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http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-britain-gorbachev122
5dec
25.story?coll=sns%2Dap%2Dnationworld%2Dheadlines

Gorbachev Ridicules Yeltsin

By Associated Press

December 25, 2001, 7:37 AM EST

LONDON -- Ten years after he stepped down as president of the Soviet
Union, Mikhail Gorbachev called the man who replaced him in the Kremlin
an untrustworthy liar, saying Boris Yeltsin even had his phone tapped.

"While Yeltsin was in office, he tried to control everything I did,"
Gorbachev told the British Broadcasting Corp. in an interview televised
Tuesday, on the anniversary of his resignation, which put an end to the
Soviet Union.

"My phones were bugged, regional governors were told not to meet me, I
was even banned from appearing on live television," said Gorbachev, who
ceded power to Yeltsin, the Russian president.

The enmity between the two men goes back to the 1980s, when Gorbachev
brought Yeltsin to Moscow as party chief and then fired him in a dispute
over the pace of reforms. In the interview, Gorbachev recited a bitter
litany of complaints about Yeltsin.

"He always said he was against the idea of privileges, but Russian czars
didn't have the kind of privileges that Yeltsin had," Gorbachev said.
"Yeltsin is a strange man, full of tricks, and he's a liar, you just
can't trust him."

Like many Russians who see Yeltsin as an ineffectual leader who let
corruption thrive, Gorbachev praised Yeltsin's hand-picked successor,
President Vladimir Putin.

He said Putin has helped bring stability to a battered Russia and
praised his moves toward a warmer relationship with the United States as
bold.

Gorbachev also suggested his own relationship with Putin is warmer than
his soured connection to Yeltsin, who sometimes seemed eager to ignore
or humiliate him after his resignation. Under Putin, he said, he even
got a special hot line he can use to call the Kremlin.

"Putin is clearly a talented and mature politician -- he's cautious, and
he knows how to listen," Gorbachev said. "Sometimes he and I get
together to discuss different issues."

The last leader of the Soviet Union recalled his resignation as "the
most dramatic day of my life."

"In human terms it was a real blow," he said. "I had to keep calm but
inside I was full of emotion."

Copyright C 2001, The Associated Press

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