clubs devoted to political discussion started to appear. Seizing the opportunities created by glasnost by the 1989 and 1990 elections, many of these clubs turned to active politics and played an important role in building up the movements and parties that challenged Gorbachev's leadership over perestroika.Footnote 1 Among the numerous discussion clubs that blossomed throughout the country, the Moscow Tribune (Moskovskaia Tribuna, hereafter MT) was by far the most prestigious and influential, gathering the Muscovite who's who of the Soviet liberal intelligentsia for highbrow discussions on current political issues.Footnote 2 From its creation in 1988 until 1991, its monthly sessions were often reported and commented on in the media, and it served as the antechamber of the first parliamentary fraction, the Interregional Deputies Group, which itself inspired the emergence of the opposition movement Democratic Russia. No other political discussion club had such intellectual and political leverage in recent Russian history.
The MT is mentioned in almost every study of political life during perestroika.Footnote 3 Its history, however, remains to be written.Footnote 4 This curious gap in the historiography can be explained by different factors. The first one is personal: none of its founders or regular members took it upon her- or himself to recount the club's experience. At the end of his life, the club's initiator wondered “whether the short, but very dense and bright history of the Moscow Tribune will be ever written.”Footnote 5 In this respect, the situation of MT contrasts poorly with that of other clubs, which were less influential but are better known today because of the dedication of their founders to keep their memory alive.Footnote 6 The second factor is material: the complete record of its transcripts was allegedly lost, following the death in 2003 of the club's main former secretary, the journalist Galina Koval΄skaia.Footnote 7 The third factor, which may in part contribute to the first one, is psychological: the memory of the MT mirrors so closely the ideas and the hopes of the Soviet liberal intelligentsia during perestroika that it seems to have suffered from the same bitter disappointment over its outcome. The Soviet liberals themselves, in their retrospective accounts, often dismiss the aspirations that drove their political activism at the time of perestroika—notably in attempting to reform socialism—as naive illusions that have not withstood the test of reality and, consequently, do not deserve much more than irony or repentance.Footnote 8
This article is intended as the first contribution to the history of the MT, focusing on its most active period, from its creation in 1988 to its sharp decline in 1991. In doing so, it uses the MT as a privileged vantage point to reflect on one of the most spectacular and decisive developments of the time, that is the dramatic political shift of many established Soviet liberals, from initial support of Gorbachev's reformism to support of Yeltsin's anti-communist revolution and opposition to the Soviet regime. In academic literature, this process is usually explained by the necessary unfolding, as circumstances came to allow it, of the oppositionist mindset of the Soviet liberal intelligentsia. An idea well expressed by Michael Urban in his landmark study of the rebirth of politics in Russia: “At the core of the liberal world-view were concepts of opposition: at first, opposition to stagnation, to bureaucrats and conservatives; later, as perestroika proved disappointing, opposition to everything associated with the communist system, including perestroika and its chief proponent.”Footnote 9 Explanations vary regarding the source of this alleged oppositionist mindset. A first set of studies simply takes it for granted, following either an implicit liberal assumption on the struggle opposing society to the state, or an explicit “realist” approach considering opposition as a self-evident strategy for democrats as rational actors under authoritarian rule.Footnote 10 A second set of studies takes the Soviet liberals’ oppositionist mindset as its very object of investigation, either to celebrate it as a demonstration of moral courage in the face of power, or to lament it as the shameful legacy of the Bolshevik revolutionary ethos.Footnote 11 In post-Soviet Russia, the Soviet liberals’ alleged oppositionist mindset is routinely denounced, in echo to Vekhi's classical argument, as yet another demonstration of the destructive radicalism typical of the Russian intelligentsia.Footnote 12 However diverse in their assumptions and conclusions, all these appraisals concur in that the Soviet liberals’ shift against the regime was the logical expression of their inherent drive towards opposition, once circumstances allowed.
In this paper, I would like to challenge this common understanding by unpacking the notion of opposition in the context of perestroika. Following an approach fruitfully applied to previous periods, I wish to historicize this notion in order to question the assumption of an anti-regime sentiment on the part of educated Soviet citizens.Footnote 13 Opposition, indeed, is a catch-all concept that can refer to a wide array of discourses and practices, from moral to political opposition, from internal exile to revolutionary upheaval. In order to bring some clarity and precision to the matter, it is useful to recall the fine-tuned typologies of oppositions elaborated in the 1970s and 1980s by scholars of communist regimes inspired by Robert Dahl's 1966 seminal work.Footnote 14 In the context of communist regimes, this literature has highlighted two main variables by which types of opposition differ: the opposition's goals and strategies. Footnote 15 The goals, on the one hand, range along a spectrum defined by the extent to which they differ from those of the government, from limited disagreements on specific matters to rejection of the whole political system, with many intermediary positions in-between.Footnote 16 The strategies, on the other hand, include non-public actions such as letters- and petitions-writing, and peaceful public actions such as manifestations and picket lines, as well as violent struggle. It should be underlined that these two variables are related, but distinct: highly unorthodox goals can be pursued through very orthodox means of action, or the other way around. Considering this variety of possible options and combinations, the meaning of “opposition” can certainly not be taken for granted.
In this paper, I use primary materials from the debates taking place within the MT between 1988 and 1991 to elucidate the goals and strategies of the opposition embodied by established Soviet liberals. I draw on the comparative scholarship on types of oppositions in communist regimes to make sense of these choices in a larger historical picture. Indeed, the MT did not appear in a vacuum; it was informed by the legacy of the Soviet and east European dissident movements, as well as the recent experimentations of the Soviet informal movement, and the east European revolutions of 1989, all of which provided the club members with different repertoires of organization and action. As a matter of fact, the discussions among MT members reveal a plurality of visions of opposition among Soviet liberals. In this paper, this plurality is addressed both diachronically and synchronically. On the one hand, I show how the opposition embodied by MT shifted over time, following the drastic changes in domestic and international circumstances, which occurred more swiftly than anyone anticipated. On the other hand, the discussions taking place at the MT demonstrate that these intellectuals were constantly divided over the need to stand in opposition to the government, even after it became thinkable, feasible, and even legal. Indeed, the main finding of this paper is that the opposition embodied by the MT experienced a two-speed radicalization during perestroika, with its goals evolving much faster than its strategies. While the objective of reforming communism was largely abandoned in favor of anti-communism over a strikingly short period of time, intellectuals at the MT were constantly divided over their desired relationship with the government. In the club's own terms, “moderates” remained faithful to the initial agenda of “constructive” opposition, which entailed full support of the government to help overcome the resistance to change, while “radicals” argued for a shift towards confrontational opposition to pressure the government from below. As this persistent divide demonstrates, and contrary to the narrative commonly established after 1991, opposition to communism did not necessarily entail a readiness to oppose the government, let alone to overthrow it as soon as circumstances allowed. At stake in these discussions, I suggest, were not only the fate of communism and that of the Soviet multinational state, but the role and purpose of opposition, an underappreciated question that will prove to have far-reaching consequences in post-Soviet Russia.
This article is based on materials gathered from private archives: from Andrei Sakharov's archives, at the Sakharov Archive in Moscow, and from Viacheslav Igrunov's archives, both at the Sakharov Archive and at the library of the International Society Memorial in Moscow.Footnote 17 These materials include documents issued by the MT, letters from members to the club's administrators, and session transcripts in written, audio, and video format. I complemented the fragmentary record of the session transcripts with various reports and comments on the MT sessions published in the official and informal Soviet press, which I consulted at the State Historic Public Library of Russia. Finally, I gathered information about the club functioning from published testimonies and from interviews with former club members.Footnote 18
Among the impressive variety of topics discussed at the MT—from the nationality question to amendments to the legal code, and economic reforms—the present paper focuses on debates that dealt specifically with the goals and strategies of the opposition. The article is organized in four parts. The first section is devoted to the creation of the club and the initial definition of its purpose. The next section deals with the first debate regarding its relation to Gorbachev, which took place in the fall of 1988. The third section deals with the renewed debate that arose over the meaning of opposition in 1989 in the context of the rebirth of competitive politics in Soviet Russia and the revolutionary experience in eastern Europe. The final section jumps in time to the fall of 1991, when MT members clashed again over the meaning of opposition, but this time it meant opposition to Boris El΄tsin, who by then had established himself as the main leader over the course of reforms in Soviet Russia.Footnote 19 At the most immediate level, each of these debates dealt with tactical considerations informed by very specific circumstances. Yet it is precisely this diachronic variance that makes the recurrent divide of Soviet liberals over strategies of opposition even more striking. From 1988 to 1991, the lines of division between “moderates” and “radicals” at the club remained broadly the same, despite the enormous ideological and political shift they experienced during this period, thus revealing a deep-seated yet implicit dilemma on the very meaning of opposition.
1988: The Initial Definition of Opposition
The MT was created thanks to the conjoined efforts of three established Soviet liberals: the historian Leonid Batkin, who was its initiator and master mind, his friend and fellow historian Iurii Afanas΄ev, a successful academic entrepreneur who put up together the founding group and facilitated logistics issues, and the physicist and famous dissident Andrei Sakharov, the great moral figure who decisively contributed to the club's reputation and attractiveness. In the summer of 1988, Batkin aptly described the general state of mind of the Soviet liberal intelligentsia as “measured optimism.”Footnote 20 On the one hand, perestroika had taken the promising path of democratization since the January 1987 Central Committee plenum, and this course had been confirmed in April 1988 by the official rebuttal in Pravda of Nina Andreeva's conservative manifesto. In June of the same year, the Nineteenth Party Conference adopted an ambitious agenda of political reforms, including the creation of a new legislative body chosen through competitive elections. On the other hand, Gorbachev's numerous inconsistencies disturbed his supporters. The reforms decided at the June Party Conference, for example, failed to specify the voting system, which was to be negotiated behind closed doors at the highest level of the Party in the following months. It was feared that Gorbachev could yield to conservative pressure and allow the new democratic institution to become mere window dressing for unchanged domination of the Party. This worrying perspective seemed to be confirmed by the decrees adopted on July 28, 1988, curtailing the rights of demonstrations in reaction to the rise of street activism in Armenia, Estonia, and Moscow.Footnote 21
For Batkin, these contradictory trends in the course of reforms fostered the need for a club through which the Moscow intelligentsia would express its independent voice, which would be heard both by the Party reformers and the population. In the summer of 1988, Batkin and Afanas΄ev created an “initiative group” (initsiativnaia gruppa) responsible for the club's foundation. Most members of this founding group already knew each other, as they had collaborated a few months before for Inogo ne dano, a collection of essays in favor of perestroika, edited by Afanas΄ev.Footnote 22 The most famous among these contributors was undoubtedly Andrei Sakharov.Footnote 23 The decision to found the MT was taken on August 9, 1988, during an informal meeting in Protvino, in the Moscow region, where Sakharov and his wife were resting for the summer. A few months later, on October 12, some 120 scholars, writers, journalists and artists gathered for the first session of the club in the hall of ceremonies of Moscow Historical Archives Institute, which was made available thanks to its director, none other than Afanas΄ev. The “political-cultural social club Moscow Tribune” was officially founded on its fourth meeting, on February 4, 1989.Footnote 24 Ten months later, in December 1989, the club counted 194 duly registered members.Footnote 25 During the three following years, the club met more or less once a month, except for breaks from July to September. The meetings usually took place at 10 am on Saturdays in the halls of prestigious cultural or scientific institutions for sessions that lasted for no less than four hours.Footnote 26 Batkin and Afanas΄ev were its main leaders, as they chaired most of the sessions until the end of 1991, when their departure coincided with the club's rapid decline.Footnote 27
Both Batkin and Sakharov wrote in their memoirs that the MT was created as the “seed” (zachatok) of an opposition.Footnote 28 But what could opposition mean in the USSR in the summer of 1988? As evoked earlier, one must keep in mind that goals such as the democratization of the communist system did not necessarily entail strategies that would challenge the regime. To understand the MT's initial choice of goals and strategies and the shift that would subsequently occur, I draw on the comparative scholarship on types of oppositions in communist regimes.
In his political memoirs, Batkin recalled that the historian Mikhail Gefter had initially suggested the MT to be a kind of research seminar providing practical recommendations to the regime. This model corresponds to what has been described in comparative scholarship as “sectoral” or “specific” opposition: an opposition that limits its goals, however unorthodox they might be, to certain specific spheres—cultural, economic, scientific—and does not reject the regime or the system. Its most common strategies of action were non-public recommendations to the concerned authorities.Footnote 29 In the USSR, “sectoral opposition” was exemplified in the 1980s by influential academic think tanks led by Soviet liberals, like the Institute of Economics of the World Socialist System, the Institute of World Economy and International Relations, or the Novosibirsk Institute of Economics, which provided Soviet leaders with recommendations that could be bold in substance while presenting no direct challenge to the system.Footnote 30 This model of opposition, however, was rejected by the MT founders on the grounds that research seminars could now work freely in institutes, and also because its sectoral character would exclude parts of the intelligentsia such as artists or scholars of natural sciences.Footnote 31 This idea of an advisory opposition had such strong appeal that, despite its explicit rejection by MT leaders, some members went on expecting the club to produce specific scientific analyses and blaming its failure to do so.Footnote 32 At the session on February 4, 1989, an ultimate proposal to define the club's mission as “a corrective to the lack of professionalism of the power apparatus” was bluntly rejected by Batkin on the grounds that such a task was hopeless. Consequently, he insisted that the MT's duty was to allow the expression of public opinion and to provide “professional-expert work of an alternative character.”Footnote 33
The alternative character Batkin had in mind was to serve as a platform to overcome “the dispersion of the intellectual and creative forces, the lack of random and personal contacts between us, the impossibility of a large and regular exchange of opinions, judgements, and ideas.” In short, it was expected to “fully express the self-consciousness of the intelligentsia.”Footnote 34 Batkin was building on the traditional view in Russia, drawing back from the nineteenth century and cultivated by the Soviet regime, of the intelligentsia as a distinct and cohesive social body infused with a moral mission.Footnote 35 Indeed, MT members seemed to commonly assume that their club embodied the “Moscow intelligentsia”—in whose name it routinely spoke—and that, as such, their role was to enlighten both the authorities and society at large.Footnote 36 This sense of mission did not seem to require any explanation or justification, and was only spelled out from time to time as a reminder, lest the club members forget their duty. In November 1988, for example, Afanas΄ev commented on the club's activities as follows: “the Moscow intelligentsia should not lose sight that its opinion must be expressed and delivered to the public (obshchestvennost΄) and the leadership (rukovodstvo).”Footnote 37 There was nonetheless one important limitation to this idea of embodying the whole intelligentsia, and it was an explicit ideological criterion. The club's founding document welcomed members with a diversity of views, on the express condition that they supported perestroika “as a historical chance for reforms in the spheres of economy, law, foreign policy and ecology, under the control of democratic institutions,” de facto excluding a wide group of nationalist and communist intellectuals who challenged the course of Gorbachev's reforms, but also Soviet liberal dissidents who did not trust perestroika.Footnote 38 MT's initial goals, without any ambiguity, were defined in support of Gorbachev's agenda of reform communism. Yet, which strategies could the “seed of an opposition” legitimately use to pursue such objectives?
With regard to its relationship with the Soviet regime, the MT aspired to “mutual respect and reasonable dialogue.”Footnote 39 It categorically rejected what comparative scholarship has called either “structural,” “subversive,” or “integral” opposition, which rejects the government or even the system, and opts for strategies of covert or overt resistance, from mass demonstrations to violent revolts or revolutionary conspiracies.Footnote 40 In 1988, this strategy was emphatically exemplified in Russia by the Democratic Union, a self-declared opposition party that openly challenged the Soviet regime and organized street protests that came under harsh police repression. In explicit contrast, the MT officially declared to operate on the ground of “political realism,” a notion Batkin defined as the ability to bring change by seriously taking into account all the constraints of the situation.Footnote 41 Not the least among these constraints was a challenge typical of oppositions in communist countries: “to establish its credibility as a loyal, non-insurrectionary group working to improve the existing body politic [in a society where] public opposition violates one of the most important mores of the political culture.”Footnote 42 Taking this situation into account, the MT designed its initial strategies with great caution.
The MT has probably been inspired in its modes of organization and action by the club Perestroika, founded the year before, in March 1987, which held regular discussions in prestigious Moscow institutes and disseminated its ideas by sending petitions to the regime and by publishing a monthly bulletin.Footnote 43 Similar to the club Perestroika, the MT scrupulously avoided any mention of the term “opposition” and rather described itself as a “social scientific-consultative council,” whose discussions aimed at “revealing and comparing different approaches, as well as elaborating general evaluations, predictions, and especially positive economic, political, and cultural recommendations.”Footnote 44 This model corresponds to what political scientist H. Gordon Skilling proposed to call “fundamental opposition,” an intermediary between advisory opposition and subversive opposition, which aims at “opposition to, or severe criticism of, a whole series of key policies of the regime, reflecting crucial differences in standards of value but not a rejection of the Communist system itself.”Footnote 45 For Skilling, an eminent example of fundamental opposition under communism is the 1968 Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia, which was meant to profoundly reform the system from within.
This delicate balance between criticism and loyalty was in many respects an ambiguous and blurred one, but it should not be discarded retroactively as a contradiction symptomatic of pathological doublethink.Footnote 46 In late communist regimes prior to 1989, as a rule, most of those denouncing the abuses of communism considered that the only realistic and relatively safe way to change the regime was from within. This was also true in Poland and Hungary, where informal groups could operate somewhat more freely than in the USSR prior to perestroika. Batkin's “political realism” in this sense closely echoed Adam Michnik's “new evolutionism” and Janos Kis's “radical reformism,” which meant openly recognizing and working within the boundaries of established realities, including the leading role of the Party.Footnote 47 In documents from the MT, this balanced strategy was called “constructive opposition,” thus anticipating a common expression in post-Soviet Russia to designate an opposition that is relatively autonomous, yet loyal to the Kremlin.Footnote 48
1988: Debating the Relation to Gorbachev
During its first months of existence, from October 1988 to February 1989, the MT's preferred mode of action was to send addresses to the media and governing bodies. One of its main preoccupations at the time was the ongoing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. On this issue, the MT even proposed itself as a mediator to reach a peaceful resolution, sending a special delegation to the Caucasus to investigate and eventually created a special committee to act as a relay between the Soviet state and incarcerated informal leaders from the Caucasus.Footnote 49 The most prominent issue discussed in the club at the time, however, was Gorbachev's announced political reform, which raised crucial questions regarding the desired relationship between the MT and the government. On November 12, 1988, the MT met in the House of Artists to discuss the political reform project. After being outlined at the Nineteenth Party Conference in June, its details had been publicized in the fall for a month-long public discussion before its final adoption. The project provided that a new legislative body was to be elected in the spring of 1989, the Congress of the People's Deputies, through a Byzantine system of voting, which reserved a third of the seats to delegates from social organizations, including the Communist Party, the Komsomol, and professional organizations. This huge parliament of more than two thousand deputies was in principle to become the main legislative authority, but in practice it would only meet a few weeks every year, and its first task would be to elect the members of a smaller, permanent legislative body, the Supreme Soviet, whose chairman would become the head of the state. When discussing the project in the MT, most members agreed that it had numerous shortcomings and that its introduction would not prevent important decisions to be taken beyond public control. The members disagreed nonetheless on the public position they should take in regard to this not-so-democratic democratization.
The club's working documents used the labels “moderate” and “radical” to describe the two perspectives that regularly clashed during the MT meetings.Footnote 50 One must be careful, however, not to assume what this “moderation” and “radicalism” was about. At the MT, these labels did not reflect the members’ respective attitudes towards the communist system. All members, indeed, belonged to the camp supporting democracy, westernization, and a market economy. Some members, to be sure, aspired to reform socialism and admired Scandinavian social democracy, while others wanted a clear turn towards capitalism, but this distinction was not considered politically relevant at the time.Footnote 51 The moderate-radical divide within the MT concerned a much more immediate issue: the Soviet liberals’ strategies as an opposition.
Regarding Gorbachev's proposed political reform in fall 1988, speakers like Batkin, the sociologist Iurii Levada, the philosopher Vladimir Bibler, the historian Evgenii Ambartsumov, and the jurist Boris Kurashvili called for substantial modifications. Their propositions included the direct election of the head of state, the direct election of a permanent parliament, and the simplification of the nomination process for candidates.Footnote 52 Batkin summarized this “radical” position in an article denied publication, in which he criticized Gorbachev's project as a bizarre transitory model that could only deceive the population and turn it away from perestroika.Footnote 53 The adoption of the project, Batkin argued, should be delayed in order to organize a constitutional referendum. After all, he said, there was no hurry: “We lived a thousand years without democracy, let's take three more months to introduce a more mature form.”Footnote 54 This call for amendments, however, was met with skepticism by “moderate” members of the MT, like the physicist Evgenii Feinberg and the sociologists Vladimir Shubkin, Leonid Gordon, and Vladimir Iadov. They supported Gorbachev's project as a true democratic breakthrough that allowed the intelligentsia to elect “worthy” (dostoinye) people through their professional organizations.Footnote 55 MT moderates also expressed concern about the outcome of a potential direct election of the head of state, which could also lead to Gorbachev's overthrow and the end of perestroika. They were preoccupied by what they perceived as the corruption of the Soviet people: it would be “sociologically precocious,” in Shubkin's words, to entrust the people with such a decisive choice, considering their current state of agitation, their lack of political culture, and their high level of alcoholism.Footnote 56 Feinberg, for his part, declared that the three-month delay requested by Batkin was not enough “to replicate German consciousness, cure alcoholism, or improve anything substantial. We need to constantly work on that for much more time.”Footnote 57 At the end of the day, the “radical” position won the vote, and it was reflected in an official statement calling for amendments to the reform project.Footnote 58
It soon became obvious, however, that none of the MT's propositions were considered by Gorbachev. As soon as the third club session, on December 6, 1988, members of the MT expressed bitter disappointment about their own powerlessness. Elena Bonner observed that the club was conducting “empty discussions” that had no impact: “these are kitchen talks, and it does not change a thing that there are a hundred of us, and not five, like in a kitchen.”Footnote 59 From that moment onward, the failure of the dialogue with the Soviet leaders came to be considered as the club's greatest shortcoming.Footnote 60 This development prompted a first shift in the political stance of the MT.
1989: Shifting Opposition to Gorbachev
On February 4, 1989, Batkin gave a speech at the tribune on “the autonomy of society,” in which he insisted that a “natural, constructive, and well-intended opposition” must closely cooperate with mass organizations so it could be heard by the government. He insisted that such a position did not imply opposition to Gorbachev nor the introduction of a multiparty system, but the expression of an independent opinion that would exert influence through partnership and debate.Footnote 61 In this sense, a constructive opposition was presented as an essential condition for perestroika and for renewed popular confidence in the Communist Party. Following this logic, the club undertook two important changes to reinforce its independent position. First, it opened its doors for closer collaboration with the informal movement, including activists that resorted to “radical” actions such as street protest. This new policy was publicized in these terms: “Abandoning, if you wish, the aspect of an ‘elite reunion,’ carefully selecting its members, ‘Tribuna’ is inviting all those who wish to take an active part in discussions and expert and work groups on given themes.”Footnote 62 As a result, the MT rapidly co-opted many young leading figures of the informal movement, such as Sergei Stankevich and Oleg Rumiantsev. Second, many of the most famous figures of the club decided to run for a seat at the newly created Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union, in the hope of contributing to the legislative process. At the session on April 22, 1989, members of the MT applauded their elected candidates: Adamovich, Afanas΄ev, Gordon, Kariakin, Popov, Sagdeev, and Sakharov.Footnote 63 In the following months, the MT played a growing role in pre-electoral mobilization. Its first experience in the streets was a modest 30-minute demonstration on April 16 under heavy rain in front of the Georgian cultural center, in protest against the bloody repression that took place a week before in Tbilisi.Footnote 64 Commenting on this event, an informal leader remarked sarcastically: “The decision of members of Moscow Tribune to hold a demonstration was proof of their complete indignation at the actions of the authorities—members of this respectable organization preferred to meet in the comfortable hall of the House of Scholars. However, even now, the streets were still an alien and comfortless place.”Footnote 65 As the electoral campaign took pace, however, the MT did become increasingly involved in the informal movement. This collaboration culminated with a huge political meeting organized jointly by the MT and other informal organizations at the Luzhniki stadium on May 21, on the eve of the Congress's first session. The meeting was a success no one anticipated: more than 150,000 persons gathered to listen to rising political figures such as the maverick apparatchik Boris El΄tsin and the self-styled corruption-buster Tel΄man Gdlian, but also members of the MT such as Sakharov, Batkin, Afanas΄ev, Adamovich, and Kariakin.Footnote 66
The first session of the Congress, from May 25 to June 9, 1989, was a watershed in Soviet politics. To millions of viewers who followed it on TV, it exposed the deepening split between Gorbachev and Soviet liberal intellectuals. Sakharov, notably, caused a scandal by refusing to vote for Gorbachev at the head of the Congress without prior discussion and by calling openly for the abolition of the monopoly of the Communist Party. At the MT session that took place immediately afterwards, Batkin declared that the club should pursue the strategy adopted in February and “go to the people,” to encourage the “involvement of wide masses in perestroika.” The MT, he said, “should play the role of an intellectual bridge between the democratic minority at the Congress and society.”Footnote 67 Again, the main impetus for the shift towards more direct opposition was the perceived failure to be heard by Gorbachev, but the foreign context was also important. With the unexpected electoral triumph of Solidarnosc (Solidarity) in Poland on June 4, the Soviet liberals could begin to consider open contestation of the regime as something other than political suicide. In an article published at the time, Batkin explicitly called to follow the “Polish model” in creating an opposition that would enter into dialogue with the government with the support of a powerful mass movement.Footnote 68
Not only was the “Polish model” inspirational, but direct advice from Solidarity intellectual Adam Michnik helped to create the first legal parliamentary fraction in the Soviet Union, the Interregional Deputies Group (Mezhregional΄naia deputatskaia gruppa, hereafter MDG), de facto challenging the Communist Party's leadership over perestroika.Footnote 69 The MT, again, was closely involved in the process, as three of the five MDG co-chairmen were members of the club—Afanas΄ev, Sakharov, and Popov.Footnote 70 Although the MDG staunchly refused to call itself an opposition, it devised an alternative “program” of reforms, which included demands such as the creation of a multiparty system, the rejection of all non-democratic provisions of the electoral law, and the formal abolition of censorship. In the fall of 1989, however, the failure of the MDG to impose its program to the next session of the Congress, along with the revolutionary upheavals in Eastern Germany and Czechoslovakia, prompted some “radical” MT members to consider the use of bolder repertoires of action to pressure Gorbachev from below, such as mass demonstrations and political strikes.Footnote 71
These developments were met with great defiance from many members of the MT. Some went as far as to call for a halt to democratization and claimed that Gorbachev could only overcome conservative resistance if he turned himself into a “progressive dictator.”Footnote 72 Most of the “moderates,” however, stood on middle ground: they insisted on supporting Gorbachev, but without giving up on democratization. They notably expressed their disagreement with the “radicals” during the MT session of November 18, 1989. Political scientist Viktor Sheinis initiated the discussion by arguing that the main obstacle to perestroika was not the resistance of the Party apparatus nor Gorbachev's passivity, but the “rightist populist” mass movements emerging at the time, especially the Unified Front of Workers.Footnote 73 In the face of this threat, democratic forces should rally in support of Gorbachev by turning their discourse from criticism to “constructive propositions.”Footnote 74 This argument was echoed by the playwright Aleksandr Gel΄man, the translator Stella Aleinikova-Vol΄kenshtein, and the sociologist Viktoriia Chalikova, who insisted that the Communist Party was still the only real political force in the country and that, considering the absence of any massive democratic movement like Solidarity, the democrats should strive to influence the Party from within. The MT, moreover, was accused of having undermined the legitimacy of Gorbachev, to whom there was no alternative.Footnote 75 In the opposing camp, the “radical” position was most vividly voiced by the sinologist Iakov Berger. For him, Gorbachev's perestroika had exhausted itself, as the reformer proved himself incapable of forming any alliance with the rising democratic forces. The philosopher Bibler even suggested that the MT should take the lead of the democratic opposition, since the MDG was failing to do so.Footnote 76 According to a journalist who attended the session, the majority of the audience shared the feelings of the “radical” camp. The situation must have remained tense nonetheless, because Batkin concluded the session by stating that it was currently impossible to make a call between the two camps.Footnote 77
This dispute forcefully erupted in public a few weeks later when some MT leaders called on their own initiative for a two-hour nationwide political strike against Gorbachev on December 11, following the recent example of Czechoslovakia, requesting the Soviet leader include the MDG proposals in the agenda of the Congress's second session scheduled to begin on December 12. The call for strike, signed by five prominent MDG figures including Sakharov, caused a virulent outcry among “moderate” MT and MDG members, who accused the “radicals” of playing into the hands of the conservatives, leading one of the signatories of the appeal to withdraw his support, arguing a misunderstanding.Footnote 78 In answer, Sakharov delivered a passionate speech, a few hours before his death on December 14, an outright advocacy of opposition, not only to the abuses of communism, but also to the Communist Party and to Gorbachev's rule: “What is opposition? We cannot take all the responsibility for what the leadership is doing. It is leading the country to a catastrophe, delaying the process of perestroika for many years. The only way, the only possible evolutionary path is the radicalization of perestroika.”Footnote 79 This was a dramatic shift from Sakharov's own views at the beginning of the same year, when he fully agreed with the general position of the MT in believing that opposition was “constructive” only as far as it did not question the leadership of perestroika.Footnote 80 In this respect, Sakharov's evolution through 1989 was typical of that of other MT “radicals” such as Batkin and Afanas΄ev. Yet, it was not representative of Soviet liberals in general, since many in the MT remained loyal to the initial strategy of unfailing support towards Gorbachev.
1991: Opposition to El΄tsin
Despite Sakharov's death and the massive dismissal of the preemptive general strike among Soviet liberals in December 1989, the shift of the MT towards opposition to Gorbachev accelerated in the two following years, paradoxically facilitated by Gorbachev himself, who allowed the adoption of a multiparty system in March 1990.Footnote 81 Many members of the MT were directly involved in the creation and coordination of a mass organization in opposition to the Communist Party: first the short-lived Civic Union, modelled on the example from Czechoslovakia, and later the movement Democratic Russia (hereafter DR), which went on to organize the largest demonstrations in Russian history in the spring of 1991.Footnote 82 Again, the example of eastern Europe played a decisive role, as many Soviet liberals became convinced that the Soviet Union, after having led the way of reforms with perestroika, was now lagging behind its western neighbors and desperately needed to catch up on them. In the spring of 1990, for example, a delegation of eight Soviet deputies, including four MT members, travelled to Poland at the invitation of Solidarity and marveled at the course of reforms, one deputy concluding that “Poland is now what we'll be tomorrow.”Footnote 83 The influence from eastern Europe also took the form of “indirect spillover,” in Mark Kramer's words, as old verities and established assumptions were profoundly discredited.Footnote 84 Thus, the agenda of reform communism was severely shaken by the landslide victories of anti-communist forces in eastern Europe, including in countries with a traditionally left-leaning intelligentsia, such as Eastern Germany. In the Soviet Union, shortly afterwards, the failure to build a “Democratic platform” within the Communist Party led prominent MT members like Afanas΄ev to quit the Party with a bang and to vociferously reject communism.Footnote 85 These foreign influences notwithstanding, the most decisive factor facilitating the Soviet liberals’ move towards opposition to Gorbachev was domestic: the emergence of Boris El΄tsin as an alternative reformer. Having become the undisputed leader of the democratic movement after the death of Sakharov, El΄tsin managed to be elected in the spring of 1990 at the head of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, following the example of the Baltic popular fronts in using republican institutions as a lever to challenge Gorbachev from within the system.Footnote 86
Originally created in January 1990 as a democratic voting coalition for the March elections in Russia, DR was transformed into a full-fledged political movement in the fall of 1990. It soon gained support from many members of the MT, both “radicals” and “moderates,” yet for different reasons. MT “radicals” were pleased to finally join a mass organization in overt rejection to the Communist Party, while “moderates” approved DR's unfailing support of Boris El΄tsin, whom they saw as the true protector of statehood (gosudarstvennost΄) and social order, while Gorbachev came to be associated with state collapse and ethnic feuds.Footnote 87 The divide between “moderates” and “radicals” persisted nevertheless, as there was still a fundamental disagreement with regard to the relations between the Soviet liberal intelligentsia and the new reformer—El΄tsin. The last of these key discussions within the MT took place in October 1991. After the failed putsch of August and the dissolution of the Communist Party, El΄tsin managed to get the upper hand on his rival Gorbachev and to impose himself as primarily responsible for the course of reforms. The Soviet liberal intelligentsia and the DR movement were then confronted with tactical questions that would decide their political fate. Notwithstanding the radical novelty of the situation after the coup, the question of opposition was raised by the liberal intelligentsia in terms very similar to the ones used two years before: either to support the government (then: Gorbachev, now: El΄tsin); to help overcome the resistance of conservative forces (then: the Party apparatus and organizations like the United Front of Worker, now: the “red-brown plague”); or to hold an independent stance to pressure the government from below and ensure that it properly realized its reform agenda.Footnote 88 To put it more succinctly, should Soviet liberals stick to their initial strategies of constructive opposition, or should they allow themselves to denounce El΄tsin's shortcomings the same way they had criticized Gorbachev?
At the MT, the initial trigger of this discussion in the fall of 1991 was an article by the literary scholar Marietta Chudakova, who called for all the democratic forces to rally behind El΄tsin to help him definitively overthrow communism. El΄tsin deserved unfailing support, she argued, because democrats for the first time in many years shared a “real affinity” with the rulers in the “sincere rejection of the Party and its methods.” Writing about the new Russian government, she stated emphatically: “they are ours, it is our regime (nasha vlast΄), we walk on the same ground and the cold autumn rain falls on us from the same sky.” She also expressed her dream for all intellectuals of “a moratorium on all irrelevant emotions,” a kind of self-censorship she thought was necessary because the “exhausted population” would not understand if the democrats went on criticizing each other.Footnote 89
Prior to its publication, Chudakova presented her article at the MT session on October 26, 1991, where it was warmly applauded and found support from influential members, including the publicists Ales΄ Adamovich and Vasilii Seliunin.Footnote 90 Her arguments were also met with a strong rebuttal from the “radicals,” beginning with Batkin. The support to the Russian government, he claimed, should be conditional based on its reform agenda, and this will not happen without pressure from below. The engineer Iurii Boldyrev, who had become an influent MP at the Congress, warned that El΄tsin, although nominally a democrat, should not be trusted blindly because he had shown worrying authoritarian tendencies. Beyond these tactical considerations, some “radicals” categorically rejected the democrats’ imperative of unity with “their” regime. For the sinologist Berger, this attitude of collaboration was simply immoral, because it rested on conformism and thirst for power. For Batkin, it ran counter to the critical and reflexive vocation of the intelligentsia.Footnote 91 In an article published shortly afterwards, he mocked Chudakova's lyrical formula: “there are many people with whom we walked on the same ground throughout this century, and the rain keeps falling from the sky, but not everyone gets wet the same way. There is no such thing as our regime, at least in democracy.”Footnote 92 This last point referred to a more fundamental argument, stipulating that the unity to which Chudakova aspired was incompatible with democracy because it blurred the distinction between the state and society. As the philosopher Bibler declared during the debate in the MT: “If democracy is equated with the ruling regime (vlast΄), then there is no democracy.”Footnote 93
Shortly afterwards, a similar debate took place at the head of DR, leading the “radical” leaders to walk out from the organization in January 1992.Footnote 94 From that moment onward, DR consistently adopted a policy of full support to El΄tsin.Footnote 95 At the end of the day, the three-year battle fought between Soviet liberal “moderates” and “radicals” regarding politics of opposition ended with the “moderates’” decisive victory. Famous members of this camp, like Adamovich, Chudakova, Kariakin, and Migranian were promoted to the prestigious Presidential Council, while the MT “radicals” either took part in the creation of the liberal opposition party Iabloko, like Boldyrev, or withdrew from political activism, like Batkin and Afanas΄ev, as their propositions for an autonomous democratic movement fell on deaf ears against the background of growing tensions between the Russian presidency and the Russian Congress in 1991–93.Footnote 96 A similar development occurred in the MT itself. After the departure of its founding leaders in late 1991, the club pursued its activities for a few years under the new chairmanship of the sociologist Vladimir Iliushenko.Footnote 97 With a sharply declining membership, the club's general orientation changed in favor of the “moderate” position: the majority of its members now fully supported El΄tsin, in apprehension of a conservative backlash by nationalists and communists.Footnote 98
The Moscow Tribune was a unique phenomenon in recent Russian intellectual and political history, not only because of the high profile of its members, which distinguished it from other discussion clubs of the time, but also because of its prominent role in the political struggles that marked the last years of the Soviet Union. The debates that took place in this club, therefore, constitute a precious vantage point to analyze the changing goals and strategies of the opposition led by elite Soviet liberals, from supporting Gorbachev and reform communism, to supporting El΄tsin and anticommunism. This radicalization, it turns out, did not result from the logical unfolding of an alleged oppositionist mindset as soon as circumstances allowed. Circumstances, of course, did play a crucial enabling role. In a country where the notion of opposition used to be branded “at worst as treasonable, at best as pathological,” Soviet liberals with relatively privileged positions would not have turned massively against the regime, if it had not been for the political opening granted by Gorbachev and for the example provided by the democratic upheavals in eastern Europe.Footnote 99 Yet, the analysis of key debates taking place within the MT demonstrates that the impact of these developments on Soviet liberals was not straightforward. In fact, Soviet liberals at the club experienced a two-speed radicalization during perestroika: while their goals quickly evolved from reform communism to anticommunism, they remained divided over strategies, as they kept disagreeing over the need to create an opposition to the government, even when it became both thinkable and feasible. Following the terms used at the club, “moderates” remained faithful to the initial agenda of constructive opposition, which entailed full support of the government to help overcome resistance to change, while “radicals” argued for a shift towards confrontational opposition to pressure the government from below. The Soviet liberals’ shift towards opposition during perestroika, in sum, was anything but self-evident; it was reluctant, reactive, and constantly disputed.
This conclusion allows us to refine our understanding of the role of the liberal intelligentsia during perestroika in three important ways. First, it reminds us once again not to assume an anti-regime sentiment on the part of the educated Soviet population, even when it stands in opposition to communism. To be clear, the point here is not to celebrate or to lament the Soviet liberals’ relative reluctance to form an opposition, but to observe the very recurrence of their disagreement on this issue from 1988 to 1991, a recurrence that cannot be satisfactorily explained by factors such as the decreasing level of institutional constraints or the deep-seated determinations of political culture.
Indeed, what was at the root of this persisting divide? The second way in which the case of MT is enlightening is that it leads us to reappraise Soviet liberals’ assumed main lines of action during perestroika. Much has been written regarding the spectacular ideological shift they experienced at the time, which saw the definitive discrediting of Marxism-Leninism and the demise of reform communism.Footnote 100 However momentous, this ideological shift does not suffice to explain the constant divide observed within MT, which persisted well into 1991, after reform communism had been largely abandoned by Soviet liberals. As a matter of fact, the debates at the MT were not driven by ideology in the sense of a confrontation of clear-cut social and political worldviews.Footnote 101 The core of the disagreements, as we have seen, opposed “moderates” and “radicals” over the question of their desired relationship with the government. Such dichotomy is far from new, yet the struggle going on at MT challenges the established knowledge regarding the victory of El΄tsinites over Gorbachevians as the triumph of radicals over moderates. The dénouement of perestroika is usually told, in echo to Crane Brinton's classical “anatomy” of revolutions, as the story of hubris-driven radicals overtaking the moderates and overthrowing the regime.Footnote 102 Yet, the situation turns out to be much more complex if one considers, as distinct variables, the goals and strategies espoused by the Soviet liberals as an opposition. True, El΄tsin's supporters were much more radical than Gorbachev's in their goals: they usually went further in their rejection of communism and, consequently, in the depth and speed of the reforms to which they aspired. Yet, when it came to the choice of strategies in relation to the government, the adoption by most Soviet liberals of a definitive pro-government stance in late 1991 marked the victory of none other than the “moderates,” who had always insisted on supporting unfailingly the “enlightened reformer.”Footnote 103 The victory of anticommunism, in short, came at the price of the rejection of oppositional politics by most Soviet liberals in order not to hinder the course of reforms, an underappreciated outcome that had far-reaching consequences afterward.
The reluctance to stand in opposition sheds light on the motives that inspired many liberal intellectuals, in the years following perestroika, to support and to grant democratic legitimacy to the Russian president's attempts at the monopolization of political power, which was eventually enshrined in the 1993 Constitution.Footnote 104 The debate on opposition observed within the MT also foreshadows one of the most important dividing lines of post-Soviet Russian politics. Throughout the 1990s and, indeed, the early 2000s, disagreements over the politics of opposition were at the core of the irreconcilable dissension between the liberal party Iabloko, which embodied the “radical” position formerly expressed in the MT, and the various pro-presidential liberal parties, like Choice of Russia, Democratic Choice of Russia, and the Union of Right Forces, which followed the principles promoted by “moderates” in the MT.Footnote 105 Beyond personal feuds between party leaders, this line of contention reflected a long-standing dilemma that was first publicly debated during perestroika and has not lost its currency still.
More broadly, I would like to suggest that this debate on opposition is crucial because it raises a fundamental question about the purpose and nature of democracy, insisting either on its efficiency in the resolution of urgent policy questions, such as economic reform, or on its ability to guarantee opportunities for citizens to participate in political life. Far from being specific to Soviet Russia, this political predicament echoed “the essential conflict between the deontological imperative of democracy and pragmatic concerns to achieve results efficiently,” observed by James Krapfl among the Czechoslovak democrats in the wake of 1989.Footnote 106 Hence, the third and final lesson taught by the debates at the MT is to invite us to think of democratization as an open-ended transformation that entails intractable choices regarding the design and dynamics of its desired outcome. Arguably, citizens of established democracies can hardly claim more certitudes in this regard than their Soviet or east European counterparts.