Former Russian p
resident Yeltsin dies
By DOUGLAS BIRCH, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 52 minutes ago
MOSCOW - Boris Yeltsin, who kicked the props out from under the tottering Soviet empire and then struggled to build a nation from its wreckage, died Monday after
seeing many of his democratic reforms rolled back. The former Russian p
resident was 76.
Kremlin
spokesman Alexander Smirnov confirmed Yeltsin's death. He died of heart failure Monday afternoon in the Central Clinical Hospital, Russian news agencies reported, citing Sergei Mironov, head of the p
residential administration's medical center.
Larger than life during his tenure, Yeltsin
shrank from public view following his
retirement on New Year's Eve 1999, and in recent years has rarely given interviews. But the big, bumptious politician with the soft pink features and wave of white hair could be seen again Monday in file footage on Russian television.
P
resident Vladimir Putin spoke to the nation four hours after the
announcement of Yeltsin's death to praise briefly Russia's first freely elected p
resident as a man "thanks to whom a whole new epoch has started."
"New democratic Russia was born, a free state open to the world; a state in which power truly belongs to the people," Putin said.
Yeltsin will be buried Wednesday in Moscow's
historic Novodevichy
cemetery, the resting place of such
diverse figures as writer Anton Chekhov and former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. Putin postponed his annual state of the state address from Wednesday to Thursday in deference.
Yeltsin was, according to Andrew Kuchins of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, "a
revolutionary leader at a
revolutionary moment," a
reformer who battled the Communist Party from the inside, an exultant wrecker of the U.S.S.R.'s totalitarian
regime.
But as p
resident of Russia, he seemed too willing to use force, too
tolerant of
corruption, too eager to trust his gut - even when it led to disaster.
He stood on top of a tank during the 1991 coup attempt by Communist hard-liners like a big game hunter celebrating his kill, but two years later, he ordered tanks to shell upstart members of parliament. He broke up the old Soviet Union, but then invaded Chechnya when the region joined the rush for independence.
He abolished the old KGB, but then named a KGB
veteran - Putin - as his heir apparent.
But what angered many Russians was how Yeltsin the
crusader against Soviet
corruption presided over a fire sale of state-owned industries to Kremlin insiders, a move which created a small cadre of Russian billionaires overnight.
Meanwhile, during his tenure, many ordinary Russian citizens saw their savings wiped out, their jobs
evaporate, the society their parents and grandparents had created disintegrate.
"He was one of us," said Galina Alexandrovna, a Moscow
resident, recalling the heady days after the Soviet
collapse. "When we elected him, we all shouted, 'Hurrah for Boris Yeltsin,' but then Russia started selling itself off and we the simple people didn't like what was happening."
Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet p
resident, eulogized Yeltsin - both a comrade and a nemesis - as one "on whose shoulders are both great deeds for the country and serious errors," according to the news agency Interfax.
Perhaps frustrated by Russia's stumbling out of the gate after the Soviet era, Yeltsin
increasingly concentrated power in his own hands - and finally handed the p
resident's enormous powers over to Putin, whose
loyalty impressed Yeltsin.
After Putin took power, he was careful to cultivate the image of the anti-Yeltsin. The second Russian p
resident always appears sober, where Yeltsin often was not; Putin is
decisive where Yeltsin waffled, firing Cabinet after Cabinet. And Putin appears calculating where Yeltsin could be
spontaneous, to the point of being impulsive.
Yeltsin's greatest moments, in fact, came during fitful flashes of
inspiration and surges of energy. From atop the tank, he led resistance to the attempted coup against Gorbachev in August 1991, and spearheaded the peaceful end of the Soviet state on Dec. 25 of that year.
Ill with heart problems, and facing possible defeat by a Communist challenger in his 1996 re-election bid, Yeltsin somehow sprinted through the final weeks of the
campaign. The challenge transformed the shaky convalescent into a spry, dancing candidate.
When he boogied onstage with two miniskirted women during that
campaign, some Russians laughed, while others rolled their eyes.
His career, in fact, was often punctuated by bizarre
behavior that the public chalked up to drinking. Red-faced pranks, missed appointments, and inarticulate and contradictory public comments were blamed by aides on jet lag, medication or illness.
Yeltsin was not one to apologize. "A man must live like a great, bright flame and burn as
brightly as he can," Yeltsin has been quoted as
saying. "In the end, he burns out. But this is better than a mean, little flame."
Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin was born Feb. 1, 1931, into a peasant family in the Sverdlovsk region of the Ural Mountains.
When he was 3, his father was imprisoned in
dictator Josef Stalin's purges for allegedly owning property before the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.
As a
mischievous child, he lost his thumb and index finger while playing with a stolen grenade.
Yeltsin was, by his own account, a garrulous, scrappy boy who loved pranks and sports, and was quick to fight. And from the start, he bucked authority. He was expelled from
elementary school for criticizing a teacher at a school assembly.
Brash and ambitious, he rose through the ranks of the Communist Party. But he chafed against the party's iron discipline and turned into one of its most determined foes.
After he helped bring down the old
regime, Yeltsin couldn't be bothered with the tricky matter of governing and was quick to blame subordinates for Russia's multiplying problems.
"He brought about the fairly peaceful
collapse of the Soviet Union, the dismantling of the Communist Party," Kuchins said. "Then he inherited a large hairball of a job that he wasn't well suited to do on a day-to-day basis."
He seemed to be a democrat by instinct, in a nation that had never known democracy. But as the years passed, he
increasingly concentrated power in his own hands. And when there was trouble, he frequently resorted to force to quell
dissent - claiming only that only harsh measures could keep the country together.
He sent tanks and troops in October 1993 to flush armed hard-liners out of a hostile parliament after violence in the streets of Moscow. And in December 1994, Yeltsin launched the first of two of Russia's wars against separatists in the southern republic of Chechnya - conflicts that would turn the Chechen capital of Grozny into a wasteland and cost the lives of tens of thousands.
Yeltsin sometimes seemed overwhelmed by his responsibilities. Former Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin said Yeltsin's health never recovered from the stress of
trying to steer Russia through some of its darkest hours.
"Yeltsin headed the country during the most difficult time and it could not but affect the health of even such a strong man," said Chernomyrdin, now ambassador to Ukraine.
Admirers
contend that it was the trauma of the U.S.S.R.'s death throes, not Yeltsin's
leadership, that brought Russia to the brink.
"If not for the strong will of Boris Nikolayevich, we cannot rule out that after Gorbachev, Russia could have plunged - for many, many years or even decades - into civil war," said Vyacheslav Kostikov, a former press secretary.
In the final years of his
presidency, Yeltsin was dogged by health problems and often seemed out of touch. He retreated
regularly to his country residence outside Moscow for weeks at a time.
Yet Yeltsin's debut as p
resident was stunning. He laid the foundation for what many hoped would later become a modern democracy - guaranteeing the rights to free speech, private property, multiparty elections, and opening the borders to trade and travel.
Though full of
bluster, he revealed more of his personal life and private doubts than any previous Russian leader.
"The debilitating bouts of depression, the grave second thoughts, the insomnia and headaches in the middle of the night, the tears and despair ... the hurt from people close to me who did not support me at the last minute, who didn't hold up, who deceived me - I have had to bear all of this," he wrote in his 1994
memoir, "The Struggle for Russia."
Yeltsin pushed through free-market reforms, creating a private sector and allowing foreign investment. In foreign
policy, he
assured independence for Russia's Soviet-era satellites, oversaw troop and arms reductions, and warmly embraced Western leaders.
Throughout his nearly decade-long
leadership, he remained Russia's strongest
bulwark against Communism.
"What set him apart was that he very often defeated his
opponents, but he never trampled on them," said Grigory Yavlinsky, the head of Russia's liberal Yabloko party, which under Putin has been marginalized. "He would knock an
opponent off his horse, but never destroy him. In his time there were many shortcomings and even crimes, but ... there was never any physical
removal of political
opponents in Russia, and that was his personal contribution."
But there was another Yeltsin.
He was hesitant to act against rampant crime and epic
corruption - beginning in his own administration - as both sapped public faith and crippled the young democracy. Millions were impoverished when wages and pensions went unpaid for months.
In the course of the Yeltsin era, per capita income fell by a staggering 75 percent, and the nation's population fell by more than 2 million. Vodka
consumption soared.
Yeltsin was a master of Kremlin intrigues, firing the entire government four times in 1998 and 1999. The economy sank into a deep recession in summer 1998, but Yeltsin rarely commented on the troubles and never offered a plan to
combat them.
While he seemed to lurch from
policy to
policy, he seemed
steadfast in his
determination to hold onto power. He easily faced down an impeachment attempt by the Communist-dominated lower
chamber of parliament in May 1999.
In foreign affairs, he struggled to preserve a role for Russia, which for centuries had defined itself as one of the great world powers.
But he also struggled to preserve a role for the former superpower to
offset U.S. global clout, and in 1999, he sent Russian troops to Kosovo - ahead of NATO peacekeepers - to show that Moscow would not be elbowed out of European affairs.
He wrangled with the West over NATO
expansion and Russia's close relations with Iran and Iraq. But as Russia's political and economic might withered, Yeltsin had little to offer other nations.
In recent years, Yeltsin seldom discussed his
legacy. He criticized Putin only rarely - once, in 2000, for a decision to
revive the old Soviet
anthem, and again in 2004, when Putin said he would end the direct election of governors.
In both cases, Yeltsin's one-time protege dismantled some of his mentor's reforms.
Boris Nemtsov, a leader of the liberal Union of Right Forces, noted that Yeltsin "loved freedom" and in the end protected the free press and Russia's multiparty democracy.
"All these achievements are now being destroyed, and I would say destroyed
cruelly and mercilessly," he told Echo Moskvy radio. "I think the best way to remember Yeltsin would be if we return freedom to our country."
Just last year, though, Yeltsin defended his choice of Putin, telling the newsweekly Itogi that without a "strong hand," Russia would have disintegrated.
Yeltsin is survived by his wife, Naina, two daughters and several grandchildren.
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