Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Failed uprising 30 years ago paved way for Putin

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Three decades ago, the world held its breath as tanks blasted the Russian parliament building in central Moscow while the Kremlin moved to flush out rebellious lawmakers in a crisis that shaped the country’s post-Soviet history.

While Russia narrowly avoided what many feared could be a civil war, the violent clashes on Oct. 3-4, 1993, marked a watershed. It led to the creation of a top-down government system short of the checks and balances that later allowed Vladimir Putin to establish a tight grip on the country and become the longestser­ving Kremlin leader since Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.

The crushing of the parliament­ary rebellion against then- President Boris Yeltsin was widely seen as a lesser evil, compared with a possible victory of nationalis­t and Communist forces that supported it.

Many observers, however, said the use of military force to end thel crisis dealt a heavy blow to the nascent Russian democracy and strengthen­ed authoritar­ian trends in its politics, which resulted in Mr. Putin’s unchecked powers that he used to send troops into Ukraine.

After putting out the mutiny, Yeltsin initiated the adoption of a new constituti­on that gave broad powers to the presidency, leaving parliament with little authority.

Russia’s politics remained turbulent throughout the 1990s, with Yeltsin’s foes continuall­y challengin­g his power, After Mr. Putin became president in 2000, he has used the legal framework created under his predecesso­r to methodical­ly tighten control of the country and eventually unleash a relentless crackdown on dissent.

In 2020, Mr. Putin called a сonstituti­onal plebiscite that reset the clock on his tenure that could see him serving two more six-year terms and remaining in office until 2036.

After years of cracking down on the opposition, Mr. Putin faced little challenge to his authority until mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin’s aborted rebellion in June. While that mutiny dented his grip on power and eroded his authority amid the fighting in Ukraine, an Aug. 23 plane crash that killed Prigozhin and his top lieutenant­s sent a chilling message to anyone daring to defy Mr. Putin.

“With suspicions running rife in the wake of the insurrecti­on, the Russian elite was obliged to redouble their efforts to demonstrat­e loyalty to Putin,” said Andrei Kolesnikov, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center.

The public feels scared and intimidate­d after years of sweeping Kremlin efforts to quash dissent, he said.

“Any major anti-Putin street protest would be quashed within seconds by today’s police state,” Mr. Kolesnikov said in a recent commentary.

Asked this week if a repeat of the events in 1993 is possible in today’s Russia, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov ruled it out, saying the country has “left the dark times behind and drawn its lessons.”

Yeltsin moved into the Kremlin after the USSR collapsed in 1991, following a failed attempt by hard-line members of the Soviet leadership to oust President Mikhail Gorbachev from power and reverse his reforms.

The violent clashes in October 1993 between government forces and supporters of the rebellious parliament followed a long showdown between Yeltsin and hard-line lawmakers who opposed his chaotic and painful free-market reforms. Yeltsin’s vice president, Alexander Rutskoi, sided with the rebel lawmakers.

 ?? Alexander Zemlianich­enko/Associated Press ?? People march Wednesday with flowers and portraits of those who were killed during the 1993 bloody clashes between government forces and supporters of the rebellious parliament during a rally marking the 30th anniversar­y of the events in Moscow.
Alexander Zemlianich­enko/Associated Press People march Wednesday with flowers and portraits of those who were killed during the 1993 bloody clashes between government forces and supporters of the rebellious parliament during a rally marking the 30th anniversar­y of the events in Moscow.

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