ook programmes to stimulate the development of small and medium business. Millions of small companies sprang up in the areas of services, tourism, trade, electrical goods and a number of other branches of the economy. By some accounts these small enterprises account for up to half the working population of Western European countries. At the same time the large family properties in Western Europe and the USA have lost the position of monopoly and importance which they had at the beginning of the century. Today neither Rothschild, nor Dupont, neither Morgan nor Rockerfeller can exert direct influence on questions of national importance as they could have done a hundred years ago. This has allowed Western European societies to halt their deterioration and to stop the growth of class contradictions and gradually to wipe out the gap between the different social groups. Thirty years after the end of the Second World War the nature of employed labour had changed beyond recognition and the proletariate described by Marx dissolved within a entirely new social and technological environment. If now at the end of the 20th century one is to visit the factories of, for example, Zussler near Zurich or American Standard New York, one will see a completely new type of work force with different interests and a different mentality and, more importantly, a workforce which is integrated within the decision making processes. These are no longer the same workers which lead Karl Marx to write "Capital" and who gave rise to mass political and trade union protests at the beginning of the 20th century. In the post-war period and particularly in the 1970's and 1980's a process of change in the nature of property ownership began which continues to the present. This in its turn has had direct ramifications upon the nature of power. This revolution has allowed the USA, Japan and another twenty or so countries to adapt much more quickly and effectively to the needs of the modern scientific and technological revolution and to become global leaders. At the same time the development of the USSR and Eastern Europe has been halted as a result of the totalitarian nature of their regimes. It is true that when it was formed in 1922, the Soviet Union inherited a poorly developed industrial base and a poorly educated population but it is also true that the totalitarian regime established by Stalin at the end of the 1920's had destructive and devastating consequences upon all areas of life. Tens of million of people lost their lives as a result of violence and repression - this was as a dramatic feature of the Stalinist regime as the complete repression of free creativity and private initiative. Centralisation in the decision making process could only provide temporary benefits in military and defence issues but in all other cases it halted intellectual, technical and economic development. From the very outset Stalinism contained within itself the thesis of forced, coercive growth. The initial results did not hide the truth that, given time, coercive development was to become transformed into stagnation and regression. The destruction of private enterprise, the total and coercive collectivisation of agriculture in December 1922, the substitution of market forces with party and subjective criteria and the repression of the intelligentsia could not do anything but leave a profound scar and cause serious consequences for human development. During the period between 1950 and 1960 total nationalisation could still be explained using complex and serious internal reasons, the general radicalisation of European regimes (especially in the 1930's) and the necessity to achieve military parity. However, during subsequent decades the totalitarian regimes became totally bankrupt. Many people in Eastern Europe still believe that the collapse in the Eastern European systems was due to the mistakes made by Mikhail Gorbachev and his programmes of "perestroika". I, personally, believe that the historical role of Gorbachev was a direct result of the overall negative trends in the development of Eastern Europe and the universal economic and political crisis which had gripped this part of the world. This crisis above all manifested itself in terms of the dramatic technological backwardness which began to become apparent as early as the late 1960's and became most marked during the 1980's. Eastern Europe began to lag behind in electronics, bio-technology, communications, environmental facilities and many other fields. Because all these technological fields are so closely linked Eastern Europe began to fall behind in every other possible field from the production of nails to complex aviation technology. The technological advantages of the West affected daily life, the workplace and management. The rate at which the East began to fall behind in the 1980's was so dramatic that certain experts began to speak of a possible "global technological gorge" opening up between the East and the West, or in other words a "self-perpetuating backwardness". With the appearance of micro-electronics, new communications and space technology, the Soviet military, who had up until now played a key role in the political life of the totalitarian state, began to realise more and more clearly that their economic backwardness would sooner or later affect their military and strategic position. This was also understood by those politicians with greater awareness unencumbered by political dogma. Although the USSR had achieved nuclear parity and, in certain areas, superiority, with the USA, its backwardness in the field of micro-electronics and communications at the beginning of the 1980's began to change this trend. The enormous amounts of money expended on military causes undermined the Soviet economy and doomed it to universal inefficiency. In a comparison of figures, it can be seen that while in 1960 the GNP of the USSR was only about $5000 USD less than in the USA, in 1980 this difference had reached $10,000 and in 1990 - $20,000. In 1960 the manufacturing output of the USSR was $1000 per head of population more than in Japan. Only 20 years later Japan was producing goods to the value of $11,864 per head of population in comparison with $6,863 in the USSR. At the beginning of the 1990's the gap had widened to $30,000.[16] A similar process was taking place in comparable smaller European countries. The German Democratic Republic, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland and Bulgaria were experiencing growing difficulties reflected in the drastic increases in their external debt in the 1980's. Without the need for further statistics, I believe, that the most obvious example was the difference between the type of automobiles produced in East and West Germany. Whether we compare Wartburgs with Mercedes or Trabants with Volkswagens it is quite clear that we are dealing with two distinct generations of manufacturing cultures. My example is based on motor vehicles since they reflect the general level of industry as a whole: metallurgy, chemical production, heavy machinery construction, electronics, textiles and so on.. While industry in Western Europe was already using a new generation of production technology, Eastern Europe was still dominated by a generation of production machinery which was physically and morally at least twenty five years out of date. The majority of Eastern Europeans lived in the conditions of information deprivation. They were fed propaganda of constant progress and achievement, the collapse of world capitalism and the greater and greater victories of world socialism. In actual fact the reality was exactly the opposite. Of course, many progressive leaders in Eastern Europe during this period were aware of the problems but none of them were able to release themselves from the common bonds of Eastern European imperialism. This was made clear by the fate of the Hungarian uprising in 1956 and the Prague Spring of 1968, as well as the unrest amongst the Polish workers and the timid attempts at reform made in Bulgaria in 1986[17]. It was quite clear that changes could only take place in the context of global reforms affecting the USSR as well. The negative consequences of technological backwardness were exacerbated by the changes in the world economic situation in the mid 1980's. The collapse in the prices of oil and a number of other raw materials lead to a sharp decline in the ability of the USSR and its allies to function efficiently and to improve the standards of living of its peoples. In the 1980's the member countries of COMECON experienced their greatest difficulties in foreign trade and were obliged to increase their external debts. From the mid 1980's the Soviet Union and its allies lost their most important comparative economic advantages and were obliged to cover their current account deficits with large external loans which even then came to more than 100 billion dollars. The nature of the technological changes of the 1970's and 1980's also raised doubts about economic centralisation. In the 1930's and after the Second World War technological innovation relied heavily on the centralised accumulation and management of funds. Energy production, nuclear technology and chemical production, large irrigation projects, heavy industry and arms production were very strong arguments in favour of the need for centralised planning and the active participation of the state in the economy. On the other hand the technological wave of the 1970's pre-supposed the decentralisation of the decision making process. The production of software and personal computer applications, the appearance of tens of thousands of different types of services and the progress in bio-technology stimulated and continue to stimulate individual creativity. This was in contradiction to the very essence of the Soviet type of system. Consequently the backwardness of Eastern Europe in the 1970's and 1980's was not only a consequence of political and economic conjuncture but had a long-term and objective character. It was connected with the inherent backwardness not only of individual areas of manufacturing but of the primary governmental and economic structures. As a result of the influence of new technologies on the life of societies, the crisis soon spread to the personal lives of the individual Eastern Europeans. In the 1970's and 1980's personal consumption per head of population in Eastern Europe began progressively to fall behind the average consumption figures for Western Europe, the USA and Japan. According to UN statistics for 1960, for every 1000 West Germans there were 78 motor vehicles in comparison with 20 in Czechoslovakia and 17 in the German Democratic Republic. In 1985 this figure had risen to 400 in West Germany in comparison to 180 in East Germany and 163 in Czechoslovakia. In 1960 in the USSR there were 1.6 telephones per hundred people and in Japan - 5.8. In 1984 this figure was 9.8 for the USSR and 53.5 in Japan[18]. In the late 1960's the economic backwardness of the USSR and its allies began to spread to non-manufacturing environments. In 1960 infant mortality per 1000 newly born infants was 26 in the USA, 31 in Japan and 35 in the USSR. In 1985 this figure had changed to 10.4 per thousand in the USA, 5.7 in Japan and 25.1 in the USSR. Similar comparisons can be made in the area of science, education, culture and cultural life in general. It would, of course, be naive and imprudent to ignore the successes which the USSR and its allies achieved in the area of space research, physics, chemistry and molecular biology and in certain other areas of technology. These were, however, rather oases within the overall system rather than its essential features. They did not change the overall picture of backwardness or its deepening character. Clearly, against a background of increasing internationalisation and more and more intensive exchange of information, the backwardness of Eastern Europe began to become transformed into a universal moral and political crisis. In the context of the boom of world communications, radio and television, satellite communications and information transfer, the truth could not be hidden for long. The attempts of the USSR and the other Eastern European countries to propagate lies reached absurd extents to prove that they were at the head of technological and economic progress. For more and more people in Eastern Europe it was becoming clear that the backwardness of their countries in manufacturing and consumerism was a direct result of the vices of the system itself. It should be noted, on the other hand, that right up until their demise the Eastern European regimes retained certain benefits such as full employment, a low crime rate, universal social guarantees and a number of other features. The price of these benefits from the 1960's onwards, however, had begun to manifest itself in the form of empty shops, the lack of basic products, the low standard of living and the lack of personal freedom etc.. Given such a situation, it was more and more difficult to speak of the successes of the Soviet style system against the background not only of a worsening economic situation but also of the moral and political climate. The Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia, the uprisings and protests of the Polish workers, the reforms in Hungary, the dissident movement in the USSR, the mass movement in favour of emigration to the West was a manifestation of the growing level of dissatisfaction or unhappiness with the existing system. In the 1970's the USA and its Western allies managed to impose a new leading ideology: the issue of human rights and the rights and freedoms of all citizens of the world. A number of "capitalist" countries such as Sweden, Austria and others guaranteed more social benefits, including pensions, unemployment benefit for young persons etc.. In general, in the USA, Japan, Western Europe and a number of other smaller countries with a market economy, life become more attractive and more in tune with the growing diversity and increase in human needs. In contrast with this in Eastern Europe and the USSR, there was a sharp increase in crime, drunkenness, apathy and scepticism. This lead to major geo-political consequences. After the collapse of the colonial model, the Soviet Union, despite its concentrated efforts, was unable to impose its system on the newly liberated countries. The majority of them adopted systems and models closer to those of Western countries. Attempts at "socialist revolutions" in Algeria, Egypt, Syria, Ghana, Somalia, Ethiopia and a number of other countries did not produce the expected results. Poverty remained a problem. The promise of a rapid leap into the "paradise of socialism" also remained an illusion. While the USA and Western Europe and later Japan were keen on expanding their influence in the world via investments, cultural influence and education, the Soviet Union in order to expand its geo-political influences concentrated on the support of "revolutionary" regimes, expending colossal amountsof state money in the process. They maintained the point of view that in states with poor economies progress could only be achieved via nationalisation and centralised planning. Life, however, shows that this is not the case. The upshot was that in the 1970's and in particular in the 1980's the Eastern European regimes were in the grips of a universal structural, economic, political and spiritual crisis, both internally and externally. Geo-politically this crisis was expressed in terms of the widening gap between the role of the USSR as a world super power and its real economic abilities. During the entire post-war period the military expenditure of the USSR exceeded all permissible economic levels. Military budgets undermined national development and seriously threatened the future of the system. On the other hand, despite the economic crisis and evident technological backwardness the Eastern European governments continued their policies of universal social guarantees of employment and wages which in the 1980's in particular lead to chronic increases in foreign debt. Consumption was greater than production. Financial commitments to the military, price subsidies and excessive state investments lead to the creation of enormous budget deficits. Essentially the system was consuming itself from within. While Western countries were reforming and adapting to global technological problems, the crisis in Eastern Europe was worsening. It was becoming more clear that without radical reforms, backwardness would lead to death. 2. REFORMS AND ILLUSIONS Attempts by the Eastern European totalitarian regimes to reformwithout damage to the foundations of their systems were illusory. These were merely attempts to prolong the life of a civilisation on the wane. T he collapse of the Third civilisation, or if you prefer, its "reconstruction" could have been an evolutionary process as it was in the West, through economic reforms and the political evolution of the totalitarian states. Since the creation of Soviet Russia in 1917 and most notably during the last decades of its existence numerous attempts at reform had been made. These reforms merit a general examination and can be divided into five periods within the history of the Soviet model system. The first of these was the period between 1917-1929 which I like to refer to as a time of consolidation and the search for a model of development. Notwithstanding the civil war and widespread violence the possibility of returning to some form of democracy still remained. A certain amount of private property, paricularly in agriculture, had been preserved. The NEP programme (New Economic Policy) introduced by Lenin in 1921 provided the opportunity for the use of foreign capital and private initiative. The second stage of "pure socialism" began at the end of the 1930's with the destruction of the remains of the NEP and a total assault on economic, political and cultural life. The coercive formation of the collective farms, the creation of an enormous army of labour camp slaves, forced economic growth based on administrative and political methods and the extermination of millions of political opponents - these were the foundations of the Soviet Stalinist regime. During this period the Soviet system developed as a monolithic hierarchical organisation in which the violence of the party elite and its subordinated security organisations dominated. From 1930 to 1953 every manifestation of private initiative and free thought was punished with prison or death.[19] The third period in the development of the Soviet system began with the death of Stalin in 1953 and the "thaw" of Nikita Khrushchev. Although to some extent contradictory, the policies implemented by Khrushchev during this period were to leave a lasting mark on the further development of the world. For the first time the truth about Stalin's crimes was revealed and both Stalin himself and his system lost their authority as the proponents of social justice and world progress. The fourth period began in 1964 and ended at the beginning of the 1980's. It was justly named by Mikhail Gorbachev as the period of "zastoi" (stagnation). During these years Leonid Brezhnev brought a halt to the "thaw" begun by Khrushchev and began his attempt to immortalise the totalitarian system through a series of internal and external cosmetic changes. It was during this period that the USSR and its allies began to fall behind their Western opponents in the areas of technology and economics. The fifth and final stage was the period of "perestroika" introduced by Mikhail Gorbachev (1985-1991) which was eventually to lead to the collapse of the Eastern European regimes and the USSR itself. My reason for this periodisation is that from the beginning to the end of the Soviet system there were two contradictory political trends: one of which saw totalitarianism as the essence of the utopian communist dream and a second which aspired to more flexible, economic and political models. The second trend appeared directly after the February revolution of 1917 in the ideas of local self-government by workers, the implementation of the NEP by Lenin in 1921 and 1927, the "thaw" of Khrushchev and finally in the policy of "perestroika" of Mikhail Gorbachov. The essence of this second trend was the combination of party and political centralism with relatively greater freedom for the private sector (especially in trade and agriculture) and in the area of art and culture. Its origin can be seen in the traditions of European socialism and social democracy. In the 1920's the proponents of a more flexible and dynamic political line - N.Bukharin, G.Zinoviev, S.Kamenev, A.Rikov and others lost their battle for power, allowing the party bureaucracy to dominate all structures of society. This was the decisive moment for the development of the essence of the Soviet model. The victory of Stalinism transformed the USSR - and a number of other countries after the Second World War - into bureaucratic command societies. During the period between 1954-1956 when N.Khrushchev was fiercely critical of the Stalinist era, he found himself in conflict with the Stalinist system in all sectors of life. As a child of the very same system, Khrushchev was condemning not the system but the style and leadership methods employed by Stalin and the cult of personality. He proposed a reevaluation of the system and mechanisms of its leadership. Khrushchev's illusion was that by changing the leadership and functioning of the system he would make it more effective and resolve its major problems. During the Brezhnev period (1964-1982) a considerable number of "improvements" were made to the leadership. The attempts made to revive the economy by giving greater freedom to industry and a timid embracement of the private sector clashed with the dominant principles of the totalitarian system. There was talk of de-centralisation, collective initiative and new economic mechanisms. However, not a word was said about the party monopoly on power and finances, banks and the market. It would, however, have been impossible to have freedom or private initiative without major changes to the banking system, price liberalisation, reform to the system of investment banking and the removal of large funds from the hands of the party and state elite. It was quite absurd to make changes to the structures of property and administration without changes to the principles of political power or without profound changes to the legislative system and the guarantee of constitutional rights and freedoms of its citizens. History frequently provides us with examples of the combination of heroism and illusion. Frequently the intellect of leaders and the grandeur of their objectives have been let down by the naivety of the way in which they attempted to achieva them. Such was the case with Stalin's opponents in the 1920's and 30's and the policies of Nikita Khrushchev in the 1950's. Zinoviev, Kamenev, Rikov and Bukharin paid for their naivety with their lives since they were up against not only Stalin's will and cruelty but also the interests and power of the party-state apparatus. Khrushchev also paid for his own naivety and was removed from power in October 1964. For the ten years he was in office, Khrushchev wavered between the desire to put an end to the Stalinist repressions and the preservation of the system. The same man who was bold enough to reveal the crimes of Stalin to the whole world allowed cruel acts of repression against Soviet art and culture. The same man who had the fortitude to remove the body of Stalin from the mausoleum in Moscow became a proponent of the super-Utopian idea of the "rapid leap" into the "paradise of communism". The enormous belief that good could be imposed from above and that the system could be revitalised by "the enthusiasm" and privileges of the nomenclature, were naive. Khrushchev was no less a believer in the system of state socialism. By throwing Stalin and Beria onto the scrapheap of history, he deprived the Soviet people of their Divine leader and was obliged to offer them a new Utopia - the rapid advent of communism, industrial dominance over the USA and a high standard of living for the people of the USSR etc.. After Krushchev's removal from power it became more difficult to delude the people with promises of new Utopias and illusions. The myth of the infallible leader in Stalin had been shattered. Khrushchev's programme for entering the era of perfect communism by 1980 had failed. The next utopia in line was Brezhnev's off-the-peg theory of a developed socialist society. Despite all this the logical question arises of why despite its general instability the Soviet totalitarian system survived for such a long time - 74 years? I believe that there are a number of reasons for this. The Soviet totalitarian model arose during a period of general crisis and the large scale transformation of world capitalism, during a period of globalisation and a search for various models of existence in a new inter-dependent world. The 20th century was a time of cataclysm, change and transition and of two world and hundreds of local wars in which more than 150 million people lost their lives. Despite its Utopian nature, the Soviet system was a model for potential progress which emphasised absolute social protection, guaranteed the interests of workers andpeasants and total nationalisation as a condition for concentrating resources and directing them towards new construction. The belief that universal social guarantees were the basis for progress provided temporary historical justification for the centralised type of society. The continuing existence of the Soviet totalitarian system can be explained with the desire and the ambitions of many nations rapidly to overcome poverty and to avoid their possible colonisation by the larger colonial metropolises. For many countries during the 1950's and the 1960's the Soviet Union was a guarantee of protection against colonisation by other countries, despite the fact that "fraternity" with the USSR meant another type of dependence. Was it not the case, however, that the crisis of liberalism and the return to the ideas of nationalisation was also taking place in other parts of the world? Practically everywhere in the world before and after the First World War and especially at the end of the 1920's societes were undergoing radical changes and centralisation. The victory of Hitler in Germany, Mussolini in Italy, the Left in France and Spain was proof of this. The crisis of world capitalism brought about by colonialism, monopolisation, the First World War and the economic crisis of 1929-33 was sufficient motivation and justification for the actions of Stalin as "necessary policies" in the context of forthcoming world conflict. For millions of people the Soviet Union was not so much a country of violent political aggression in which millions of innocent people lost their lives but rather the power which defeated Hitler, saved humanity from the death camps of fascism and gave a chance to many peoples to live their lives in freedom and independence. In 1932 in the introduction to his criticism of socialism, Ludwig von Mizes wrote, "In Europe to the East of the Rhine there are very few non-Marxists and even in Western Europe and the United States his (Marx) supporters are greater in number than his opponents"[20]. If today at the end of the 20th century, socialism is perceived as "something bad in the past", for over half a century - from the 1920's to the 1970's it was seen as the hope for the majority of mankind. This is due to the not insignificant achievements of socialism in the areas of industrialisation, science and technology, culture and art and, most significantly, the social guarantees of labour, wages, a place to live and so on. To disregard or to conceal these achievements would be imprudent, and, indeed, impossible from an historical point of view. Each historical period notwithstanding the nature of political power leaves behind it something positive, guaranteeing the furtherance of human life. The successes of the USSR in industrialisation, transforming it from a country surviving on the remnants of a system of feudal agriculture into a world super-power, guaranteed wages, work and income for the vast masses of its population were for many people sufficient grounds for maintaining the system. I, therefore, do not consider the model of state socialism to be the ravings of a group of mad politicians. Its appearance, existence and dissemination over the whole world from the second half of the 19th century to the end of the 20th was a consequence of huge world transformations and reactions against the imperialist colonial world with its injustices and wars. Despite its illusions and errors it was a conscious attempt to offer protection to the interests of the oppressed and division and class struggles to be replaced with unification and social unity. I realise how difficult it is only a few years after the collapse of the totalitarian regimes in Eastern Europe for these words to be uttered. However, we should not be too hasty in our evaluation of history from the point of view of a specific political moment in time. The continued existence of the Soviet type of system and the popularity of the communist idea during the greater part of the 20th century was a consequence of the objective and global processes of transition of the modern world. It was a part of the processes of world integration, but also a part of the crisis of the Third Civilisation. The same factors which provided the opportunities to state socialism also dug its grave. Continuing global integration could no longer tolerate isolationism. Social guarantees led to the demotivation of labour. The growth in personal and group self-confidence were limited by the lack of basic human rights. The reason for the collapse of this system was its tendency to consume more than it produced and to maintain "balance" via the methodical use of aggression upon the personal freedoms of its citizens. The very idea of achieving universal justice and material plenty via coercion and "forced awareness" were Utopian and inhumane. The contradictions arose from the economic essence of the system, from the type of ownership, and not from the style and methods of leadership, as Khrushchev considered. Khrushchev did not attempt to change the system which, in its turn, killed him politically. His illusions were inherited from Bukharin and in the end the system was doomed to failure. However, that which was planted by Khrushchev, the desire for change, eventually gave fruit. On the one hand because the reformers within the Soviet party and state leadership were able to learn from its lessons and on the other since they were all aware that partial and cosmetic changes would not lead to success. Twenty years and four months had passed since Khrushchev was removed from office when on the 11th of March 1985 Mikhail Sergeevich Gorbachev was elected to the post of General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. 3. THE TWO OPTIONS AND THE MISTAKE OF GORBACHEV Gorbachev had two options - to change the system either by liberalising the economy or by changing the political system. The first option would have guaranteed stability and a gradual transition, the second - conflict and chaos. In any event neither he nor his successors had a plan for global action. A t the beginning of 1985 the majority of the Soviet population was ready for change. It was tired of the drawn-out death throes of the Brezhnev leadership, filled with hope when Yuri Andropov came to power, crushed by his death soon after that and his replacement with the aging Brezhnevite Konstantin Chernenko. Soviet society and in particular the intelligentsia during this period were tired of the endless speeches and demagogy, of the discrepancies between words and reality, of the empty shelves and the universal lack of everything which the ordinary member of the public might require. Mikhail Gorbachev found not only fertile ground for change but he indeed became the natural mouthpiece for the expression of all the ambitions and hopes of the majority of Soviet society. During his first year of office Gorbachev made significant changes to the politburo, the government, the leadership of the armed forces and foreign ministry. It was during this period that Edward Shevernadze came to the fore in the Soviet leadership as foreign minister and member of the politburo. A.Yakovlev became the leader of the propaganda section of the Central Committee of the CPSU. Boris Yeltsin became the leader of the Moscow party committee of the CPSU. In practice these were the three political figures who most radically and faithfully supported the political and economic reforms. In 1985 Gorbachev opened up the way for improvements in Soviet and American relations in the areas of arms control policy and the radical reduction in first-strike nuclear weapons. The summit meeting held between Gorbachev and the American president Ronald Reagan in November 1985 in Geneva was the beginning of a turn-around in world nuclear arms policy. In 1986 Gorbachev accelerated personnel changes in the leadership of the communist party and the Soviet state as well as in the mass media and local party apparatus. I believe that these first two years were decisive for Gorbachev's choice of strategy. Undoubtedly, the change which he began were on a much larger scale than those of Khrushchev and affected all areas of life. Despite this in 1985 and 1986 Gorbachev continued to pursue the idea of revitalising the system in the aims of "more socialism". In June 1986 in Habarovsk he formulated the essence of "perestroika" and the need for its advancement. During this period the people of the USSR were allowed much greater spiritual freedom and learnt many truths about their history and the outrages of Stalinism. Now, looking back on the documents and facts of this period, it can be seen that Gorbachev did not have a plan for global action. He had not imagined that perestroika would cause such global transformations. The General Secretary of the CPSU was motivated by the idea of strengthening Soviet society and socialism, rather than overthrowing the culture and system of a waning civilisation. This "provinciality" in his attitude to a global power, such as the USSR was, is quite evident in his thousands of speeches and articles of the time, however, it is also proof of the lack of the global responsibility necessary for the leader of one of the two super powers.[21] Gorbachev had two options. The first of these was to give priority to economic reforms (similar to Hungary and China) with simultaneous guarantees of centralised power followed by the gradual implementation of political reforms. The second option was to introduce political reforms followed by economic reforms. If he had opted for the first option he would have had further opportunities for global influence, but he did not and plunged the USSR into a network of internal conflicts. From the speeches made by Gorbachev between 1985 and 1986 it can be seen that he did not underestimate economic reform and wanted to find a way of implementing reform both in the economy and in politics. It is, however, clear that Gorbachev and his allies were thinking on their feet and that they did not have a clear action plan suitable for universal, global change. The political campaigns began to take a hold but economic reforms tended to falter in their tracks. The simultaneous implementation of economic and political reforms in actual fact gave weight to the latter. As Gorbachev announced the policy of Glasnost and began to reveal the truth about the past, he put the authority of the party apparatus under threat and accepted the enormous challenge of political reforms and the divisive inner-party conflicts. The beginning of "perestroika" through the policy of "glasnost" in essence meant the priority of political reform over economic reform. This fact was of decisive significance for the fate of the USSR and Eastern Europe and the whole world. If Gorbachev had delayed political reform and had placed the accent on the economy, this would not have lead so rapidly to the chaotic collapse of the Eastern European systems and the USSR. Such a transition would not have lead to the explosion of nationalism and dozens of local wars and conflicts. The Eastern European nations would not have become a burden for the developed Western European nations and there would not have been the need for billions of dollars in financial aid. Gorbachev's choice was not the result of a deliberately thought-out plan but rather the result of circumstances. However, having opted for a model of change, sooner rather than later local conflicts and the collapse of Eastern European structures were inevitable. Of the reasons for such a denouement, one is of particular significance. The integrated nature of the totalitarian system was totally reliant on the centralised nature of power. In contrast to market economies where people are linked by an enormous number of horizontal connections independent of the central power, in a totalitarian economy social integration is maintained via central state institutions. This applies not only to economic entities but also to ethnic groups and the structures of information exchange and culture. Rapid reforms to the system of political authority without economic foundations within a totalitarian society by definition pose a risk of the entire system collapsing in chaos. Imagine factories which are accustomed to receiving materials allocated to them by the central planning institutions. The destruction of this institution or change within the political or administrative system allows the factories to sell to whom they want and to ignore whom they want. The result of this is that at one fell swoop thousands and millions of economic bonds are severed and the chaos becomes unimaginable. This was also the case in the area of international relations. Under totalitarianism many national groups were able to co-exist peacefully within the order imposed from above and any conflicts between them were cosmetically concealed. However, these peoples peoples lacked sufficient horizontal economic and cultural bonds as for example is the case with the various nationalities inhabiting Switzerland. After the collapse of the central power, nations which had until the previous day been good neighbours began to divide up territories, power, money and in many cases opened up the way for armed conflict with tanks and weapons. Whether Gorbachev understood the scale of the emerging crisis is a question of some doubt. What is clear, however, is that during this period economic reforms made no progress, whereas political reforms began to give rise to greater and greater conflicts. In January 1987, a little more than a month after the release of Sakharov from internal exile, Mikhail Gorbachev laid before the Central Committee of the CPSU a series of measures aimed at political reform. These included secret ballots with multiple candidates and the election of non-communists to senior state posts, participation of employees in the election of directors at their place of work, the reduction of state ownership in favour of cooperative ownership and so on. This was not only a direct and decisive blow to the party apparatus and its vested interests, but also to the power structure itself. After this plenum feelings of opposition to perestroika began to make themselves felt. The indignation of the party apparatus was total and reactions became more and more overt. However, the inertia of change was too great to be stopped. In 1987 a process of political rehabilitation of intellectuals repressed by Stalin began and the first timid steps were being made towards the opening of private cooperative shops. In the same year, which I consider the zenith of the perestroika, a number of serious problems began to manifest themselves. Most significant of these was the fact that "perestroika" had given practically no positive economic results and had not alleviated the problems faced by ordinary people. The successes which were being achieved in the medium range arms negotiations were having less and less influence on the public opinion. People were more concerned with the lack of goods in the shops. In October 1987 the first nationalist conflicts between Armenia and Azerbaidjan flared up. This was the beginning of the general crisis in national relations within the USSR. At the same time a number of diverse, but well organised, opposition groups began to appear within the Soviet leadership. On the one hand, both within the Central Committee of the CPSU and outside it the opposition to Gorbachev's reforms was becoming more vocal and aimed at the preservation of the status quo of single party power and the totalitarian system. On the other hand, in October 1987, Boris Yeltsin made official accusations against Gorbachev and Ligachev, marking the beginning of a political movement aimed at more radical and liberal reforms. From this moment on Gorbachev was obliged to strike a balance between these two groups which limited his flexibility and making his action seems more contradictory. The General Secretary was neither able to turn back, which would have marked the end of his career and perestroika, nor was he free enough to make sufficient intensive progress. Gorbachev had already surpassed Khrushchev but was not safe from the same fate. In November 1988, Estonia declared its independence and the right of the Supreme Council of Estonia to veto laws passed by the Soviet parliament. Mass independence movements began in Lithuania and Latvia. The ethnic tension between Armenia and Azerbaidjan continued. In this situation, on the 7th of December 1988, Gorbachev announced to the UN that the Soviet army would be reduced by half a million and the pull-out of Soviet troops from Hungary, Czechoslovakia and East Germany began. The Soviet leader called for a new world order. This was his biggest tactical mistake. He realised his global responsibility too late. When Gorbachev finally understood his decisive significance in international reform and in general, as well as the fate of perestroika,he had already lost his power. 4. THE COLLAPSE OF PERESTROIKA The collapse of perestroika in 1991 had been foreseen as early as the end of 1988. With the conflicts which ensued, it will be evaluated by modern historians as a process filled with contradictions. On the other hand, it opened the floodgates to new opportunities for progress and history in the long-term will appreciate as the catalyst for the advent of the new civilisation. I shall take a more detailed look at the changes which took place in Eastern Europe not only because since I lived through them personally but because I am convinced of the fact that the events of 1986--1991 will affect our fate for many years to come. 1989 and 1990 were years of the gradual "fiasco" of perestroika as a line of evolutionary change within the totalitarian system. Its collapse took several forms. Firstly -- the complete failure of economic reforms and, consequently, the reduced support for perestroika on the part of the Soviet people. Secondly -- allowing the local inter-ethnic conflicts to get out of hand and the consequent explosion of ethnic self-confidence and demands. Thirdly -- the collapse of the Eastern European political and military alliances and the severance of ties between the Eastern European nations and Moscow. As early as the beginning of January 1989 the majority of Soviet republics began to pass a series of new laws establishing their own languages as the official language of the republic. In March of the same year in the first free elections for the Congress of the People's Deputies the nationalist movements in the Baltic Republics won the absolute majority. In May, Lithuania and Estonia and in July Latvia, in spite of Moscow's displeasure, passed a law, declaring their independence. The question arose of the fate of the USSR, its integrity and unity and the future of the central leadership. This was, indeed, Gorbachev's most serious ordeal and the precursor of the final collapse of perestroika. The opposition of the neo-communists within the Soviet leadership was a powerful force in favour of preserving the unity of the Soviet Union and hard-line policies. The potential collapse of the Soviet Union was unacceptable for the Moscow elite, mainly for ideological reasons. It is not to be underestimated that for 70 years millions of people in the former USSR were absolutely convinced of the need for its existence and of the idea and meaning of the Soviet system. No less important is the fact that the collapse of the USSR was de facto to signify the demise of all the higher leadership posts. In 1990 and 1991 such a possibility instilled feelings of insecurity in the Soviet elite. Tens of thousands of senior civil servants, amongst them leading figures in the Moscow government, were threatened with losing their jobs. There is another side to the question which has to be considered. The majority of the world political elite considered the potential collapse of the USSR as a complex and possibly dangerous issue. From my direct personal conversations with senior politicians in the USA, France, Germany and Austria and other countries and from indirect political analyses, I have the impression that in 1990 and 1991 only the minority of them were in favour of a collapse of the USSR. The world was concerned about the appearance of new nuclear powers such as the Ukraine and Kazakhstan and the potential of large-scale military conflict with the possible use of nuclear arms. The insecurity of this super power was a matter of concern for all. This insecurity could also be felt in Moscow. It coincided with increased criticism of the economic and social policies of the CPSU. The leaders of the other Eastern European states, members of the Warsaw Pact, were amongst those who were becoming vocal in their criticism. The most significant factor which was to sound the death knell for perestroika was the explosion of ethnic and nationalist tension within the USSR itself. IN January 1990, thousands of Azeris protested near to the Soviet border with Iran. A few days later the Lithuanian communist party ratified Lithuania's independence. On the 11th of January, Armenia exercised its right to veto Soviet legislation, following the example of the Baltic states. The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaidjan over Nagorni Karabakh continues to escalate. Protests and tension began to make themselves felt in Moldova and Tadzhikistan. These were clearly not individual phenomena but symptoms of the general collapse of the USSR. On the 7th of February 1990, the Central Committee of the CPSU accepted in essence the idea of a multi-party political system as the basis for the creation of democratic socialism. In February and March during the local government elections the established nomenclature lost many senior positions in favour of independent and largely unknown new leaders. A little later, V.Landsbergis was elected as the first non-communist president of a Soviet republic. From this moment on the process of collapse began to accelerate. Gorbachev had clearly begun to lose control of events. After 1989 the rate of change was no longer being dictated by Gorbachev or his entourage. On the other hand it must be appreciated that Gorbachev did not give in to the temptations or the suggestions to halt the reform process with the help of the army.[22] By the middle of 1990 it was already evident that the three Baltic republics would achieve full independence. The next great challenge came from Kiev where the Ukraine, on the 16th February, also declared its independence. In August another group of Soviet republics declared their independence. Gorbachev was left the with the only alternative of proposing a new union of independent republics. His suggestion to reorganise his cabinet to include the leaders of all 15 republics showed that even as late as November 1990 the central Soviet leadership was unaware of the real pace of the reform processes and their real scale and power. In December Kirgizia, the last remaining 15th republic declared its independence. During the period (November--December 1990) the opposition against Gorbachev had begun to increase and he was forced to make compromises. In December 1990 he was forced to dismiss some of his most loyal allies and supporters of the reform process. On the 2nd of December the Minister of the Interior was replaced by Boris Pugo and on the 26th of December Gorbachev put forward Genadiy Yanaev for the post of Vice-President of the Union. I do not believe that it would be a contravention of political ethics I if were to share my personal impressions from the meeting I had with Genadiy Yanaev the day after he was elected to the post of the Vice-President of the USSR. From my conversation with him it soon became clear that the election of Yanaev was a return of those forces which desired the stabilisation of the situation, the preservation of the USSR, more hard-line politics and a desire to use the position of Gorbachev to achieve these aims. In the same month, December 1990, the head of the KGB, V.Kriuchkov began to become more vocal and to increase the authority of his position by officially proclaiming the time-worn slogans of the danger posed by the CIA and that the KGB was prepared to fight against any anti-communist forces. On the other hand, one must not forget the exceptional foresight and shrewdness of the foreign minister of the time, Edward Shevardnadze, who warned of the imminent possibility of dictatorship. During the entire period of 1991 Gorbachev was forced to manoeuvre between these influences, hoping to preserve the Soviet Union and to continue his line of paced reform within the ideology of perestroika, albeit in an new form. When I look back and analyse the events of those days, I find it impossible not to believe that the conflict which took place at the end of 1990 was impossible for two major factors: on the one hand, the increased rate of the disintegration of the Soviet state via the development of democratic and completely independent movements in all the former Soviet republics while on the other -- the threats to the interests of the ruling elite and the increased activity of the majority of the Soviet leadership aimed at the preservation of the status quo. And so we arrive at the attempted coup of the 19th of August 1991. One question begs to be answered: Did Gorbachev and other proponents of perestroika know of the imminent coup and its scale? I do not believe so, at least in terms of specifics. They could not have failed to have seen the storm on the horizon or have felt the potential danger, but nothing more. On the 16th of August A.Yakovliev warned that a coup was being prepared in Russia, but this was more of a political conclusion than information based on specific facts. A month later, on the 15[th] of September I had a long conversation in Moscow with Yakovliev and Shevernadze. My profound conviction from these talks is that they had both had a foreboding of the events but had not believed that it could take place so quickly. I feel that Gorbachev was of the same opinion. They had not believed for example that the minister of defence, D. Yazov, could be involved in such a plot. They had not believed that the entire council of ministers of the USSR would be so willing to reject the new Treaty of Union to replace to the USSR with a Confederation of Independent States. Of course, there were many inexplicable occurrences during the course of the attempted coup, but that is the way of politics. Large-scale change is often connected with many inexplicable events when the momentary psychological or physical conditions of an individual or group of individuals can be of decisive significance for events. The intention of the leaders of the coup was to carry replace Gorbachev quietly, or at least to put him out of the way in reserve. Yanaev, Kriuchkov, Pavlov[23] and others had evidently been in favour of the maximum flexibility in the change of power with the eventual gradual restoration of the Soviet regime. Gorbachev had to be convinced to withdraw for reasons of illness or nervous exhaustion or to come into line with the leaders of the coup and to "cure" himself of his illusions. There were clear analogies with the coup of August 1991 and the removal of Khrushchev from power in October 1964 -- a statement regarding the illness of the leader, putting the troops on alert along with a declaration that they would not be used as an elementary attempted to pacify the people and international society. There were, however, enormous differences between 1991 and 1964. Underestimating these differences was one of the biggest mistakes the leaders of the coup made. In August 1991 the Russian nation and in particular the Russian intelligentsia were of a completely different state of mind. Their thirst for and their experiences of freedom were stronger than any more primitive feelings for preserving the status quo. Notwithstanding economic difficulties, masses of the Soviet people had experienced the taste of free life. Although perestroika in terms of strategy and tactics was already bankrupt, it had lead to profound changes in the way of thinking of wide ranging social groups. The 19th of August was the litmus test which in reality showed what had been achieved by Gorbachev. Perestroika had not only unleashed the will of the people but had also given it the self-confidence not to heed what was said to them "from above". Shortly after the attempted coup the rock group, "The Scorpions" released their hit "The Winds of Change", dedicated to those who had thwarted the coup. Indeed, this wind came from the heart of the reformed Soviet society, from the new spirit cultivated by perestroika. On the day after the coup, on the 20th of August, several hundred thousand demonstrators protested against it in St.Petersburg, thousands surrounded the White House. Huge demonstrations were organised in the larger towns of Russia. Major sections of the Russian army refused to carry out the orders of leaders of the coup or take any decisive actions. On the evening of the 20th of August it was already becoming apparent that the self-proclaimed "Committee of salvation" had lost control over the situation. At that moment the leaders of the coup had two choices: either to declare a bloody civil war with no predictable outcome or to sound the retreat. In the final outcome, the coup was thwarted by the decisive actions of Boris Yeltsin and his supporters, but also by the millions of ordinary Russian people who were unwilling to make compromises with their consciences, the generals and officers whose thoughts and deeds were not limited by party interests and remained loyal to their exalted mission. I will never forget my telephone conversation at that time with Edward Shevernadze. At the time of the conversation the outcome of the conflict was far from clear. Despite this I felt in him not only his decisiveness to engage in the struggle, but also a clear feeling of responsibility to avoid the unthinkable -- to avoid a civil war or a large-scale thermo-nuclear war. I feel tempted to write that not only in the USSR but in other countries as well the driving forces of change were the standard bearers of the emergent new civilisation. Many of them, perhaps still unconsciously, other, thinking with the criteria of world progress, and yet others since they had just had enough of thinking the way other people wanted them to think. The 19th of August 1991 was the real date of the end of perestroika and the start of new beginnings in the process of economic and political reforms in the USSR. The collapse of the coup meant, in practice, the collapse of the major forces which were holding up the reform process. It meant something else as well: together with the ban on the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the dismissal of the Council of Ministers, the arrest of the conspirators the main it resulted in the removal of the main institutions of power which until that moment had held the USSR together. Making the most of this moment, in the days following the failed coup, the former Soviet republics confirmed their announcements of independence. The new union treaty of which the leaders of the coup had been so frightened and which would have saved the Union was forgotten. The new directly elected president of Russia, Boris Yeltsin, began a series of direct contacts with the leaders of the former Soviet republics and with only a few months withdrew the prerogatives of the centralised Soviet ministries. This in reality meant the collapse of the USSR and the passing of its basic rights and obligations into the domain of the Russian republic. After coming to terms with the huge public support for the actions of Boris Yeltsin, Mikhail Gorbachev resigned in 1991.[24] This was the end of a significant period in the history of the nations of the former USSR. As paradoxical as it may seem, this period also marked the beginning of a new era in the development of the world. The collapse of one of the two superpowers meant in practice the collapse of the bi-polar world and together with this the structures which were typical of the Third Civilisation. 5. THE EXPLOSION IN EASTERN EUROPE The radical changes within Eastern Europe during the period between 1989 and 1990 were the first part of the universal political restructuring of the world order. These changes began as a huge emotional outpouring soon to be followed by enormous problems and disappointments. A number of experts on the subject believe that the changes in the Eastern Europe were the result of understandings reached by Gorbachev and Reagan at their numerous meetings, in particular in Malta. My personal opinion is that these processes could not have come about as the result of any agreement. The changes were a result of the growth in self-confidence of the Eastern European peoples as a consequence of perestroika, of the confidence in the influence of the democratic movements and the feeling that Gorbachev and his entourage were losing control over power. The extent of the influence of the reforms which took place in the USSR after 1985 on the countries in Eastern Europe was enormous. In Bulgaria, for example, whose language is very close to Russian, the most popular newspapers between 1986 and 1989 were not Bulgarian but Soviet. The spirit of perestroika, the revelations of truths about the past, the constant reminders that the Utopias of the totalitarian regimes were bankrupt lead to enormous changes in people's attitudes and prepared the way for the beginning of the explosion. Despite differences in scale and methods, all the "socialist" countries of Eastern Europe began to give birth to new civil movements and the growth in free expression and the desire for profound reforms. On the 6th of March 1989 the speaker of the Soviet foreign ministry, Gerasimov, announced that the future of every Eastern European country lay in its own hands. In this way he officially dismissed the Brezhnev doctrine which guaranteed the control of Moscow over all its Eastern European satellites. There is no doubt that Gorbachev had given prior notice of this announcement to his Western partners. From this moment on, events unfolded at an unbelievable pace. In May 1989 the Hungarian government dominated by reformist communists opened its border with Austria and allowed thousands of citizens from the former German Democratic Republic to travel to West Germany. A little later the Polish trade union "Solidarity" achieved a decisive victory in the elections to the Senate and part of the lower chamber of the Polish Sejm. Moscow accepted these events calmly, thus proving that it had indeed accepted a new policy towards Eastern Europe. On the 7th of July at a summit meeting of the Warsaw pact countries in Bucharest, Gorbachev declared that all the members of the pact were at liberty to chose their own paths. What was the objective of the Soviet leadership in relation to its former allies? Analysing the experience of Bulgaria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and a number of other Eastern European countries of this period, I believe that between the spring and summer of 1989 Gorbachev had begun to apply a policy based on two main theses: first of all -- the rejection of the "Brezhnev doctrine" on the limitation of sovereignty and allowing greater freedom to the governments of the relevant countries; secondly -- the replacement of the old leaderships with new, more pragmatic leaders and the preservation of the Soviet zone of influence on the basis on new alliances and treaties. This, however, involved the same theoretical and practical problem as in the Soviet Union. On the one hand, Gorbachev wanted to give greater freedom and to support the reform processes within the Eastern European communist parties. On the other hand, he could or would not comprehend the scale of the explosion, the fuse of which he had lighted himself. The reform processes resembled an uncorked bottle of champagne rather than a well-thought out scheme. After liberation of their spirits, the people would no longer accept leaders imposed upon them from above and pouring out onto the streets and squares they demonstrated new power and self-confidence. After the summit meeting in Bucharest in July 1989 events unfolded like a chain reaction. On the 7th of October Gorbachev directly influenced the beginning of reforms in the DDR and on the 18th of October Erik Honneker was replaced by Egon Krenz. A few days later the Berlin wall came down. On the 10th of November the Bulgarian communist leader, Todor Zhivkov, was replaced by Petar Mladenov, who was favoured by the Soviet leadership. At the end of November and the beginning of December after mass unrest in Prague, a new government was formed consisting mainly of non-communists and on the 29th of December Vaclav Havel became the first non-communist president from more that 40 years. During the last few days of December the Rumanian dictator and his wife were killed after a military coup and a hastily improvised trial. From the point of view of the history of the Eastern European nations these changes had enormous significance. They followed the logic of the analogous changes which were taking place within the USSR, but rapidly overtook them in terms of their speed and depth. Apart from the universal elements of the crisis within the USSR there were the additional factors of the struggle and aspirations of the smaller Eastern European nations for complete sovereignty and independence. This also helps to explain the more radical nature of the changes which took place within them. From a global point of view the explosion in Eastern Europe was the first phase of the larger geo-political changes and the creation of a new world order. The changes in Moscow, Berlin, Sofia, Prague, Budapest and Bucharest, together with the collapse of the USSR can be determined as the beginning of the collapse of the Third Civilisation. The military and political alliances of the Warsaw Pact and COMECON were rendered pointless. The political map of Europe had changed beyond recognition. The democratic changes in Eastern Europe could have taken place in a different way but they could not have been avoided. The changes were a consequence of the crisis of the totalitarian regimes, their inability to adapt to the large technological and political changes in the world and the requirements of the new age. The administrative coercion of the one-party system and the repression of private economic initiative were shown to be historical mistakes. Only history will decide what would have been best for the world -- either the "Chinese" model of reform by placing priority on economic reform, or the "velvet revolutions" which in reality took place. I have to say personally, that not only in Bulgaria but in most of the other Eastern European countries very few people believed in the rapid demise of the USSR before 1989. No-one could believe that a super power such as the USSR could allow itself to reject its global privileges or that the leader of such a super power would voluntarily "concede" his "conquests" without wanting anything in return. And now, looking back to the facts of 5--6 years ago, I can see for myself yet again, that the changes in Eastern Europe were not thought out beforehand, not were they carried out effectively from a regional or global point of view. The West was carried away with the "ideological" ecstasy that communism was on its way out. In the Eastern European countries themselves the nature of the changes was motivated mainly by internal conflicts and clashes. In some Eastern European countries restorationalists got the upper hand, with aspirations to restore to themselves the pre-war rights they had lost. Radical change from strong state regulation to radical liberalism had its destructive consequences. It was clear that in this way the Eastern European countries would undergo a long period of instability and a slow adaptation to the European Community. From a positive point of view, the most important consequences of the changes in Eastern Europe were the destruction of internal obstructions to world integration and the creation of the new structures of the global world. At the same time the discovery of new virgin territory for world globalisation was far from promising world harmony. Realisation was soon to come in the West that the belief in the final victory of world capitalism was wrong. In the East internal conflicts continued. New solutions had to be found while the common crisis persisted... 6. RETURN TO A DIFFICULT FUTURE Was the return to power of the former Eastern European socialist parties a logical stage in development? There is a common reason for this. It was a confirmation of the thesis that the political process is not a series of happenstances but is rather governed by a definite logical process. A fter the series of mainly "gentle" revolutions in Eastern Europe in 1989 and 1990 and the changes which took place later in the USSR, the period between 1993 and 1995 was marked by a series of elections in which the former communist parties (or their political successors) were returned to power. In Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria and Slovakia the former communists won categorical victories at the polls. In December this was repeated in Russia by the communist party lead by G.Zuganov. In Rumania and Yugoslavia the former communists never actually left power. This gave rise to the question which is not uppermost in the minds of modern thinkers and politicians: was this return to power of the ex-communist parties a logical stage in development? I have to admit that during the five or six years of the reform process many of these parties did undergo profound changes. They accepted the values of democracy and pluralism and changed their platforms. In contrast to the newly-formed parties of anti-communists, democrats and liberals they had well organised party structures and people faithful to them in all sectors of economic power. Some of these parties together with the structures of the former state security organisations had been preparing themselves for pluralism and opposition politics as early as the period of perestroika. Economic domination, the creation of their own "loyal" dissident and political circles, the infiltration of trusted members into the newly-formed anti-communist parties - all this was undoubtedly well planned and had a strong influence on the political situation. The most important reason for the return of the ex-communist parties to power, in my opinion, can be found in the nature of the totalitarian system and the logical stages in its change. What I referred to earlier as the "mistake" of Gorbachev was also decisive here. The new democratic, radical and liberal forces came to the forefront riding high on the wave of political reform. E.Gaidar and A.Chubais in Russia, L.Balzerovic in Polish and Y.Antal in Hungary all became symbols of the reform. All the reformers, however, were faced with the same problem - while political changes could be carried out radically and quickly, economic reform required time, trained specialists and techniques specifically designed for the transition from extreme centralism to a market economy. The "phased" discrepancies between economic and political changes caused economic difficulties, serious political clashes and crime. The explosion of emotions and anti-communism of the autumn of 1989 and during the period between 1990-1991 succeeded in alienating the former administrative and economic elite from the new democrats. Their more or less forced removal from ministries and state factories provided them with significant opportunities in the private sector where they acted in close cooperation with tens of thousands of well-trained experts from the former state security organisations. The only way for the new democratic forces to control the economic forces was to get them on their side, as happened in the Czech republic. Elsewhere where pragmatism was replaced with virulent anti-communism, the new political forces were unable to control the economic sector sufficiently to carry out large-scale reforms. The economic forces, banks, factories and the private sector, in general remained in the hands of people trained by the former totalitarian regime. The second important reason was the disappointment of the population. One group of the population had benefitted from a series of social privileges and guarantees under the totalitarian regime. By supporting the reforms between 1989 and 1990 many of these people expected a rapid solution to the problems which they were experiencing and not the chaos, crime and fall in living standards and production which in reality ensued. Unfortunately, as a result of the delays in economic reform during the period of perestroika and the clashes with the harsh reality of the open world economy these hopes remain unfulfilled. Bulgaria did not become a Balkan Switzerland, as some of its leaders promised, nor did Rumania become France. Quite the contrary, the populations of the Eastern European countries had to come to terms with the unwelcome news that they produced little, consumed much more and had to reverse this ratio by 180 percent. For these reasons in 1992 almost all the Eastern European countries experienced a profound change in social attitudes. The political elite who had been in power from 1989-1990 were forced to realise in terror that their sleepless nights, the titanic struggle and reforms were now considered by many as mistaken. Of course, it should be added that many of the new democrats did in fact make many mistakes. In the long run the radical nature of the economic reforms in the period between 1989 and 1990 and the delay in implementing economic reforms led to the political equilibrium being upset. Sooner or later it had to be restored. A significant percentage of the population in Eastern Europe had become impoverished and disappointed. They preferred to vote for the former communist parties seeing in them hope for the restoration of the social benefits which they had lost. However, can the reformed communists live up to these expectations? The answer is a conditional "no", or a partial "no". The condition is that they undertake a flexible policy of reform aimed at the widest possible social strata of society. Due to the legislative changes which have been undertaken, any return to the past is unlikely, although to a certain extent still possible, mainly in Russia. There still remains the difficult path of peaceful reforms needed to achieve successful economic policies. For this reason the return of the ex-communist parties is a return to a difficult future. It will not halt the global processes of integration, nor will it delay the processes of moving towards new, civilising social relations. After the battle of Waterloo at the beginning of the 19th century, the processes of restoration in France looked inexorable and many believed in it. However, it was to be seen that once the seeds of revolutionary ideas had been sown, it was to be very difficult to destroy them, the freedoms that had been won could not be taken away. Such is the case with the return of the ex-communist parties to power. They will either have to adapt to the new civilising realities or they will thrown onto the scrapheap of history. For the ex-communist parties of Hungary and Poland this will be easier, their ideological reformation began a long time before they came back to power. For the Bulgarian Socialist Party or the Party of Social Democracy in Rumania this will be more difficult. Whatever the outcome, the reflected processes of global transition in Eastern Europe will not be smooth. As a reaction to the errors and the collapse of perestroika politics went too far to the right and then turned sharply to the left. The realities of life will put the former socialist parties to the test. Some of them will rise to the challenge and some will fall victim to the contradiction of their own ideological contradictions, while still others will collapse under the pressure of vested interests. Whether the New Civilisation will accept them is a matter that the future will show us. Chapter Three COLLAPSE II: GLOBAL DISORDER 1. THE DANGER OF CHAOS Ever change of epoch takes place in the context of conflict and disorder. The crisis in the East is just the first phase of the changes in the present global political order. The second phase will take place in the West and Far East... T he universal processes of globalisation and the collapse of the Eastern European regimes have given rise to a whole series of unfamiliar phenomena. Humanity has entered a new phase of development marked by the huge and growing level of mutual interdependence between people, nations and cultures. The global order based on the principles of bi-polarism of two super powers and which had dominated since the Second World War has been destroyed. To a large extent the way in which the Eastern European regimes collapsed lead to this state of chaos firstly in their own countries and later in international economic and political relations. I define chaos as a universal crisis of the spiritual and value systems, the rejection of certain standards of global intercourse and the instability of others, as a period of relative disorder leading to change in the world order. The first phase of this chaos began in 1989--1900 with the collapse of the Eastern European regimes and the economic and military organisations in this part of the world. The dissolution of COMECON and the Warsaw Pact in the space of a few months led to chaos in economic relations within Eastern Europe. The mutual export of goods between the former members of these organisations fell sharply. Almost all the countries in the region lost their markets and the stability of their industrial structures was all but destroyed. Later this was followed by the collapse of Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. A number of ethnic conflicts flared up, some of which developed into full-scale wars. For the three years between 1990--1993 the region was in absolute chaos. I believe that this first stage will be followed by a second, very important stage of changes. This second stage, which has already begun is affecting the larger Western powers and their mutual relations, with new roles and positions being assumed by the Asian states and the acceptance of new principles in international economic and cultural relations and with formation of new institutions for the regulations of global processes etc.. Some of them will want to preserve the status quo and their position of dominance, while others will want to prove old theories. However, there is only one truth: the post-war global order has lost a number of its main foundations. Humanity has entered a transitionary period from the bi-polar model to a new, unfamiliar global structure. The universal crisis of the post-war political model had caused and continues to cause the general collapse of contacts and relations wwhich will be of great significance for further development. There are two interrelated factors which are of influence on the processes which are taking place: globalisation as a fundamental and continuous phenomenon and the crisis in Eastern Europe which was provoked by globalisation and which at the same time has accelerated its pace. The problem, however, is that no-one, or almost no-one was prepared for what happened - neither the collapse of the iron curtain, nor the consequences of the new drive towards globalisation and its side effects. I want to speak of the dangers posed by chaos and general disorder mainly because after the collapse of the Eastern European regimes not one of the factors which caused the universal crisis of contemporary civilisation has dissappeared entirely.The deformations of economic growth remain and global ecological problems have yet to be solved. After the renewal of nuclear tests, albeit tactical, by France in September 1995 no-one any longer believes that disarmament is irreversible. In the context of the bi-polar model the world was governed by two super powers and a group of nations dependent on them. Today the level of direct government has sharply declined. After the collapse of the USSR a number of new pretenders to world leadership have appeared and before our very eyes the roles and relations of former allies have changed radically. Politics is no longer two-dimensional but an equation with hundreds of unknowns. A clear example of the ontradictions between the great powers can be seen in the war in the former Yugoslavia. The vested interests of certain states, in assisting various leaders and arming different armies demonstrate that the old political tradition, the tradition of the bi-polar world has long since passed away. Or let us take Europe. The unification of the two Germanies did not only impose a series of new responsibilities on West Germany but has created complex problems for pan-European processes. Germany transferred part of the burden of unification on to its European partners via the mechanisms of international financial relations. The integration of the two German states has changed the structure of Europe and the relations of the states within it. The granting ofassociate membership status to the Eastern European countries within the structures of the EU seemed in 1989-1991 a relatively easy task but was soon delayed almost indefinitely. This was to a certain extent because of the unwillingness of Russia to allow itself to be encircled by a new "iron" or other type of curtain. The place and role of Russia itself in the global community are still unclear. In the global aspect the collapse of the Eastern European regimes has had even greater consequences. The collapse of the Soviet Union and its economic potential to all intents and purposes removed one of the two main super powers from the geo-political map. Only the USA remains. A number of years have passed and there are already voices which proclaim that the super powers are no longer necessary. France has offered to extend its nuclear umbrella over Germany. Germany and Japan have demonstrated their desires to become permanent members of the Security Council.Russia has officially requested membership of the group of the most developed nations. The collapse of the Eastern European economic and political structures has opened up a hole in world economic relations with consequences for the world economic order. A not insignificant number of investments have flowed into Eastern Europe. West Germany's great commitments to its new Eastern provinces have resulted in a deterioration in the condition of the European exchange rate system. Without the burdens of such problems, Japan and a number of other countries in the Far East have continued to develop their potential and to exert more and more influence on the world economic processes. China has demonstrated high levels of growth and a flourishing economy. The changes in South Africa and the forthcoming transition in Hong Kong have encouraged high levels of investment and movement of funds. In 1992 and 1993 while delivering lectures in Switzerland and the USA I emphasised on several occasions that geo-political turbulence will affect the world financial systems. Even today few people really believe in this although the facts are there for all to see. In the winter and spring of 1995 the American dollar began to tumble against the Japanese yen. The world financial markets became very worried and the most prominent financial experts explained it away with the American budget deficit, the crisis of the Mexican peso or ambitions to increase American export. What really happened demonstrates the reduced abilities of governments and central banks to exercise effective control over international economic relations. Certain "invisible" private forces are already in control of the world economy and are rarely affected by governmental influence. Moreover, the first symptoms of uncotrollability appeared directly after the collapse of the Brenton Woods system at the beginning of the 1970's when in March 1973 Richard Nixon allowed the dollar to float. For almost a quarter of a century the dollar has been trying to find its levels via floating exchange rates and now we are on the eve of a new governmental vacuum. The reason for this is the constant increase in the role of the private banks and unidentified financial funds in global economics, the growth in the role of centrifugal effects in the world financial systems. In the spring of 1995 the director of the International Monetary Fund, M.Cammedessu, declared that in the near future and with its present structures the IMF would not be able to continue to fulfil its functions. "We are living in a dangerous world" were the words of Cammedessu. His trepidations were emphasised by the constant growth in unregulated funds of money as well as by the growing mountain of state and private debts etc.. Neither the present international financial system nor the entire world economic and political order will be able to prevent any possible crises. The chaos has affected the spiritual relations, thinking and value systems of people. The world communist movement underwent a catastrophe with negative repercussion for a number of other socialist and social democratic movements. On the other hand, the unpreparedness of the West to act quickly and the clear inadequacy of liberal doctrines to stop the crisis showed that they are unable to offer a miracle treatment. Many politicians in attempts to avoid divergence between reality and ideas have stated that it is no longer political programmes or ideologies which are important but pragmatic action. As in other similar historical transitional periods a large number of people are confused and prefer to take refuge in local pragmatism and finding solutions only to current problems. The lack of a common view about how one should approach the new situation has opened the door to nationalism, ethnic ambitions and xenophobia. A significant number of world politicians have been compelled to turn their attention to current problem solving and to ignore global and regional problems. It is becoming more and more evident that there is a need for a global analysis on what is taking place, its consequences and a search for a solution to the chaos which is ensuing. Today there is no doctrine or common theory about the future of the world, or how to solve our common problems: the global economic order, the environment, poverty, religious tolerance, stabilisation of growth etc.. This is one of the reasons why nationalism often comes to the fore in the search for solutions to global problems. The attitudes of the younger generations is a very important indication of the spiritual crisis. I often speak to my colleagues who are lecturers in various institutions of higher education in the industrialised countries of the world. In the less developed countries the situation is less clear. The young people in these countries want to achieve the material prosperity of the richest nations which is in itself strong motivation. In the USA, Japan, France, Great Britain, Canada and Germany, however, for quite a long time now, students and young people have no overall idea about their future. The ambition of achieving a certain level of material prosperity, a large bank account, one's own business, to travel abroad and so on, are largely manifestations of tradition rather than anything else. But what does this mean? Healthy interests and the stability of the system? Or, rather, a spiritual crisis in a vacuum expressed by the new generations in the most developed countries drowning in luxury and spiritual consumerism. World history has witnessed other periods of chaos and disorder of global structures: some longer some shorter. The problem is that the changes which are taking place today are not as the result of wars in which the victor imposes his will with force. The globalisation of the world has led to a universal crisis of the current world order. This is a crisis of the entire world system, of national and regional thinking and consequently everything else which typifies the Third Civilisation. Within global relations there is a new spiritual, economic and political vacuum. If these vacuums are not filled with adequate changes to world structures, there may be indescribable consequences. Why has there been such an explosion of religious sects in recent years? Why has terrorism become a global problem and is more and more uncompromising and violent in its forms? Why are people becoming more alienated from politics? Why has fundamentalism spread into new territories? Why has international crime grown so much? The reason is that the current world order is not adequate to respond to the new realities. NATO and the USA alone are not capable of resolving world conflicts. This may even lead to a reaction from Russia or China and new divisions within the world. The UN does not have the strength to stop conflicts. It is becoming apparent that many elements of the current world system are outdated and its major mechanisms have to be changed and repaired. The manifold lack of clarity in international political and economic relations are an expression of an inadequately low level of agreement between countries and the expectation that everything will resolve itself. The disorder is on such a large scale that it requires common action on the basis of universally accepted principles. Of course, the world today is much more integrated. This should not be seen so much as an advantage but as a condition for overcoming the chaos more rapidly and for allowing integration to develop. This will also require some form of world coordination, of mutually acceptable decisions and the growth in the role of organisations such as the UN. It would, however, be imprudent to suppose that the problems with which we are faced will be resolved quickly and conclusively. This will require a relatively longer period. The new world order will develop gradually, based on mutually agreeable action .This conclusion is based on the fact that the real world powers are still acting from their position as nation states and their national responsibilities and will only change the international rules of the game within that context. This is logical but it also carries a risk. Given a variety of events and varying conditions any one country with a more dominant global role by changing its internal order runs the risk of causing a universal cataclysm. Globalisation and its progeny - the global world, will lead to a crisis not only of traditional international relations but also of the political systems of national societies. The interests of more and more people stretch beyond the bounds of a single state and depend less and less on the decisions of a single government. Everywhere in the developed world there is a decline in trust for traditional political systems and a need for new decisions. Thus: 1. The lack of a mechanism for reliable international, economic and political regulations; 2. The contradiction between the unlimited global power of world corporations and the limited power of governmental decisions; 3. The reactions of 2.5-3 billion poor people in the unification of humanity into a single mutually dependent whole; 4. The danger of new nationalism and the restoration the division of the world into blocs; 5. The possibility of the bi-polar model being exchanged for a mono-centric world structure and the domination of one or a group of rich states; 6. The destruction of small cultures and the dilution of national traditions and values; 7. The limitation of the private life of the individual and his transformation into a "manipulated animal" by the new media; 8. The crisis of traditional political systems; 9. Terrorism and international crime; All this factors are expressions of the disorder and danger of chaos - an expression of the crisis of the borders between the two epochs. 2. GEOPOLITICAL COLLAPSE One of the most important consequences of the collapse of the Eastern European totalitarian regimes was the change in geo-political structures. The bi-polar world seems to have collapsed irreversibly. T he "modern" age which has occupied the last five centuries in the development of humanity has been a time of the creation and consolidation of nation states, of the formation of alliances and opposing political blocs. After the collapse of the Berlin wall a series of global processes began which were to lead to gradual but irreversible changes in the world political order. Directly after the fall of the"totalitarian regimes in Eastern Europe the majority of political commentators and researchers considered that the problem would be limited to the collapse of the USSR and a number of smaller Eastern European states and thereafter their inclusion in the structures of the developed nations of NATO and the EU. Such one-sided views continue to predominate today, despite the fact that most people are aware of their inadequacies. The problem is that after the explosion in Eastern Europe a slow but unstoppable process of universal geopolitical change began. I refer to this process as "geo-political collapse", since it affected the political structures typical of the entire twentieth century and in a broader context, the entire Third Civilisation. What is clear is that the map of Europe is being reshaped. However, let us look at the rest of the world. Despite the strong influence of Russia in Central Asia there is a growing conflict of interests between a number of Islamic states and China. The unification of Germany has changed the proportionality of power in central Europe. There is no need for detailed forecasts in this area although there are certain clear trends emerging which seem to herald the end of the old world order. The first wave of the geo-political collapse clearly took place in Eastern Europe and most significantly in the USSR. The second will be connected with the increase in the political importance of Europe (above all Germany) and Japan. he role of the USA, the only remaining super power, will be to provide a balance with all the consequences which that entails. The third wave will be a consequence of the increase in the economic and the political importance of a number of smaller countries in South Eastern Europe, Asia and Latin America. At the beginning of the 1990's we were witnesses not only to the collapse of the Eastern European political structures but also to the potential of profound changes within the West. There is no doubt that the borders of the European community will move towards the East and that the role of Germany in this process will be extremely significant. The consolidation of the European Union and the creation of a single European currency which appears to have strong political support[25] presuppose a number of changes in trans-Atlantic cooperation. I do not believe that trans-Atlantic ties will weaken but I do believe that the creation of a common European currency will bring about many changes in their nature, scale and direction. It is true that a large number of lesser developed states still do not have the self-confidence and strength to undertake independent activities. Even if this were to happen, such ideas would develop in isolation rather than as a part of a logical process. For the moment the countries outside the Group of 25 are strongly dependent on the most developed nations. Amongst them, however, there are a number of nations with growing ambitions for more economic and political influence. Which will be stronger? Integration or an eruption of ambitions and the struggle for new influence? The question is whether the struggle for free economic and political relations will begin in Asia, Africa or Latin America? Will this not be stronger than the processes of global integration? In any event one thing is clear - the old world order created between the 18th and 19th centuries by a group of advanced European states and the two super powers which emerged in the 20th century is now a thing of the past. The old geo-political world is collapsing before our eyes and not only as a consequence of the collapse of the USSR. In the autumn of 1995 the voters in Quebec very nearly voted for secession from Canada which could have lead to the real collapse of the Canadian state. Almost daily, politicians and civil servants in the European capital of Brussels reiterate the view that the USA should no longer play the role of a super power. In Paris the views are even more categorical. The state of chaos is due to the fact that the world is undergoing transition. There are many processes and situations within this transition as well as many unpredictable deviations. 3. ECONOMIC TURBULENCE Colossal disproportions have accumulated within the financial systems of the world. Until now they have not lead to any great crises because of the regulatory role played by the world political order. However, after its total collapse are we not bound to feel the cold embrace of instability and chaos? O n the 1st of September 1995 the world news agencies reported an emerging financial crisis in the most prosperous of post-war economies - Japan. Thousands of investors withdrew their deposits from the Kisu Credit Union in Osaka and the Hiogo bank in Kobe which were then closed to all kinds of banking operations. Their clients wanted to withdraw over 3 billion US dollars or almost 1/4 of the total deposits of the union. The bankruptcies of a number of Japanese credit unions and the unprecedented problems they caused for a number of large banks cast huge doubts about the stability of the banking system in Japan. The reason for such shocks is the huge amount of debt accumulated in the 1980's when stock exchange prices were very high and suddenly fell as a result of the global recession. The problem, however, is more complex. More and more people are becoming aware of the fact that the debts accumulated by governments and individual financial structures will not be repaid. The enormous debt of the American government and the increased indebtedness of other developed countries pose a question about the efficacy of the world financial system. It is true that in contrast to the Great Depression of the 1939, the banks and national governments now have much greater reserves and experience in avoiding financial crises. However, it is also true that such colossal debts are possible in the conditions of guaranteed political economic regulation and a clear and stable political order. The trust in the major currencies is based not only on their real condition but on their established monopoly of the world markets. It is not difficult to comprehend that if the geo-political restructuring does take place then political and military factors will lose their influence and the problem with debt will prove catastrophic. There is a direct link between the changes in world political structures and stability of the existing financial systems. Neither of them are adequate for the conditions of the epoch which we are now entering. Of course, the world economy will