Gorbachev had decreed that there should be no direct Soviet involvement in Romania, and the evidence is that he was obeyed. ‘We knew something would happen there,’ said one of Gorbachev’s key foreign policy advisers, Valentin Falin. ‘We knew there would be victims . . . something was inevitable because the regime was not only rotten but intransigent. Even then we didn’t foresee the bloody bacchanalia that came to pass. Romania had no other way out. We therefore . . . watched.’
20
The dénouement in Bucharest was full of irony. At the height of the fighting, the Americans became seriously alarmed that violence might spread in the Balkans. Lawrence Eagleburger, the Assistant Secretary of State, told his boss, James Baker, that he was worried the Romanians might turn their weapons on ethnic Hungarians and wondered if the Soviets should intervene to stop it. US objections to the Brezhnev Doctrine should not apply in this case. On Christmas Eve Baker formally suggested ‘that the Soviets have the incentive and the capability to do something to stop the bloodshed’. He said the US would not object ‘if the Warsaw Pact felt it necessary to intervene’ in Romania. This was almost exactly the tenth anniversary of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. It seemed an extraordinary suggestion for an American Secretary of State to make. He told the American Ambassador in Moscow, Jack Matlock, to sound out the Soviets, who reacted with mirth. Shevardnadze said the idea was not sinister ‘but merely stupid’. He was ‘categorically opposed’ to any outside intervention. The Romanian Revolution was ‘their business’. Any kind of Soviet intervention might ‘make a martyr out of Ceauescu’. Besides, the fighting stopped immediately after he was executed.
Late on 24 December, Matlock had an uncomfortable meeting in Moscow with one of Shevardnadze’s officials, Ivan Aboimov, who repeated that the USSR would not intervene. The Americans, he pointed out, had just a few weeks earlier invaded Panama to remove a hated dictator, Manuel Noriega, from power there. He was brutalising his people and involved in a drugs-running cartel that smuggled cocaine into the US. ‘We’ll leave that sort of intervention to you,’ said Aboimov. ‘You mentioned the Brezhnev Doctrine. From our side, we will give you the Brezhnev Doctrine as a gift.’
21
FINALE
Vatican City, Friday 1 December 1989
The motorcade of twenty black vehicles, with motor-cycle outriders, had created havoc in the congested streets of Rome for the previous day and a half. Wherever Mikhail Gorbachev went, outside the USSR, he attracted vast and enthusiastic crowds. This was no exception, though the occasion was unique. At about 10.30 a.m. the Soviet entourage reached the Gate of Bells at the side of St Peter’s Basilica and turned right down a narrow cul-de-sac. Gorbachev’s Zil limousine halted at the entrance to the papal apartments in the courtyard of St Damasus, one of the secret gems inside the Vatican closed to the public. He was greeted with a halberd salute from a detachment of Swiss Guards in their maroon- and mustard-coloured uniforms and by a group of senior Curia officials, including a clutch of four cardinals. Both delegations stood in sombre silence for a few minutes to savour a historic and bizarre scene. The Vatican band played the
Internationale
- and by all accounts, despite their unfamiliarity with the tune, played it beautifully - followed by the Papal Hymn. The first meeting was about to take place between a leader of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the head of the Roman Catholic Church.
u
The representatives from both sides were profoundly aware how pregnant with symbolism was the encounter.
Raisa Gorbachev caused a minor sensation. According to Vatican protocol, women at formal papal audiences are supposed to wear black. Raisa had been aware of this for several weeks. It was her husband who had desperately sought the Vatican visit, which was sandwiched between a formal state visit to Italy and the summit due to begin the next day in Malta with President Bush. According to his advisers, the Pope had originally been doubtful, thinking the Russian leader might receive too much favourable publicity, and approved the meeting with the utmost reluctance. But since then a Catholic intellectual had become Prime Minister in his own homeland, the Berlin Wall had fallen, the Czech regime had collapsed. The Pope felt vindicated - and thought Gorbachev deserved the publicity.
When Mrs Gorbachev turned up in a bright red trouser suit flattering enough to demonstrate that at fifty-six she was still an attractive woman, Vatican officials showed only the briefest hint of surprise, continuing as though nothing unconventional had happened. She was given a tour of the art treasures of the Vatican while her husband was ushered into the Pope’s private library, where the two spoke for seventy-five minutes with just their interpreters present. This was a room that had been bugged by the KG B when one of Gorbachev’s chief mentors, Yuri Andropov, had been the Soviets’ main spymaster. It had been Andropov who had predicted eleven years earlier that Pope John Paul’s election could foreshadow disaster for the Soviet empire. He had been prescient. Gorbachev was an exceptionally confident man, though he admitted he was ‘very nervous’ as he was preparing to meet the Pope. He did not often use irony, but - though he repeatedly denied it - he must have smiled inwardly at his presence in a Bishop of Rome’s chambers. The meaning of his comment afterwards - that if it had not been for Pope John Paul none of the transformations in Europe would have happened - was open to several interpretations. The conversation between them at the Vatican rambled into generalities and nothing of significance was agreed. But the important thing was not what they talked about, but that these two men spoke to each other at all. It showed the world how profoundly things had changed.
Similarly, little of significance was agreed at the summit in Malta two days later. Bizarrely, it took place at sea - or just outside Valetta harbour - jointly on a pair of American and Soviet naval vessels during one of the worst winter storms in the Mediterranean for several years. Many of the participants, including some key aides of both George H.W. Bush and Gorbachev, were so violently seasick that they could barely take their place at the talks, let alone at any of the formal dinners and receptions that had been scheduled over two days.
v
Bush had proposed the summit in a private note to Gorbachev in the early spring. His intention had been to hold as informal a meeting as possible, with only a few aides and minimal media attention. The idea was to discuss a range of East/West issues, disarmament and, most particularly, Eastern Europe. By the time the summit took place the map of Europe had been transformed and, as both of the main players recognised, there was far less to talk about. Both agreed the Cold War was over. Condoleezza Rice, Bush’s senior adviser on Eastern Europe, was in the room at the most dramatic point in the summit, when she realised that ‘the world had changed, utterly . . . It was when Gorbachev said something I never imagined I would hear from a Soviet leader. He said matter of factly, without a hint of rancour, that he regarded the United States as a European power, and as a partner. That, for us, was a revolutionary change.’
1
On New Year’s Day 1990, three days after he was elected President of Czechoslovakia, Václav Havel spoke to an enthusiastic crowd of a quarter of a million people outside Prague Castle. It was a polished performance from a man who had little experience of appearing at great public gatherings. When he mounted the podium the shout ‘Havel - Havel’ rang throughout the city. He began, typically, in his measured, well-constructed, closely argued way, still the philosopher as much as a practising politician. He was cheered when he said that among the principal faults of the Communist regime was ‘the way that, armed with an arrogant and intolerant ideology, it reduced Man and nature to mere tools of production . . . to nuts and bolts in a monstrously huge and stinking machine’. Then, halfway through his text the mood of his audience began to change and Havel noticed that some people were beginning to shift uncomfortably. He even heard the odd catcall as he warmed to his theme, that Czechs had lived in ‘a contaminated moral atmosphere. I am talking about all of us. We had all become used to the totalitarian system and accepted it as an unchangeable fact. This helped to perpetuate it . . . We are all - though clearly to different extents - responsible for the operation of the totalitarian machinery. None of us is just its victim. We are its co-creators.’
2
Havel was being honest as usual. But few of his listeners in Prague, or elsewhere in the newly liberated lands of Central Europe, appeared to share his angst - yet. Disillusion might come, but not now. People seemed to want less introspection and more celebration, before the work of creating a new future began. Epic parties continued throughout December in the capitals of countries where for decades citizens had seen little hope or cheer. After the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin - symbol of German nationhood - reopened on 23 December, celebrations went on for three days and nights. For ten days in Bucharest a ‘revolutionary committee’ occupied the suite of offices formerly used by the Ceausescus. On New Year’s Eve the late dictator’s possessions were divided in a ceremony that combined wild joy with pure greed. Everyone knew there remained plenty of unfinished business: Romanians and Bulgarians would quickly discover that their revolutions were half-complete; the momentum for German reunification was unstoppable, despite early efforts by Mikhail Gorbachev, Margaret Thatcher and François Mitterrand to halt the process. And what should be done with leading figures in the old regimes?
In Prague towards midday on 1 January the playwright-turned-president was finishing his speech. The crowd was now back on his side after he spoke about optimism rather than guilt. As Poland had done two days earlier, Czechoslovakia would immediately drop the ‘People’s Republic’ label and in a new constitution would simply be called a Republic. ‘People,’ Havel declared: ‘Your Government has returned to you.’
REFERENCES
APRF - Russian Presidential Archives, Moscow
BA SPMO- Bundesarchiv, Stiftung Archiv der Parteien und Massenorganisationen der DDR
CPCD - Centre for the Preservation of Contemporary Documents, Moscow
CWIHP-Cold War International History Project, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington DC
GF - Gorbachev Foundation Archive, Moscow
LHCMA - Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives, King’s College, London
OHCW - Oral History of the Cold War, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
USNSA - US National Security Archive, George Washington University, Washington DC
For titles referred to by the author’s name only, see Bibliography
PROLOGUE
1
Victor Stanculescu, ‘Nu V Fie Mila, au 2 miliarde lei in cont’ (‘Show no mercy, they have 2 billion lei in the bank’),
Jurnalul National
, Bucharest, 22 November 1990
2
John Sweeney,
The Life and Evil Times of Nicolae Ceauescu
(Hutchinson, London, 1991), pp. 157-8
3
Trial transcript,
Romania Libera
, Bucharest, 25 January 1990
5
Jurnalul National
, Bucharest, 18 December 2006
ONE: THE WORKERS’ STATE
1
Heins,
The Wall Falls
, pp. 114-20
4
Davies,
Europe: A History
; Robert Service,
Comrades: A History of World Communism
(Macmillan, London, 2003) and Toraska all have penetrating analyses of the Soviet system
5
‘Cold War Endgame’ debate at 1996 Princeton University conference, and published (ed. William Wohlforth, Penn State University Press, 2003), p. 178
6
Kornai,
The Socialist System
and
Politics of Shortage
(Elsevier, 1981) is superb on Marxist economic realities.
7
Ferenc Vali,
Rift and Revolt in Hungary
(Oxford University Press, 1961), p. 126
9
Vasili Mitrokhin and Christopher Andrew,
The Mitrokhin Archive: The KGB in Europe and the West
(Allen Lane, London, 1998), p. 673. The entire archive can be found at CWIHP.
10
Jacques Lévesque,
The Enigma of 1989
(University of California Press, 1997)
TWO: A MESSAGE OF HOPE
1
Mitrokhin Archive
, pp. 326-35
3
Nigel West,
The Third Secret: The CIA, Solidarity and the Plot to Kill the Pope
(HarperCollins, London, 1999), pp. 25-135
4
George Weigel,
Witness to Hope: The Biography of Pope John Paul II
(Cliff Street Books, New York, 1999), pp. 280-90 and O’Sullivan, p. 58
5
Weigel,
Witness to Hope
, pp. 175-80
6
Quoted in Davies,
God’s Playground
, pp. 440-41
7
Mitrokhin Archive
, p. 369
8
Quoted in Dobbs, pp. 134-5
THREE: SOLIDARITY
1
Shana Penn,
Solidarity’s Secret: The Women Who Defeated Communism in Poland
(University of Michigan Press, 2005), pp. 97-125
2
Wałesa,
The Struggle and the Triumph
, p. 263
3
Jacqueline Hayden,
Poles Apart: Solidarity and the New Poland
(Cass, London, 1994), p. 38
FOUR: THE ELECTRICIAN
1
Garton Ash,
The Polish Revolution
, p. 135
4
Background on Lech Wałsa from Wałsa’s autobiography,
The Struggle and the Triumph
, and Boyes,
The Naked President
6
Michnik,
Letters From Freedom
, p. 213
7
Lech Wałsa,
The Path to Freedom 1985-1990: The Decisive Years
(Editions Spotnakia, Warsaw, 1991), pp. 160-72
8
Author’s Interview with Tadeusz Mazowiecki, Warsaw, October 1995
9
Background on Leonid Brezhnev from Volkogonov, and from Dobbs
12
Centre for the Preservation of Contemporary Documents, Moscow, TsKhSD, Politburo
13
Minutes 3 September 1980, APRF; Soviet Communist Party Politburo minutes for 29 October 1980
14
Central Archives of the Ministry of Defence, Moscow, TsAMO
15
Garton Ash,
The Polish Revolution
, pp. 247-51
16
Michnik,
Letters from Freedom
, pp. 146-7
20
APRF, f80, Brezhnev’s notes on meetings with Kania.
21
Vladimir Kryuchkov interview quoted in West,
The Third Secret
, p. 138
22
Mitrokhin Archive
, pp. 413-15