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CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
The Sixth Glasnost
Glasnost—a Russian concept that originally meant publicity or notoriety—has been an effective instrument of Soviet policy since the early days of the Bolshevik Revolution. It was first used by Lenin, who realized that power proceeded from denying others a veil of privacy for their decision making. Hence, Glasnost, or "public airing," became a weapon for the Communist Party. 1
By forcing local officials to engage in a process of "criticism and self-criticism" in which they had to confess to their own mistakes or point to those of others, Lenin made all government officials and lower-ranking Party members increasingly vulnerable to Party discipline and purges. In so doing, he strengthened the hold of the Party hierarchy while at the same time increasing the appearance of free speech. As he noted, "Glasnost is a sword which itself heals the wound it inflicts." 2
This miraculous sword could also be used as a powerful instrument of deception. To the extent that these controlled bouts of self-criticism were seen by foreign eyes as unrestricted freedom of criticism, it created the illusion of a budding democracy. As in all deceptions, a single indicator of a phenomenon—in this case, criticism—is represented as the phenomenon itself, an open society. The logic went: Democracies allow public criticism of officials; the Soviet Union allows public criticism of officials; therefore the Soviet Union is a democracy.
Glasnost served a further, more practical purpose. In order for the press in the Soviet Union, which is entirely controlled by the Communist Party, to serve as an effective means of delivering messages to foreign audiences, the illusion had to be created that it was independent. By fostering the impression of a free speech and a free press, Glasnost lent credibility to government-controlled newspapers that otherwise would be regarded by foreign newsmen, and their audiences, as mouthpieces for the straight Party line. It provided the Soviet government with the means of altering its image abroad. It could be used to establish a set of convenient peepholes for journalists, academics, and other Kremlin-watchers through which they could see selected pictures of Soviet society.
From its inception, the Soviet leadership was justifiably concerned with its image abroad. Lenin, to get his revolution accepted by both capitalist governments and socialist parties abroad, had to represent it as something it was not: a constitutional union of democratie states. Its very name, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, was a fiction designed to make it appear that the Soviet Union was not a state, run by the Kremlin, but a grouping of autonomous "Republics" governed by elected "Soviets" of workers.
The Soviet Constitution was similarly a fiction. It described a government, complete with a Presidium, Supreme Soviet, and court system; but they existed in name only. Even the ministries were merely fronts for the agencies of the Communist Party. Lenin also fabricated entire activities of the notional "Republics" to impress foreign audiences. At one point, he even staged a breakdown in relations between one of these "Republics," the Far Eastern Republic, and Moscow, in order to encourage the American and Japanese governments to believe it was a dissident republic, and to provide it with munitions and equipment.
These early deceptions had little staying power, however. What modest credibility staged press releases about Soviet democracies had was quickly undermined by Communist spokes-men crudely stating that news releases should be used for agitation and propaganda, or "agitprop." This crisis of credibility came at a time when the Soviet Union faced a desperate economic situation.
By 1921, industrial production had fallen to about one fifth of the level it had been in 1913, and total national income, even in inflated rubles, was only one third the prewar level. 3 Factories were shut for lack of spare parts; the railroads were paralyzed by lack of fuel, oil fields had stopped production because of lack of drilling bits, trucks and tractors had run out of tires, and farmers lacked the fertilizer and equipment to produce food to export to the cities. Moreover, the Soviet revolutionists could not import the equipment they needed. The United States, Britain, France, and Japan not only had intervened in the civil war on the side of the anti-Communists, but now embargoed the export of these desperately needed items from the Soviet Union. And even if they could buy them from other countries, the Soviets had no way of paying for them. The Western Allies had frozen Russia's foreign gold reserves, and denied them credits.
Lenin recognized that the survival of the Soviet Revolution now depended on changing this situation. The Soviet Union had to get nations that perceived it as an intractable enemy to ship it the necessary equipment and materials to revive its economy. To do this, Lenin had to alter their image of the Soviet Union from a hostile to potentially friendly nation. The instrument was Glasnost.
THE FIRST GLASNOST: THE NEP
In the spring of 1921, Lenin proclaimed to the world a 180-degree reversal from the policies that had alienated the Western powers. He explained this change as the evolution of communism. He announced that "war communism," in which Soviet citizens had no freedom, rights, property, or even money, had come to an end. It would be succeeded by the second phase of communism, called the New Economic Policy, or NEP, in which there would now be a gradual return to a free market economy. Individuals would be allowed to own property; peasants would be allowed to own their land; small and medium businesses could be owned by workers and entrepreneurs in the form of cooperatives; and large industries would be reconstituted as publicly owned "trusts." Money would again become legal tender, debts would be recognized, and, wherever possible, the profit motive would be reinstituted.
Moreover, this economic "restructuring" would be accompanied by political liberalization. Individuals would be allowed to travel within Russia without permission, to emigrate, and to participate in local politics. Even émigrés abroad would be offered amnesty. Taken together, these measures suggested that the Soviet Union, despite its rhetoric about revolution, was slowly but irreversibly moving toward an accommodation with capitalism.
The message implicit in NEP was: The desired reversal of communism would be accelerated by trade with the West. It was thus in the interest of the Western Allies to supply, rather than deny, trade credits to the Soviet Union.
Feliks Dzierzhinski, as head of the OGPU, the security service of the Communist Party, was charged with getting this message convincingly through to the West. Dzierzhinski had already established the Trust deception which, it will be recalled, allowed him to send messages through the medium of putative dissidents to eleven Western intelligence services. Lenin also appointed him head of the NEP's Supreme Economic Council. From this dual vantage point, Dzierzhinski could control the covert as well as the open channels to the West. While the former was used to convince the West that the Revolution was faltering, the latter was used to show how democracy was surfacing.
Here Dzierzhinski activated a number of underground "opposition" newspapers, such as New Russia, which were read by, and cultivated working relations with, Western journalists in
Moscow. They echoed the theme that the Soviet Union was in a period of exciting change. At the same time, Dzierzhinski had his OGPU agents arrange tours of the "underground" for Russian émigré writers who had fled to the West. They were allowed to return to the Soviet Union, to interview recently released political prisoners, and to witness dissident meetings. They then reported back to their readers in first-hand accounts on how censorship on books, art, plays, and cultural criticism had been suspended under the NEP.
The Soviet leadership was even willing to manipulate its institutions to further this effect. For example, in 1922, the Commissar for Foreign Affairs enthusiastically proposed to Lenin: "In case the Americans would insist on representative institutions ... we can deceive them by making a small ideological concession which would not have any practical meaning." 4
Lenin had no problem with falsifying institutions in the Soviet Union that were fictions to begin with. As he privately explained to the Communist leadership, the new policy "did not mean peace with capitalism but war on a new plane."
Within this Glasnost atmosphere, the Soviet Union also opened a "path," as Lenin called it, to the corporate business community in the United States that helped facilitate the Soviet Union's acquisition of credit, commodities, and technology, and also gave American lobbyists, public relations firms, and politically influential contacts a powerful incentive to support Soviet objectives.
Lenin pointed to the potential of this path during an acrimonious debate he had with other Bolsheviks soon after the Revolution. After he had hyperbolically asserted the Communists would triumph by hanging the capitalist nations, one skeptical colleague interrupted, and, referring to the critical shortages of war material in Russia, asked where the Communists would get enough "rope" for such a massive hanging. Lenin answered: "The capitalists will sell it to us." Moreover, they would sell it on credit. 5
Underlying Lenin's quick reply was a powerful insight. Although foreign capitalists were the ultimate target of communism, they were also, in the short run, its most promising allies. The explanation to this paradox was simple enough: Western corporations had a concrete interest in helping Lenin break the diplomatic and economic isolation that the Western governments had imposed on the Soviet Union—because they wanted the Soviet Union's business. Lenin dangled in front of capitalists the sort of opportunity they could not easily find in their own free markets: a government-guaranteed monopoly. It would take the form of "concessions" in which foreigners would invest the capital in Russian ventures—and reap a large share of the profits.
The immediate problem for Soviet strategists was to convince Western businessmen, who had seen the Bolsheviks seize their property without compensation in 1917, that now, four years later, it was safe to accept these "concessions." The problem was compounded by the fact that the Soviet Union was virtually bankrupt—and Soviet ideology eventually required nationalizing private property.
To get around such formidable obstacles, Lenin suggested a program of misdirection that would focus the attention of the audience on the future promise of a Soviet Golconda—while distracting it from the inherent risks. Specifically, Lenin ordered his staff to find an American businessman who could be awarded the first concession under the NEP and, by parading before other American corporations, convince them that it was prudent and safe. It was much the same strategy as slaughterhouses using Judas goats to lead the cattle in. Lenin noted: "What we want to show and have in print... is that the Americans have gone in for concessions." He added, showing his appreciation of the lobbying role corporations play in the United States, "This is important politically." 6
The American chosen for this role was Armand Hammer. 7 Although he was then only a twenty-one-year-old medical student visiting Moscow, his father, Julius Hammer, was well known to Lenin. Julius Hammer had been a founder of a radical wing of the American Communist Party, and, in this capacity, had met Lenin and other Soviet leaders before the Revolution. After Lenin seized power in 1917, Julius Hammer, who became the exclusive agent for Soviet trade with America, helped supply the Soviet government with embargoed goods by laundering them through a third country—the short-lived Republic of Estonia. He also made the Soviet government a silent partner in his Allied-American Corporation, through which this business was funneled. Although an American citizen, Hammer was appointed the Soviet commercial attaché in New York, and worked closely with a Soviet official named Ludwig Martens in organizing trade arrangements, and evasions of the American embargo.
By late 1921, these relationships between Hammer and the Soviet government were investigated by the Department of Justice, and Martens was unceremoniously deported. Shortly thereafter, Julius Hammer himself was jailed on supposedly unrelated charges stemming from an illegal abortion he had performed, and he was sent to Sing Sing for three years. This prison sentence left his son Armand with the task of sorting out the tangled strands of the Allied-American Corporation.
Armand Hammer had little problem making contact with the Soviet strategists. As soon as he arrived in Moscow, he called Ludwig Martens, his father's former associate, who was now working directly for Lenin's intelligence chief, Feliks Dzierzhinski, on the Supreme Economic Council, and, even more to the point, was directly in charge of the effort to open the path to Western business. Martens brought Hammer to Boris Reinstein, who was in charge of organizing "International Propaganda" for Lenin. Then, with Reinstein's endorsement, Hammer was allowed to meet Lenin, who approved awarding him the show concession to "advertise" Soviet opportunities.
Since the purpose of this exercise was not to mine ore from the concession but to use it as bait for other potential concessionaires, Lenin instructed Martens in October 1921 to immediately give Hammer's corporation a contract for a concession, "even if it is a fictitious one." He suggested it could be "asbestos or any other Ural valuable or whatever you will." 8
Lenin then wrote to Joseph Stalin, the newly appointed General Secretary to the Communist Party, asking that he and other Politburo members fully "support" this notional venture with Armand Hammer. He explained, "This is a small path to the American business world and this path should be made use of in every way." The emphasis was added by Lenin, who used "in every way" as a term of art suggesting this path could be used for covert action, influence agents, and intelligence. A copy of the letter was sent to Dzierzhinski as well as Stalin. 9
After receiving this concession in 1922, Hammer set out to publicize it in America (as did Boris Reinstein's propaganda bureau). Hammer went from industrialist to industrialist in America, extolling the virtues—and potential profit—of investing in the Soviet Union. Hammer told these businessmen that Lenin had openly admitted to him that "Communism does not work," and that now the Soviet Union needed capitalists to repair the system. By 1925, Hammer had succeeded in recruiting no fewer than thirty-eight prestigious corporations, including the Ford Motor Company, into investing in Soviet enterprises. As the "path" gradually expanded to a superhighway for doing business with the Soviet Union, another three hundred foreign companies signed up for concessions. There followed a vast infusion of machinery, trucks, spare parts, ships, planes, and even whole factories—all financed by Western credit. 10
In supporting this path, Dzierzhinski demonstrated that the Soviet Secret Service was capable of using covert channels to Western intelligence, such as double agents, false defectors, and sham communications, to reinforce and give credibility to the government's overt channels. As Lenin had accurately predicted, as long as the capitalists were told what they wanted to hear, they would tacitly accept rather than expose the deception. The message they wanted to hear was that the USSR was a potential gold mine.
The Soviet government also used diplomatic channels to rein-force the Glasnost message that the Soviet Union was evolving into a moderate government. Instead of calling for world revolution, as they had done prior to 1921, Soviet diplomats and trade delegations now stressed peaceful coexistence. The Soviet Foreign Ministry, using codes it knew were being deciphered by England, instructed its overseas agents to cease support for anti-West subversion. It also claimed that the Communist International, or Comintern, which Lenin headed, was a separate entity, not under its control.
This Glasnost message was accepted partly because it coincided with what Western governments wanted to believe. It was convenient to assume that the Soviet Revolution was a failure if only because it ended the pressures to take military action against Moscow. And it was in the interest of Western governments to believe that trade with the Soviet Union would weaken, rather than strengthen, the revolutionary elements in the government.
In any case, the NEP succeeded in breaking the effort to isolate the Soviet Union. Every major country except the United States normalized its diplomatic relations with Moscow, the trade embargo was abandoned, Germany helped rearm the Red Army, and no fewer than twelve foreign Communist parties joined the Comintern during this period. The Soviet Union also got the credits it needed to refurbish its industry.
Finally, in 1929, having accomplished its purposes, the NEP was abruptly ended. all private enterprises were nationalized; foreign concessions were cancelled (and most foreign investment was expropriated without compensation); agriculture holdings were seized and farms collectivized. ("Perestroika" meant in this context the forced merger of private farms into state collectives.)" Censorship was reimposed; dissident movements were quashed; non-Party newspapers were shut down; and, within weeks, all traces of NEP disappeared.
THE SECOND GLASNOST: THE SOVIET CONSTITUTION, 1936-37
The next Glasnost offensive was more short-lived. Stalin suggested in the mid-1930s that the Soviet Union should move in the direction of restructuring its economy along capitalist lines, if necessary. He called these radical reforms "reconstructions," or Perestroika. They included profit incentives that were determined not by any Marxian need but by individual efficiency in increasing production. He explained: "There was no point in overthrowing Capitalism in 1917 ... if we do not succeed in enabling people to live in a state of prosperity." To support this picture of a rapidly changing Soviet state, he proclaimed that the Soviet Union was returning to a Western-style constitutional government.
The new 1936 Constitution had all the trappings that suggested a democracy in Western eyes. 12
It guaranteed, on paper at least, that there would be freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and freedom of assembly. There would also be elections where citizens would be able to use secret ballots.
While the foreign press, which was the immediate target of these announcements, expressed some skepticism that this constitution would turn the Soviet Union into a democracy overnight, it accepted that Stalin was moving in the right direction. Even Time, which had been an avowed opponent of communism, grudgingly reported: "Last week Russia, having come of age, allowed her people all the fun and trapping of a real national election ... to vote not in public by a show of hands but in private in a red-curtained booth, by secret ballot, according to their own convictions." It raised questions about "How capable Russia's ignorant masses are of assimilating democratic doctrine . . . and how capable Joseph Stalin is of permitting them to do so," but concluded that these constitutional changes, despite their limitations, suggested Stalin "had evidently revised his theory" about communism. 13
The liberal constitution was only the opening shot in this campaign to make the Soviet Union appear similar to European states. It gave credibility to Soviet journalists, trade officials, diplomats, and other spokesmen who could claim to their foreign counterparts that they now could speak candidly, and critically, about the Soviet system because they were protected by the new guaranteed freedom of speech, press, and so forth.
Stalin, meanwhile, used embassies in neutral countries and diplomatic chatter at the League of Nations to further reinforce this theme. Agents of influence such as President Edvard Benes of Czechoslovakia—who was secretly in the debt of Soviet intelligence, if not the pay—were mobilized to pass discreet messages, disguised as diplomatic insights, to British, French, and Polish diplomats. At a more subterranean level, messages that dovetailed with these were put directly into the hands of Western intelligence services by a supposedly anti-Soviet émigré organization, based in Bulgaria, called "the Inner Line." Although this group originally had worked against the Soviet agents in Europe, and served as a security service for other anti-Communist groups, it had been taken over by Soviet intelligence officers by the thirties. Like its immediate predecessor, the Trust, the Inner Line now was a controlled channel for disinformation.
The thrust of these messages was that Stalin was a pragmatist, not an ideologue; a nationalist, not an internationalist; an administrator, not a revolutionist; a manager, not an exporter of terrorism. It was therefore possible for the West to do business with him.
Through Benes and other diplomatic channels, it was reported that Stalin's actual foreign policy, as distinct from his Communist rhetoric, involved developing alliances with capitalist countries opposing Hitler. Stalin's celebrated call for "socialism in one country" was seen as a face-saving rationalization for ending the Leninist policy of intervention and subversion abroad.
To further advance this idea, Stalin made a number of concrete demonstrations to foreign leaders that he was willing to make changes. For example, he openly pledged not to support the American Communist Party or any other group that advocated the overthrow of the American government, even though such a promise backed away from the principles of a Communist International. But it made it easier for President Roosevelt, who finally had recognized the Soviet Union in 1933, to extend credits and trade preferences in Moscow. Moreover, Communist parties abroad were even allowed to criticize the decisions of Moscow, which added to the appearance that they were becoming independent.
Previously, Communist parties had been considered to be Stalin's agents in foreign countries. Now they could claim to be independent and patriotic institutions. This made more plausible their demands to participate with non-Communist parties in "popular front" governments. Stalin also benefited: by advancing the legitimacy of local Communist parties, he laid the conceptual groundwork for Euro-Communism.
This Glasnost offensive came to an end with Stalin's purge of the Communist Party in 1937-38. All the constitutional guarantees, electoral demonstrations, foreign policy pledges, and diplomatic promises were revealed to be shams. The promised Perestroika turned into the "Great Terror." Then, in 1939, Stalin's alliance with Hitler, which was supported by the Euro-Communist parties, wrecked the illusion that these parties were independent entities.
THE THIRD GLASNOST: THE UNCLE JOE PARTNERSHIP, 1941-45
After Hitler invaded Russia in June 1941, Stalin revived Glasnost in the form of a Soviet partnership with the United States and Britain that would bring democracy and peaceful cooperation to the postwar world. He again sent out the message that the militant phase of communism had now ended.
As a further demonstration of good faith in 1943, he dissolved the Comintern, which had been one of the famous Soviet organs dedicated to promoting Marxist-Leninist revolution abroad. By then, however, it had only symbolic significance; the coordination of Communist parties was now done by the International Department of the Communist Party. In an equally symbolic gesture, Stalin expunged from the national anthem references to international revolution. He also restored the rights of the Russian Orthodox Church, proposed the liberalization of censorship and other controls, and permitted Russians to own private plots to grow food. And he agreed to joining the United Nations after the war ended.
Even though these were only token gestures, they were accepted as evidence of change by Anglo-American leaders who wanted the alliance with Stalin to be more palatable to the public. Churchill, for example, responded by drafting a letter to Stalin, noting: "We feel we were right in interpreting your dissolution of the Comintern as a decision by the Soviet Government not to interfere in the internal political affairs of other countries."
These messages were delivered by diplomats and intelligence officers stationed in neutral countries in the form of "slips" or planted stories. For example, one British intelligence report in 1944, which it later turned out was assembled by a Soviet agent, stated that Russia had based its postwar recovery on "a structure of trade that would allow a slower pace of re-industrialization and the import of consumer goods—and, through political collaboration with a view to establish real security in the West." 14
Again, this was what the Allies wanted to believe: the Soviet Union would be buying goods from the West—not threatening it with subversion. This justified massive economic and military aid through the Lend-Lease program, which the Red Army needed to remain in the war against Hitler.
Harry Hopkins, President Roosevelt's adviser, wrote after the meeting with Stalin at Yalta in 1945:
"We really believed in our hearts that this was the dawn of the new day we had been praying for. . . The Russians had proved that they could be reasonable and far seeing, and there wasn't any doubt in the mind of the President, or any of us that we could live and get along with them peacefully for as far into the future as any of us could imagine." 15
The British Foreign Office similarly concluded: "The old idea of world revolution is dead." 16
Encouraged by such optimistic assessments of a Soviet partnership, the United States and Britain sanctioned de facto Stalin's earlier annexation of the three Baltic states—Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia—as well as his postwar plan to annex parts of Poland, Prussia, Rumania, Finland, and Japan. They also accepted in this spirit of goodwill the concept of a Soviet sphere of influence over much of Eastern Europe.
The euphoria hardly outlasted the end of the war. The Soviet takeover of Czechoslovakia, sponsorship of the civil war in Greece, and occupation of part of Iran, among other things, brought this entente to an abrupt end. The Iron Curtain, as a metaphor, replaced the spirit of Glasnost.
THE FOURTH GLASNOST: DESTALINIZATION, 1956-59
On February 24, 1956, at the XXth Party Congress in Moscow, Nikita Khrushchev launched yet another Glasnost offensive based on economic and political reforms. He blamed Stalin, who was dead, for the present problems. He argued that the "cult of the personality" that Stalin created had perverted the Communist Revolution and led to the loss of individual freedom.
Khrushchev thus equated ending Stalin's "cult of the personality" with the restoration of democracy in the Soviet Union. Although the publication of this speech was portrayed as an intelligence coup in the United States by the CIA, its message was hardly secret. 17
Khrushchev had copies of the speech distributed to over 2 million Communists in the Soviet Union and Eastern bloc, and according to Angleton, no fewer than six different Communist diplomats, under Soviet control, offered it to the CIA as well as to other Western intelligence services. The "leaking" of this secret speech set the basis in the West for the most sweeping Glasnost offensive since the NEP.
Then Khrushchev announced, with great fanfare, reforms that appeared to constitute what approached another Russian Revolution—equivalent, as The New York Times reported, to "the spring break up of ice on a Siberian River." 18 He proclaimed that competition would play a major role in restructuring agriculture and industry. And, in a well-publicized experiment, economically autonomous teams would be allowed to act like private businesses. This return to capitalism was then made the subject of a film, released abroad under the title Man of the Soil.
The Soviet press, amplifying the return-to-capitalism theme, published numerous stories about private millionaires, underground businesses, and the thriving black market. 19 In addition, there were drives to eradicate alcoholism, nepotism, and corruption.
The economic reforms were accompanied by political reforms. Russian Church leaders were allowed to travel abroad; Moscow artists were permitted to hold exhibitions of abstract paintings; poets like Yevtushenko were allowed to give readings in the United States; and Solzhenitsyn was allowed to publish works critical of the Soviet Union under Stalin, such as One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. Soviet dissidents were allowed to have contact with the Western press. Academic enterprises, such as the Institute for the Study of the United States and Canada, were similarly given a new role as sources of "news" for American journalists. 20
Khrushchev also decided to again make use of the business path to build support for his Glasnost. He turned to Lenin's original choice, Armand Hammer, who had in 1957 taken control of Occidental Petroleum, a minuscule company in Los Angeles with no real assets.
By 1961, Occidental, which was listed on the Stock Exchange, had become a sufficiently large energy company for Hammer to return to the Soviet Union under the imprimatur of the U.S. Commerce Department to, as he put it in a press conference, "inquire into opportunities for increased peaceful trade." 21
In Moscow, Khrushchev warmly applauded Hammer, in a speech to Communist leaders, for the role he had played under Lenin's New Economic Policy in the twenties, and further, while reminiscing about him, justified the policy of luring capitalists to Russia as a means of advancing the revolutionary cause. He stated, in terms that left little room for doubt: "The measure our government took under Lenin's initiative yielded good results; it contributed to the success of socialism in our country." He asked rhetorically, "Was the New Economic Policy a retreat?" He then answered the question, No—it had only appeared to be a retreat. "Now it is clear to all that it was an attack by socialism on capitalism." 22 In other words, the NEP was a successful deception.
In a private conversation with Hammer, in which there was not even a translator present, Hammer reported that Khrushchev complained about inefficiencies in the Soviet economy, and then stated, in an almost word for word repeat of Stalin's earlier message to the West, "If we cannot give our people the same standard of living that you give your people under the Capitalist system, we know that Communism cannot succeed."23 Again, as he did with Lenin, Hammer was given the message to repeat that the Soviet leadership was admitting the failure of communism, and making internal economic reform its highest priority.
When Hammer returned to the United States, he sought an audience with President Kennedy to report on what Khrushchev had told him. The message, as he also announced to the press, was that the Soviet Union could provide a bonanza of profits and jobs for American business. "If you give us credit. . . . you will keep your plants busy," he quoted Khrushchev as saying. 24
Hammer explained that Khrushchev had confided in him that "Communism was sure to fail" unless it could provide its people with more food and consumer products. The Soviet Union thus had to change from a wartime to peacetime economy to save the Revolution.
Although it was the same message that had been sounded in the NEP (and by the same American capitalist), it was a message American business—and labor—still wanted to hear. The Soviet Union could, in Khrushchev's estimate, furnish America with a million new jobs.
Whatever success it had in projecting the image of a more moderate and non-threatening state, this Glasnost did not prevent the Soviet leadership from carrying out its other strategic goals. In 1959, as Golitsyn later revealed, it radically reorganized the KGB, so that it would be capable of securely carrying out long-term deceptions (a reorganization confirmed in the late 1960s by U.S. Communications Intelligence). At the same time, it also created the special strategic deception staff, GUSM, under military command. Soon afterwards, as we have seen in the telemetry double cross, the Soviets began projecting an image of missile incompetency through biased electronic signals and double-agents' disinformation while perfecting highly accurate missiles. These missiles gave the Soviet Union the ability to destroy America's land-based missiles in a surprise attack, although U.S. intelligence did not realize it for almost a decade. And then, in Cuba in 1962, Khrushchev attempted to change, if not the balance of power, U.S. confidence in its ability to defend itself by covertly deploying intermediate-range missiles in Cuba. But by this time such events as the shooting down of an American U-2, the mass arrest of Soviet dissidents, and the erection of the Berlin Wall had ended this Glasnost.
THE FIFTH GLASNOST: DETENTE, 1970-75
The fifth Glasnost, initiated by Leonid Brezhnev, supplied the context and goodwill atmosphere for the Soviet policy of Detente. If the Soviet offer to restrict strategic arms, negotiate mutually beneficial accords, and relax internal tensions was to be made credible, Brezhnev had first to establish that the Soviet Union no longer seriously aspired to change the East-West status quo.
The "public airings" of issues helped explain to relevant audiences in the West why the Soviets had abandoned its prior aim of world revolution. The central theme was that the Soviet government was now run not by ideologues but by technocrats who had no interest in adhering to the Leninist doctrine of class warfare. Instead, like technocrats in the West, they wanted to expand and rationalize their industrial base. They wanted, in short, to substitute butter for guns. 25
Soviet scientists sent to international conferences, such as Pugwash, told their Western counterparts about how they were coming into increasing conflict with Communist ideologues. These dovetailing reports, elicited and analyzed by CIA debriefers, advanced the idea that, under Brezhnev's leadership, the scientific-technical elite was winning the battle.
During this same period, Georgi Arbatov's Institute intensified its program of briefing Western academics, journalists, media executives, and congressmen on the effect of technocratic changes in Soviet society. These backgrounders directed attention to differences purportedly developing between the outdated but still mandatory rhetoric of the Revolution and the actual policies of the new Soviet leaders. Briefers at the Institute told their subjects that Brezhnev's real agenda, whatever he said for internal consumption, was getting the Soviet economy working. To make progress, he recognized the need to relax the controls on Soviet scientists, engineers, and other members of the Soviet meritocracy, and to import Western methods and ideas. Dissidents in Moscow who were scientists and engineers were permitted to speak to foreign correspondents. Even if they had no mandated brief and merely spoke their mind, their complaints about inefficiency and bureaucratic restrictions would support the justification for a technocratic revolution.
As this Glasnost progressed in the mid-1970s, Brezhnev, like Stalin before him, promulgated a new constitution for the Soviet Union. It too granted freedom of speech, press, assembly, meeting, and public demonstration—as well as the right to education, medical treatment, and employment. The Soviet Union even signed the Helsinki Accords in 1975, which appeared to legitimize an opposition to Communist rule.
This technocratic revolution line was also fed by Soviet diplomats into intelligence channels. At the UN, the double agents code-named Top Hat and Fedora suggested to the FBI that Brezhnev's qualifications as an engineer were being given prominence to placate Soviet engineers and scientists who were fed up with ideological red tape. In 1969, both Soviet diplomats reported that they had received new "priority" questionnaires from their Soviet controllers demanding they find out about the American Chemical-Biological Weapon (CBW) program.
Fedora, after being recalled to Moscow for a briefing, then told the FBI that Soviet intelligence was being put under this pressure because the Soviet military had determined that the United States had an almost unbeatable lead in chemical-biological weapons. It was thus demanding the budget for a crash program to catch up. But the Politburo did not believe that the Soviet economy could afford to spend the money. Fedora claimed to be caught in the battle between doves, who demanded further intelligence, and hawks, who wanted to build chemical and biological weaponry. 26 (This message that the United States had won the race gave Nixon a further reason for making a dramatic decision that had been under consideration. He unilaterally ended U.S. production of CBW weapons.)
But the Soviets did not have to rely on chancy public or intelligence channels to get the main message of detente through to the White House. They had at their disposal a superb vehicle for laser-beaming messages to strategic planners in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the State Department, and the National Security Council without the intermediation and scrutiny of the counterintelligence staffs in the CIA and Pentagon that test the more ordinary communications sent from the enemy camp. This channel was the arms control process.
Whatever else they might accomplish in terms of actually limiting or reducing the strategic weapons of either the United States or the Soviet Union, arms control negotiations have provided the Soviets with a means of educating an elite American audience about Soviet defense policies, which, up until then, it had learned about mainly through espionage, satellite images, signals interceptions, and military displays paraded by the drag strips in Moscow. In these negotiations, the Soviets could tell this audience the meaning of the jigsaw pieces that they had collected in years past through conventional intelligence gathering. They could also use this channel to test the technological abilities of American intelligence by staging treaty violations to see if they could be detected. They could learn what could and could not be seen. And they could then use this channel to direct the attention of U.S. satellites to events and developments in Soviet territory that Soviet deception planners wanted seen. If, for example, Soviet negotiators suggest that mobile missiles are being confined to a base in Eastern Europe, they can be reasonably sure that U.S. intelligence will point its cameras there, and that the resulting photographs will be closely scrutinized. The Soviet negotiators, in other words, could steer U.S. satellites to peepholes that would reinforce a message sent through any other channel. And the messages need not be limited to weapons. They could concern the nature of the Soviet regime, the new leadership, and its desire for change. The Soviet version of arms control was developed in the early 1960s under the direct supervision of N. R. Mironov, a close associate of Brezhnev's. 27
As head of the Administrative Organs Department of the Communist Party, Mironov had the responsibility for coordinating military, diplomatic, covert, and intelligence actions aimed at furthering state policy. He was also, according to Golitsyn, Brezhnev's chief deception strategist and had personally led to the successful drive in the late 1950s to reorganize the KGB and International Department of the Communist Party so that they could securely execute long-term disinformation programs modelled on Lenin's NEP deception. General John Sejna, who acted as a liaison with the Administrative Organs Department and Czechoslovakian military planners in the 1960s, and who defected to the United States in 1968, explained in his debriefings that Mironov initially envisioned using the arms control process to delay U.S. military programs, disrupt the relations between the United States and its NATO allies, and gain some indication of how the West perceived of Soviet policies.
As the arms control channel developed, Mironov brought in another top deception planner. He was N. I. Savinkin, who subsequently, as deputy head of the Administrative Organs Department, took over the job of making sure that the negotiations not only dovetailed with but advanced Soviet objectives. Since this task required coordinating what military and ballistic equipment was seen by U.S. satellites and military attachés, he made General (later Marshal) N. V. Ogarkov—who had been in charge of GUSM, the Soviet General Staffs Directorate for Strategic Deception—the chief military representative to the SALT arms control negotiations. 28 This put Ogarkov in a perfect position to ensure that what the United States was told through the negotiations would be confirmed by what it "saw" and "heard" through its photographic and electronic surveillance of the Soviet Union.
Arms control also was an effective two-way channel. From it, Soviet strategists could learn what the prevailing American pre-conceptions of Soviet strategies were. Soviet negotiators were in fact told by the Americans precisely what they assumed Soviet weaponry, strategy, and objectives consisted of—and asked, after consultations with Moscow, to correct them if they were wrong. This technique, described by SALT negotiators, was meant to foster a common language about such issues as deterrence, mutual assured destruction, first-strike capabilities, mobile missiles, and so on. But it also helped Soviet deception planners to make information more credible by keying it in to the preconceptions of the American negotiators.
The more extended arms control negotiations become, the more dependent the Americans have been on the Soviets for public signs of support—such as official statements indicating progress or even the scheduling of summit conferences. And as the talks progress, the incentive has commensurately increased for American negotiators to assume that their Soviet counterparts are acting in good faith. Otherwise, they would have to conclude that their own efforts have been, at best, a waste of time. Further, they have depended on the Soviets to provide them, by both words and deeds (which could be conveniently photographed by satellites), some corroboration of this presumed good faith.
The Soviets, in turn, needed to know precisely what words and acts would be taken as evidence of their credibility. In other words, it was in both the American and Soviet negotiators' interests to tacitly cooperate on verifying hypotheses that the United States was relying on. Not uncommonly, according to participants, the Americans would suggest to the Soviets what further evidence had to be displayed— or withdrawn—to make the Soviet position credible to the White House, Congress, and the American media. By doing so, they would also provide Moscow with feedback. 29
The Soviets have encouraged this tacit cooperation by reinforcing the notion that there is an internal struggle between "doves" in the Foreign Ministry and "hawks" in the Soviet military. As Soviet Ambassador Anatoli Dobrynin told Henry Kissinger in 1971, the Americans could intervene on the side of the doves by taking certain actions in the SALT talks. To his credit, Kissinger realized that the Soviet suggestion did not coincide with reality. As he notes in his autobiography, "the proposition that elements of the Soviet government would squabble while dealing with foreigners was cleverly geared to American preconceptions of the 'doves' in the Kremlin fighting a valiant battle against 'hard-liners.' " 30
The assumptions about Soviet intentions advanced through the arms control channel have affected much more than the deployment of missiles. Nixon explained in his 1972 report to Congress that the Soviet willingness to enter into arms accords "indicates constructive intentions in political as well as strategic areas," and that "progress in controlling arms can reinforce progress in a much wider area of international relations."31 What this linkage led to was the reversal of America's postwar policy of containing the Soviet Union. Instead of maintaining political, military, and economic pressure on the Soviet Union, the new detente now strove to relax this tension. Instead of questioning the legitimacy of the Soviet rule over Eastern Europe, it recognized the "organic unity" of the Communist bloc—Kissinger's deputy, Helmet Sonnenfeldt, suggested that Communist bloc unity, rather than dissonance, was in the long-term interest of the United States. Instead of confronting the Soviet bloc, American forces were withdrawn from areas of conflict, including Vietnam. And instead of attempting to isolate the Soviet bloc, it was granted access to Western credit, technology, and markets— at times on "most favored nation" terms. Whereas earlier the United States had attempted to intensify economic disaffection within the Soviet Union, it now shipped out its own wheat to help the Soviet government satisfy the populace.
As Brezhnev held out the carrot to American business of a ten-fold increase in trade by 1980, Hammer recruited the support of some of the largest capitalist enterprises in the world to detente. Through Occidental, he announced deals amounting to over 28 billion dollars. (Most of these projects either did not materialize or proved largely unprofitable for Occidental.)
The Soviet Union also appeared willing to allow Communist countries in Eastern Europe to pursue independent relations with the West and engage in their own versions of Glasnost. Rumania, for example, advertised itself as a Communist nation that the West "could do business with," according to Ion Pacepa who, up until his defection in 1978, served as acting director of Rumanian intelligence and a personal adviser to President Nicolae Ceausescu. "To convince the West that Rumania was becoming a Western-oriented country, independent of Moscow," Pacepa said, "Ceausescu himself publicly attacked the Soviets, unmasked many of his predecessor's abuses, allowed the press to criticize the party bureaucracy, simulated a decentralization of the economy, instituted dual candidates for local elections, and launched a campaign against alcoholism, corruption, and nepotism." By 1975 the U.S. granted Rumania "most favored nation" status, and within three years, the West extended Rumania credits of $20 billion (or nearly $1,000 per capita). Then, in 1978, after he defected, Pacepa revealed that the "independent line" was largely a sham staged by the Rumanian intelligence service under his direction. He explained in a post-defection interview "Ceausescu's Glasnost was an . . . influence operation." 32
Brezhnev also announced with great fanfare a unilateral troop cut in Soviet forces in Europe. Accordingly, the Russian Sixth Tank Guard Division, with its 10,000 troops and armor, moved out of its base in Wittenberg, East Germany, presumably reducing Soviet offensive power in Europe. In fact, as Western intelligence determined only in 1981, the withdrawn division had distributed its tanks and other equipment to other Soviet front line divisions in Germany and then, although officially taken out of the Soviet order of battle, it was re-established under a different name just across the Polish border, where it received all new equipment. The "withdrawal" thus actually added to rather than reduced Soviet offensive capabilities in Europe. 33
The test of this "linkage" concept came in Vietnam in 1973. Kissinger believed that he could count on Soviet cooperation to prevent North Vietnam from breaking the Paris Accords, which would permit America to withdraw the last of its troops without losing face. As Kissinger reports, Brezhnev told Nixon that he had stopped "military deliveries to North Vietnam."34 If so, the North Vietnamese Army would not be able to invade the South. Suggesting a deal had been struck, Brezhnev added: "There may be rifles but nothing of considerable significance. We will urge [the North Vietnamese] to adhere to the Paris Agreement." Kissinger concluded "we . . . had used detente to isolate Hanoi and extricate ourselves from Vietnam." 35
The judgment turned out to be wrong. Despite the negotiated peace, the North Vietnamese Army—with tanks, ammunition, and electronic intelligence supplied by the Soviet Union—blitz-krieged through South Vietnam in the spring of 1975. North Vietnam took over South Vietnam, and its army occupies most of Laos and Cambodia. The Soviet Union, for its part, obtained the huge air and naval base at Cam Ranh Bay that the United States had evacuated, which greatly extended the effective range of the Soviet Navy.
Brezhnev's Glasnost, and the assumptions that Soviet activities could be taken at face value, were called into question by a secret reassessment of Soviet strategy in 1976. What occasioned this reassessment was a glaring discrepancy between CIA predictions of the number of intercontinental missiles that the Soviets would aim at the United States—and the reality. Rather than the few hundred missiles the CIA projected, the Soviets deployed by 1973 well over a thousand warheads aimed at targets in the United States. In 1974, Albert Wohlstetter argued in a series of highly influential articles that the CIA's persistent underestimation of Soviet missile deployments came, not from a lack of contrary photographic intelligence of silo construction, but from a mind-set among CIA analysts that began with the premise that the Soviets had the same deterrent strategy as the United States. 36
This "mirror-image" view of deterrence came from the arms control channel. It held that the only rational use of nuclear weapons was to deter, rather than win, a war. Consequently, the Soviet Union, like the United States, would build, and deploy, only the minimal number of missiles it needed to threaten—in the event it was attacked—the assured destruction of the attacker. If this logic of "mutually assured destruction," or MAD, was valid, the Soviet Union could be expected to build no more than the number of city-destroying missiles it needed to assure that the United States would not start a nuclear war. Since the Soviet Union would not need either numerical superiority, or highly accurate missiles that could attack U.S. missile silos, the CIA had assumed that it would not waste resources on them. The observed facts were interpreted accordingly, which led to the underestimates in the late 1960s.
This error caused such unease at the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB), which included some of the most distinguished experts on military technology, that its chair-man, Admiral George W. Anderson, suggested to President Nixon that he appoint an independent group of experts to reexamine the intelligence data. The idea, however, was strongly opposed by the CIA, and Nixon, under tremendous pressure to resign because of Watergate, rejected it. But when Gerald Ford replaced him in 1974, he ordered the CIA to produce a review of how well it had fared in estimating Soviet capacity in the past decade. According to Lionel Olmer, the executive secretary of PFIAB, the consequent review was "so condemnatory of the performance of the [intelligence] community over ten years on those issues that it left no room for argument that something ought to be done." 37
Admiral Anderson, at this point, revived his earlier proposal, suggesting that two teams reanalyze the evidence. Team A would be drawn from the CIA's own experts; Team B would be outsiders selected by PFIAB, with the approval of CIA Director George Bush. The experiment would test whether two different sets of experts, analyzing the same data, would come to different conclusions—and, if so, why? By July 1976, President Ford approved that competitive analyses would provide the basis for a new intelligence estimate of Soviet strategy, and Richard Pipes, a Harvard professor of Russian history, was selected to head the strategic review of Team B. 38
The Pipes panel, which included a top group of experts on military weaponry and strategy, then began, as Pipes put it, "a broad and in depth survey of Soviet strategic policies, and programs." The point of the exercise was to test the validity of the prevailing assumption that Soviet nuclear strategy was identical to America's own "MAD" strategy. It considered in this regard such factors as Soviet missile accuracy, aiming points, deployment patterns, and reload capacity. And it closely analyzed assertions of military doctrine in Soviet military journals. It concluded that the MAD theory did not fit the observed facts about the development of the Soviet rocket force. This was supported by the two other Team B technical panels, which demonstrated that the CIA had underestimated the accuracy of the newer generation Soviet missiles and that, once this error was corrected, these Soviet missiles could be seen not as part of a MAD deterrent but as weapons designed to destroy U.S. silos, with the least amount of collateral damage. They were, in other words, war-fighting rather than war-deterring weapons. In addition, it was calculated from the positioning of the land-based Soviet missiles that they were aimed not at American cities, which would have been consistent with a MAD philosophy, but at U.S. military targets. Further, these panels interpreted data indicating that the Soviets were developing or deploying no fewer than eleven new systems of missiles as inconsistent with the notion that Soviet strategy was based on maintaining the status quo.
The Pipes panel concluded that this evidence was completely in keeping with stated Soviet doctrine that "military missions are driven by political missions, not the other way round." It asserted that, if U.S. analysts avoided "mirror-imaging," or the assumption that Russians and Americans had the same strategy, the available evidence led to only one conclusion: The Soviet leadership, rather than subscribing to MAD, was deploying nuclear weapons, like any other military force, to achieve its national goals. As Pipes noted, "Soviet nuclear strategy had to be seen in context of grand strategy."39
This was a radical departure from what the CIA's Team A had concluded. Team A held that the Soviet leadership, believing victory was unobtainable, had developed its nuclear force to deter the United States from attacking the Soviet Union. It held that Soviet nuclear weapons were based on MAD and therefore future Soviet deployments were reactive to U.S. deployments.
The confrontation between these two different views of the same evidence, which was not unlike the religious disputations in medieval Europe, took place at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, on November 5, 1976. The audience included the fourteen members of PFIAB and the Director of the CIA. After considerable debate, Team A, unable to explain more recent Soviet missile deployments in terms of MAD, more or less gave up the battle. It then revised its report, and in agreement with Team B, concluded that the observed facts of Soviet missile deployments did not support the theory that they were a deterrent—or even defensive in nature. This revised assessment, accepted by PFIAB and CIA Director George Bush, thus became, at least briefly, the official American view of Soviet strategy. It was encapsulated in the 1977 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE-11 3/8). This new view completely contradicted the most fundamental assumption of detente—that both sides sought only to maintain the status quo.
The conflict was resolved in the Carter administration by discrediting not only Team B itself but the entire process of outside review. The new CIA leadership, under Admiral Turner, made what amounted to an ad hominem attack on the B team. Rather than dealing with the fact that the report had been accepted by Team A and the PFIAB, it called into question the personal integrity of its members, suggesting that they had used the "competitive review" merely as camouflage to assert their own biased view of Soviet intentions. The main source for this charge was a CIA officer, John Paisley, who had been assigned to the B team as a "liaison"—though actually, as it turned out, his job, according to Pipes, was to monitor and control its work for the CIA. Paisley himself was found shot to death in 1978, chained and weighted, in Chesapeake Bay.
(Angleton was intrigued by the circumstances surrounding this mysterious death. He suggested that if it had not been for some of the weights slipping off the body and consequently its surfacing, Paisley's disappearance would have been written off as a presumed suicide. Because Paisley had obtained a crucial overview of the credence given by the CIA to the different methods of assessing Soviet developments, Angleton speculated that Paisley's knowledge would have been of "great value" to the KGB, and that if they had obtained it they might also have had an incentive to hide this success by disposing of Paisley.)
By 1979, with the widespread arrests of Soviet dissidents, including members of the Helsinki Watch Committee, the closing of the underground newspapers, the resumption of Soviet covert actions abroad, and the invasion of Afghanistan, the discrediting of this Glasnost was complete.