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3 days that shook up Soviet Union

How a failed coup in 1991 led to the country’s breakup

- By Vladimir Isachenkov

MOSCOW — The world held its breath 30 years ago when a group of top Communist officials ousted Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and flooded Moscow with tanks.

But instead of bringing a rollback of liberal reforms and a return to Cold War confrontat­ions, the August 1991 coup collapsed in three days and precipitat­ed the breakup of the Soviet Union a few months later, an event the plotters claimed they were trying to prevent.

The putsch began when several of Gorbachev’s top lieutenant­s arrived at his Black Sea vacation home Aug. 18 to urge him to impose a nationwide state of emergency. They were trying to stop the signing of a union treaty between Soviet republics set for two days later, which Gorbachev saw as a way to shore up the crumbling Soviet Union.

After he refused to endorse the state of emergency, the coup plotters cut off the Soviet leader’s communicat­ions and left him isolated at his residence.

The next day — Aug. 19, 1991 — Soviet Union residents woke up to the televised broadcast of the Bolshoi Theater’s “Swan Lake” ballet and state TV anchors reading a terse statement declaring that Gorbachev was unfit to govern for health reasons. The statement said the State Committee on the State of Emergency was created to save the country from sliding into “chaos and anarchy.”

At the same time, hundreds of tanks and other armored vehicles rolled into Moscow in a show of force.

Thousands of people opposed to the coup gathered around the government building for the Russian Federation, one of 15 Soviet republics, which was led by

Boris Yeltsin, who enjoyed broad popularity as the leader of pro-democracy forces. The orchestrat­ors of the coup, meanwhile, were hesitant.

Vladimir Kryuchkov, the KGB chief and top mastermind behind the coup, had the KGB’s Alpha commando unit surround Yeltsin’s residence near Moscow but never issued an order to detain him, allowing Yeltsin to drive to his headquarte­rs.

“We decided to try to get to the office despite the risks,” Yeltsin’s top associate, Gennady Burbulis, said.

Some troops surroundin­g the Russian government building even joined the protesters. After arriving, Yeltsin climbed atop a tank deployed to block the building and passionate­ly urged people to stand up to the coup.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Burbulis said he tried to discourage Yeltsin from getting on the

tank because of the risk, but Yeltsin dismissed his warning.

“It was in Yeltsin’s character to resolutely and unabashedl­y defend what he considered right,” Burbulis said.

Within hours, it became clear the coup was crumbling.

When the coup instigator­s showed up at a news conference, they were sweating and stuttering. Some couldn’t prevent their hands from trembling as they struggled to fend off questions from the media.

Later that evening, state TV showed the nervous, indecisive coup plotters along with a defiant Yeltsin atop a tank — images that could not contrast more.

“They lacked the political will and the willingnes­s to take responsibi­lity for the country,” Viktor Alksnis, a hard-line member of the Soviet parliament who backed imposing a state of

emergency, said of the coup plotters.

The following day, up to 200,000 people rallied near the Russian government headquarte­rs to defy the coup, building barricades, roaming the streets and ignoring a curfew imposed by the coup leaders.

“There was a lot of excitement, enthusiasm, resolve and a strong belief in our consolidat­ion and eventual victory,” Burbulis said.

Another Yeltsin ally, Andrei Dunayev, quickly ordered about 1,000 police cadets to come to Moscow to protect Yeltsin’s headquarte­rs with weapons. He said that helped discourage the coup plotters from using force.

“They decided there would be too much blood,” he said.

Amid the tensions, a clash between troops and protesters in a tunnel less than a half-mile from the Russian government building left

three protesters dead and others wounded.

Hours after the clash, Soviet Defense Minister Dmitry Yazov ordered troops to pull back from Moscow.

Later on Aug. 21, some of the coup organizers flew to Gorbachev’s Black Sea residence to try to negotiate, but he refused to meet with them.

The coup plotters were arrested and Gorbachev flew back to Moscow on Aug. 22 only to see his power dwindle and Yeltsin calling the shots.

“He was kept prisoner for three days by the organizers of the coup, but when he was freed and had the possibilit­y to return to Moscow, he was already the hostage of Yeltsin, because he owed to him his liberation,” said Andrei Grachev, who served as Gorbachev’s spokesman in 1991. “Yeltsin became the No. 1 political actor on the Soviet scene.”

Less than four months later, Yeltsin and leaders of other Soviet republics declared the Soviet Union defunct, and Gorbachev stepped down Dec. 25, 1991.

The arrested coup plotters faced trial but received amnesty in 1994.

Grachev argued that Gorbachev underestim­ated the danger that his hard-line lieutenant­s posed to his rule.

“He considered them to be too mediocre, incapable of organizing anything serious or challengin­g him,” Grachev said.

Gorbachev, 90, has spoken about the coup with bitterness, describing it as the fatal blow to the Soviet Union.

“Those three days of imprisonme­nt were the hardest test in my life,” he wrote in his memoir.

In a statement this week, Gorbachev said the coup organizers “bear a large share of responsibi­lity for the country’s breakup.”

 ?? BORIS YURCHENKO/AP 1991 ?? A crowd stops an advancing personnel carrier near Red Square in downtown Moscow. A coup 30 years ago collapsed in three days.
BORIS YURCHENKO/AP 1991 A crowd stops an advancing personnel carrier near Red Square in downtown Moscow. A coup 30 years ago collapsed in three days.

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