91视频

(Opinion): Eduard Shevardnadze and the politics of sheer tenacity

Author: Martha Merritt

Martha Merritt is a political scientist and director of international development at the Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频 at the University of Notre Dame p. p. OP-ED
p. Eduard Shevardnadze鈥檚 resignation as president of the small, beleaguered Caucasus republic of Georgia brings a strange and formerly brilliant career to an end, though the controversial politician鈥檚 decision to remain in the country is bound to trouble his successors. The lesson of his political trajectory is that鈥攅ven for one as skilled as he鈥攃rafting democracy in the aftermath of authoritarian rule is exceedingly difficult.p. While most politicians see the rise and eventual fall of their power, Shevardnadze had a catlike ability to regenerate himself. He literally escaped death at least four times during assassination attempts.p. Equally remarkably, he rose in Soviet-era Georgian politics, risked it all by ratting on his boss, rose to membership in Mikhail Gorbachev鈥檚 Politburo, risked it all by resigning, and finally gained the presidency of a Georgia in turmoil by 1992. He then hung on to that office with tenacity, his political skill in doing so eventually outweighing his judgment and likely the interests of his country.p. Without a strong social consensus on democratic institutions and a market economy, such as that of the Baltic states, and with heavy pressure from Russia, Georgia has not been able to put weapons-heavy politics and other forms of gangsterism behind her. While Shevardnadze鈥檚 many enemies portrayed his repressive rule and the discredited elections in Georgia earlier this month as personal failures, the next Georgian president will find political institutions weak and the pull of personalistic politics strong. Even the last three weeks of public protest in forcing Shevardnadze out was not necessarily a triumph of the public that must yield democratic rule. As has happened all too often in the post-Soviet countries, frustrated publics are likely to go home and hope for something better, rather than take the risk of staying put and insisting upon it. The power brokers then move back to the center of action.p. Shevardnadze once was much respected in the West, earning him the dislike of Russian conservatives in at least equal measure. As the chief architect of Gorbachev鈥檚 foreign policy, the accusation was that he 鈥済ave it all away鈥 to Western advantage. What Shevardnadze did as foreign minister was impress his counterparts, with his commitment to a peaceful transition to democracy and a knowledge that, as he said in his memoirs of the time, the Soviet system 鈥渨as all rotten.鈥 That such a figure sank to political lows in Georgia at least in part demonstrates the difficulty of ruling a country with lingering secessionist tensions鈥攊n Abkhazia and North Ossetia鈥攁nd bordering on the war-torn Russian republic of Chechnya. To be sure, Shevardnadze鈥檚 rule in Georgia was not assisted by the intense disdain the Russian military harbored for him and his increasingly desperate attempts to hold on to power. Like former Russian President Boris Yeltsin, Shevardnadze struggled to establish a credible presidential network that could carry out his commands. Elections became a tool to affirm his power, rather than a vehicle for accountability and public choice.p. Both Yeltsin and Shevardnadze have now relinquished power, but neither lost it through an election that empowered the opposition. These were lost opportunities to give the public confidence and to affirm a commitment to democratic political institutions.p. Shevardnadze and Yeltsin were hailed as democrats prematurely, and then spent their careers as presidents using every fiber of their considerable political savvy to hang on to power. Both men had promise and a preference for democracy that soured in the rough and tumble post-Soviet world. A new generation, less idealistic and more sober in their approach to the West, will take over in Georgia. So far, acting President Nino Burdzhanadze and the likely winner of the pending elections, Mikhail Saakashvili, have taken pains to guarantee Shevardnadze鈥檚 safety and to assure a smooth transition. They affirm Western-looking priorities, including re-opening negotiations with the International Monetary Fund and possible membership in NATO and the European Union. But these goals will not be easily achieved. Saakashvili is a 35-year-old graduate of Columbia Law 91视频 who proved his mettle in voicing opposition to corruption but now will have to be the one to clean it up. The real test will come, however, not in his evident desire for power but in his ability to walk away from it. Charles de Gaulle is a better role model for post-Soviet leaders than Shevardnadze or Yeltsin.p. In short, a change of power does not guarantee democracy; yesterday鈥檚 opposition can become tomorrow鈥檚 despot, whether in Georgia, Russia or Iraq. Our already tumultuous decade recommends a sober assessment of Georgia鈥檚 current upheaval in government, as well as a continued focus on the means of building democracy instead of just the promise of it.

TopicID: 3939