Does Gorbachev Deserve Platitudes on His 90th?
Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev, inheritor of Brezhnev,
Khrushchev, Stalin and Lenin, and the last ruler of the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics – the Evil Empire
as President Reagan correctly
observed – is 90 years old and some are fawning over his achievements as
dubious as they were.
So what’s the big deal?
The National Security Archive at nsarchive.gwu.edu/ wrote a
happy birthday tribute to him titled “Gorbachev’s Greatest Hits.”
Among other things, the article states: “Gorbachev did not
have time to realize many of his ideas, chief among them the creation of a new
voluntary and democratic and demilitarized Soviet Union. But the seven
years he spent as leader of the Soviet Union changed the world to an extent
nobody imagined before. Gorbachev, more than any other figure, ended the
Cold War, then worked to ensure the story could be told.”
According to Reuters, President Putin hailed his predecessor
Gorbachev as an “outstanding statesman” who influenced the course of history.
Gorbachev’s spokesman Vladimir Polyakov said messages of
congratulations also came from world leaders, including British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson, President Joe Biden and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
However, former captive nation Latvia’s Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics seemingly facetiously tweeted
that Latvians were grateful to Gorbachev. “His perestroika and (glasnost
reforms) were intended to save the Soviet Union, instead they sped up the
collapse of the Communist empire paving the way to freedom for millions,” he
wrote.
The article in National Security Archive attempted to white
wash the cumulative evils of the USSR just because its last dictator, Gorbachev,
involuntarily oversaw its demise on December 26, 1991, several months after a
few of the captive nations had already proclaimed their independence. The last
paragraph in the article bemoaned that Gorbachev did not have time to realize
his plans and end the Cold War and sought to exonerate him for all of Russia’s
crimes against humanity. Actually, his “perestroika” and “glasnost” policies
did not restructure anything, they did not allow openness, and they really didn’t
liberate anyone but rather they continued subjugating the captive nations but now
cynically with a “happy face.”
In retirement Gorbachev cautioned against a return to the
Cold War and urged Moscow and Washington to keep talking to each other,
regardless of their differences. As for ending the Cold War, there was never
any intention to do so because Moscow turned dialogue into regional hot wars
such as its seven-year aggression in Ukraine.
Including Gorbachev’s reign, Russia – in all of its
colorations – has never wavered from its belligerent behavior toward its “near
abroad.” Gorbachev, himself, expressed opposition to the wave of independence
that swept the Russian prison of nations in the past three decades. Its
invasion of Ukraine is an example of the ongoing mission of the Kremlin.
Gorbachev is just like all of his predecessors and
successors. He didn’t renounce Russia’s bloody past so he perpetuated centuries
of its crimes against humanity.
He does not to deserve these ovations because he merely
administered Moscow’s unchangeable malicious empire for a few years and was a
segue between a Soviet-Communist Russia and Putin’s federal one. Aggression and
oppression continue unabatedly.
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