http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/gorbachev-is-the-last-20th-century-wilsonian/389864.html

Gorbachev Is the Last 20th-Century Wilsonian 
19 November 2009
By Fyodor Lukyanov
I first met former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in person in 1992 during a 
round-table discussion. Several months earlier, he stepped down from power. We 
all expected that Gorbachev, now freed from the burden of authority, would tell 
us what he was prohibited from saying earlier: the truth about events leading 
to the end of communism and the collapse of the Soviet Union. But he only spoke 
of the very things we had already grown so tired of hearing in recent years - 
of perfecting socialism and of the lost opportunity to preserve the renewed 
union.

The crowd gradually thinned as people lost interest, and I unexpectedly found 
myself alone with Gorbachev. Our conversation never touched on anything 
weighty, but from Gorbachev emanated a powerful charisma that seemed to envelop 
me. I still remember how it was ­impossible to avoid falling under his spell.

Seventeen years later, on the eve of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the 
Berlin Wall, I once again met with Gorbachev, this time intent on learning his 
views of those epochal events two decades ago.

I did not hear anything fundamentally new during our two-hour talk, but I think 
I learned the secret of his charisma. Gorbachev has a strong and healthy inner 
core. He was then, and is now, convinced of the correctness of his actions. It 
is not a merely intellectual conviction, but a moral one. Gorbachev did not 
have a transition strategy at the time, but he had an understanding of what was 
right and what was wrong, what actions were morally acceptable and which were 
not. The real mystery is how he retained his strong sense of values even while 
rising through the ranks of the Communist Party. However it happened, that 
moral force makes a strong impression, even if his views now seem out of touch 
with reality. 

Gorbachev continues to admire Lenin and considers him a model politician - bold 
and full of conviction, yet flexible and capable of making major tactical 
shifts. He sees Lenin as the supreme innovator and Stalin as the ultimate 
tyrant. 

Had a person with Gorbachev's views and values rose to power in the 1960s - 
when the Soviet Union had more diversified economic potential and the public 
had not yet become so thoroughly cynical - maybe he would have had a chance to 
turn the country toward something more productive. But Gorbachev inherited a 
society that was no longer capable of reforming itself. True, he does not 
believe that himself. Gorbachev continues to blame just one person for all that 
happened - former President Boris Yeltsin. His anger is strong and very 
personal. He refuses to acknowledge that the Soviet economy was in shambles. 
Gorbachev still maintains that he lost not an economic battle, but a political 
one, and that if Yeltsin had not stabbed him in the back he could have overcome 
all the other obstacles in his path. 

Gorbachev's attitude toward the West differs from that of both his two 
immediate successors. The post-Soviet Russian stance has fluctuated between 
early Yeltsin-era toadyism and the defiant self-assertion of Vladimir Putin. 
The roots of both feelings can be found in a lack of self-confidence. Gorbachev 
did not suffer from that problem, nor does he now, despite his own political 
misfortunes and fall from power. He has retained a sense of personal dignity. 
He is also dumbfounded when he sees how the former Soviet satellites and Baltic 
states so eagerly handed over to Washington and Brussels the very sovereignty 
they had fought so hard to obtain from Moscow, even though it was Gorbachev who 
started this process by revoking the Brezhnev Doctrine. 

Most Russians believe that the West reneged on its verbal promise not to expand 
NATO. According to Gorbachev, the accession of the newly unified Germany into 
NATO - the only expansion of that alliance discussed at the time - was not part 
of a separate deal, but part of an overall restructuring of Europe and the 
world. But those plans could not be carried out once the Soviet Union ceased to 
exist.

Gorbachev's plan was to convert the end of the Cold War - a unique 
confrontation that never degenerated into a direct clash - into a "joint 
venture" of sorts between two superpowers. But that never happened because, as 
it turned out, the Soviet ship, with Gorbachev as captain, sank. 

Today, Moscow has once again become fixated on the idea of having a buffer zone 
along its borders. And that approach to ensuring national security is perfectly 
reasonable if you assume that it's "every man for himself." Gorbachev has a 
different approach - that of an integral and indivisible security architecture. 
It is no coincidence that he frequently quotes former U.S. President John F. 
Kennedy: "There can either be peace for everyone, or for no one." 

What Russians considered and still consider as Gorbachev's naivete or even 
worse, his treason, is in fact a very conscious political idealism - one in 
which he, surprisingly, still has not lost faith. Gorbachev was the last 
Wilsonian of the 20th century. Like former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson during 
World War I, Gorbachev believed in "new thinking" in the name of global 
harmony. Having conceived the League of Nations, ­Wilson could not convince his 
own ­countrymen to support the concept, and that organization entered history 
as a symbol of helplessness. But that idea outlived its author and was finally 
deemed successful when the United Nations was created in 1945. The UN served as 
a stabilizing force in global affairs until the end of the Cold War, and it 
will probably regain this role in the future.

The world of the 21st century has not lived up to the expectations of Gorbachev 
or of those who, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, proclaimed themselves 
the victors. Meanwhile, the new world order has not taken shape - at least not 
as it was envisioned by Gorbachev or by former U.S. Presidents George H.W. Bush 
and George W. Bush. Like Wilson before him, Gorbachev witnessed the failure of 
his attempts to overcome superpower egoism for the sake of the common good. 

Gorbachev's and Wilson's idealism remain milestones on the path toward 
progress. But the regularity with which politics chews up and spits out the 
latest idealist and then continues on with business as usual leads me to doubt 
whether any progress has been achieved at all. 

Fyodor Lukyanov is editor of Russia in Global Affairs.


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