Saturday, August 20, 2011

Memories of Twenty Years Back: The Soviet Putsch


I was planning to return to Moscow on August 23, 1991. We were about to begin an advisory project for the USSR Oil and Gas Ministry. I was in Houston, Texas.

It must have been August 20. I awoke to the news that hardliners organized a putsch against the vacationing Gorbachev. His reforms were too much for them. CNN showed a rather sorry group of  old and typical party apparatchiks. They did not exude confidence.

Everything was in flux. The commentators had nothing so say. CNN turned to live feed from the streets. No commentary. Crowds were everywhere. Tanks and troops were everywhere.

One live feed convinced me that the Yeltsin side had a good chance. It was a scene of an old woman, pleading with a young soldier in a tank: “Please do not fire. Do not do anything. Just go home.”

CNN then showed the huge crowds around the White House. The famous scene of Yeltsin mounting the tank to address the crowds. Finally, there was the withdrawal of troops and tanks. The reformers had won.

I remember Gorbachev’s return. He appeared before the Duma. No one paid him attention. The old communist Soviet Union was, in effect, no more.

I was in Moscow several days later. I must have stayed there three weeks or so. The most vivid memory was the sense of optimism and joy. I talked to a friend whose sons had joined the crowd protecting the White House. I asked: Did you not try to persuade your sons not to go. At that time, the best guess is that they would have been shot.  Her answer: I was proud that they went. The cause was worth it.

I was in the White House shortly after the victory. I remember the optimistic parliamentary deputies saying: Now we have the power. We will transform Russia. One made a special point to show me the White House cafeteria. Its food was no better than anyone else’s. What a change from the communists.

By looking backwards from the present-day Putin KGB state, I understand the sense of disappointment of the Russian people. Russia had its brief chance and blew it. What a shame.

7 comments:

  1. Mayer managed some of Google’s most successful innovations, launching more than 100 features and products including image, book and product search, toolbar, iGoogle, Google News, and Gmail – creating much of the “look and feel” of the Google user experience.

    yahoo.com! Co-Founder David Filo said, “Marissa is a well-known, visionary leader in user experience and product design and one of Silicon Valley’s most exciting strategists in technology development.

    ReplyDelete
  2. A few months after unveiling a new design for gmail, Google is ready to roll that out to G Suite business customers alongside some new features for Google Voice and Google Drive, as it continues to emphasize its business productivity software suite at Google Cloud Next in San Francisco.

    You snooze, you win; at least when it comes to the new Gmail design. The revamped email software now allows all G Suite users to snooze an email like you would with that wretched alarm clock, surfacing a reminder to deal with it later after the coffee has kicked in. The new design also comes with enhanced security features driven by machine-learning techniques applied to spam and phishing emails, as well as the Smart Reply and organization features announced by Google back in April.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Google’s email service has been growing rapidly as hotmail usage has been declining.

    Microsoft is hoping to turn that around.

    Outlook.com connects tightly with social networks, integrates with Microsoft’s SkyDrive storage service, and offers a set of tools to fight inbox clutter. The streamlined user interface is designed to bring Microsoft’s consumer email service into the modern world of tablets and smartphones.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The insights, wisdom, and perspectives you share have the power to ignite a spark within readers, urging them to embrace new ideas, challenge their beliefs, and embark on their own personal journeys of growth. hotmail.com login

    ReplyDelete
  5. Connect, Share, and Thrive: Your World on Facebook

    ReplyDelete
  6. Well i think this documentary is true some how because when I went to russia the attitudes of russian people is quite aggresive and they even dont assist tourists which was a totally disappointment.

    outlook.com

    ReplyDelete