Boris Yeltsin


We don't appreciate what we have until it's gone. Freedom is like that. It's like air. When you have it, you don't notice it.

Boris Yeltsin, 1995


Part I. Construction

In 1930, Ignaty Yeltsin, a well-off peasant of Butka village, Sverdlovsk region, was declared kulak. His house, his mill, and other valuables were confiscated. According to different sources, Ignaty Yeltsin either fled the village to avoid further persecution, or was sent to internal Northern exile. On February 1, 1931, Ignaty's grandson, Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin, was born in Butka. Soon afterwards, Boris Yeltsin's family moved to the city of Kazan, where his father, Nikolai, worked at a construction site of a machine-building plant. On May 23, 1934, Nikolai Yeltsin was convicted of anti-Soviet agitation. He served 3 years in Stalin's notorious labor camps of GULAG. After his release, Nikolai Yeltsin remained unemployed for a while, then worked in construction. Boris Yeltsin's mother, Klavdiya Vasilyevna Yeltsina, worked as a seamstress.

In his youth, Boris blew off two fingers on his left hand while playing with a live grenade.

Boris graduated from Pushkin High School in Berezniki, Molotov (Perm) region, where his parents lived from late 1930s to the early 1970s. After graduation, Boris went to Ural Polytechnic Institute in Sverdlovsk. While in college, Yeltsin played pro volleyball for Sverdlovsk in the USSR first division. In 1955, he graduated from Ural Polytechnic Institute, majoring in Construction.

In September, 1955, Yeltsin got his first job after college. He worked for Uraltiazhtrubstroy in Sverdlovsk. In his first year at work, Boris mastered twelve construction worker skills (stonemason, carpenter, driver, glazier, plasterer, etc.), a unique achievement for a young college graduate. Only then did Yeltsin agree to take a foreman's job. Yeltsin participated in numerous construction projects in the Urals.

In 1956 Boris Yeltsin married Naina Iosifovna Girina, a student he knew in college. They have two daughters, Yelena and Tatiana, born in 1957 and 1959, respectively.

Yeltsin's engineering career advanced rapidly. In early 1960s, he held jobs of construction unit chief, chief engineer of a construction division, chief engineer of an integrated plant. In 1961, Yeltsin joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). By 1963, at the age of 32, he became chief of a housing construction integrated plant, where he had thousands of people under his command.

Part II. The Communist Party

Boris Yeltsin's career in the Communist Party administrative apparatus began in 1969, when he became Chief of the Construction Department of Sverdlovsk Region Committee of the CPSU. In 1976, Yeltsin was elected secretary, then First Secretary of Sverdlovsk Region Committee of the CPSU.

In 1977, Yeltsin received an order from the Kremlin to destroy the Ipatyev House, a historical building where the family of the last Russian tsar, Nicholas II, was executed by Bolsheviks in 1918. Yeltsin obeyed, and the house was demolished overnight. By morning, every brick, including ones from the foundation, was taken to the city dump, and the site was paved with asphalt.

In April, 1985, Boris Yeltsin moved to Moscow. He held positions of vice chairman of the Construction Department, then the Secretary on Construction Issues of the Central Committee of the CPSU. On December 24, 1985, Yeltsin was elected the First Secretary of Moscow City Committee of the CPSU. This event elevated him to the status of an Alternate Member of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU. That period of Yeltsin's life is remembered by Muscovites for renovation of Arbat, a historical street downtown.

Yeltsin sharply criticized the Secretariat of the Central Committee of the CPSU for slow pace of reforms at the October, 1987, plenary meeting of the Central Committee. As a result, Yeltsin lost his positions in Moscow City Committee and the Politburo. He was hospitalized with a heart trouble, when, on the order of Mikhail Gorbachev, the KGB agents made Yeltsin leave the hospital and escorted him to a plenary meeting of Moscow City Committee of the CPSU, where he was sacked. The next year, Yeltsin was appointed First Vice Chairman of the State Committee on Construction, minister of the USSR.

Part III. The Democrat

March 1989 became a turning point in Yeltsin's career. He was elected to Congress of People's Deputies of the USSR from Moscow electoral district No. 1 in the first multi-candidate parliamentary elections in history of the USSR. One of the more populist parts of his electoral program was a call for reduction in spending on the Soviet space program. He received a seat in the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, where he held the position of Chair of the Committee on Construction. More importantly, he became a co-leader of the Inter-Regional Group of deputies, which stood up for human rights and democratic reforms.

Yeltsin was elected speaker of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) in May, 1990. By then, he was well-known for his harsh criticism of Mikhail Gorbachev and communist hardliners. In Yeltsin's opinion, Gorbachev had to speed up the pace of reforms in the USSR and get tough on the conservatives. More power had to be transferred from the Kremlin to the republics of the USSR. On June 12, 1990, Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR adopted the Declaration of Sovereignty of the RSFSR. June 12 is presently celebrated in Russia as its Independence Day. In July, Yeltsin quit the Communist Party. In August, Yeltsin and Gorbachev signed a document, according to which a new economic program had to be created and relations between the Kremlin and Soviet republics had to be harmonized. The program became known as "500 days". It was authored by a group of Soviet economists headed by Grigory Yavlinsky and Stanislav Shatalin. Gorbachev withdrew his support of the program in Autumn, 1990, and it was never implemented. Yeltsin called for resignation of President Gorbachev in a televised address in February, 1991. Gorbachev seeked a compromise, and negotiations on the Union Treaty started in Novo-Ogarevo.

Part IV. Presidency

In the first democratic presidential elections in Russia held on June 12, 1991, Yeltsin captured more than 57% of the vote to defeat Nikolai Ryzhkov, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, and three other candidates. President of the USSR Gorbachev attended the inauguration ceremony (July 10, 1991) and congratulated President Yeltsin.

President Gorbachev and heads of the Soviet republics were scheduled to sign the Union Treaty on August 20, 1991. Gorbachev, Yeltsin, and President Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan had an informal meeting in Novo-Ogarevo on July 29. They agreed that, after the Union Treaty was signed, Soviet KGB Chief Vladimir Kryuchkov, Minister of Defense Dmitri Yazov, and Prime Minister Valentin Pavlov would be replaced, and Nazarbayev would be appointed Prime Minister of the USSR. The conversation was recorded by the KGB.

On August 18, 1991, President Gorbachev was detained at his summer residence in Crimea on the orders of Communist coup plotters headed by Kryuchkov. The next day, they announced the takeover of Gorbachev's presidential powers by Vice President Gennady Yanayev. Boris Yeltsin rushed from his Arkhangelskoye residence to the White House of Russia in downtown Moscow. He condemned the coup and called for resistance. On the orders of the self-proclaimed State Committee on the Emergency Situation (SCES), organ created by the coup leaders, the White House of Russia was surrounded by the troops. Thousands of unarmed citizens came to defend the building. A tank unit of Taman division switched sides. President Yeltsin delivered a public speech, standing on top of tank No. 110. Paratroopers of Tula division were ready to defend the White House, too. Their commander, General Alexander Lebed advised Vice President of Russia Alexander Rutskoi and General Kobets, the chairman of the Military Reform Committee of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, on how to place the armored vehicles. People's resistance, swift action by President Yeltsin, and indecisiveness of the junta caused the coup's failure. The troops were never ordered to storm the White House. Three of its defenders were killed when they attempted to prevent armored vehicles from approaching the building the night of August 20. In the morning of August 21, several coup leaders, including Kryuchkov, fled to Crimea, where they requested a meeting with President Gorbachev. Gorbachev refused to meet them. Gorbachev safely returned to Moscow with Alexander Rutskoi's rescue team sent for him by Yeltsin. Most of the coup organizers were arrested and accused of treason. Marshal Akhromeyev, Interior Minister Pugo, and CEO of the Central Committee of the CPSU Kruchina committed suicide. Yeltsin banned the Communist Party, its property was confiscated. The Union Treaty was never signed.

On December 1, 1991, Ukraine held a referendum, and its citizens voted for independence from the Soviet Union. A week later, presidents of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus signed a treaty on creation of the Commonwealth of Independent States. On December 24, Russia took over the USSR seat in the United Nations. The next day, President Gorbachev resigned. The Soviet Union ceased to exist.

Everyday work of Yeltsin's government throughout most of 1992 was supervised by its Vice Premier, Yegor Gaidar, whom Yeltsin appointed acting Prime Minister on June 16. Gaidar's team started one of the most ambitious economic reforms in history. It included liberalization of prices, legalization of private business and private ownership of land, introduction of free trade and commercial banking, massive privatization of state-run enterprises, and radical cuts in the military spending. The reform was soon in jeopardy because of Yeltsin's own economic incompetence and destructive activities of pro-inflation forces. In November, 1992, President Yeltsin appointed the most influential pro-inflationist, former Head of the Central Bank of the USSR Viktor Gerashchenko, Head of the Central Bank of Russia. Once this appointment was approved by the Supreme Soviet of Russia, it became hard to reverse. The Supreme Soviet controlled the Central Bank, and Yeltsin's opponents led by speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov were in control of the Supreme Soviet. Under the false pretext of stimulation of the economy, Gerashchenko showered commercial banks with cheap credits, while the reform-oriented government kept cutting budget expenditures in futile attempts to lower the inflation. Inflation devalued savings and wages of most Russians while its few beneficiaries kept converting their roubles to dollars to invest abroad. In the meanwhile, import taxes were low, while taxes on Russian manufacturers remained outrageously high. Naturally, domestic production nosedived, and the first stage of the reforms became widely known as "shock without therapy".

On December 15, 1992, Viktor Chernomyrdin became the Prime Minister. Yegor Gaidar left the cabinet.

Congress of People's Deputies of Russia attempted to impeach President Yeltsin on March 26, 1993. Yeltsin's opponents gathered more than 600 votes for impeachment, but fell 72 votes short. In a referendum held on April 25, 1993, 58.5% of the voters expressed their confidence in President Yeltsin. More than 52.8% of participants also supported Yeltsin's economic policy.

In violation of the Constitution, President Yeltsin disbanded the Supreme Soviet and Congress of People's Deputies by his decree of September 21, 1993. The date of the new parliamentary elections was set to December 12, 1993. On September 22, Yeltsin discussed the possibility of Gerashchenko's dismissal with Prime Minister Chernomyrdin and proposed reformer Boris Fedorov to head the Central Bank. Chernomyrdin defended Gerashchenko.

In the meanwhile, the president's parliamentary opposition kept control over the White House of Russia. Yeltsin's Vice President, General Alexander Rutskoi was proclaimed the new president. On October 3, armed supporters of Khasbulatov and Rutskoi seized Moscow Mayor's Office and attacked Ostankino TV station. Twenty three people died. Yegor Gaidar addressed supporters of Yeltsin and democracy, asking them to come unarmed and defend the Kremlin and Moscow Soviet. Russian TV was broadcasting from a secret location under Moscow reserved for the occasion of a nuclear war. On October 4, troops loyal to President Yeltsin entered Moscow. The White House of Russia was surrounded, shelled from tanks, and set on fire. More than 100 people died. Rebels surrendered, and main leaders of the coup, including Khasbulatov and Rutskoi, were arrested.

On December 12, 1993, Russians voted in the parliamentary elections and the referendum on the new Constitution. The Constitution passed, and presidential powers significantly increased. Yegor Gaidar's Russia's Choice became the largest faction of the State Duma. Yet, reformers barely controlled one third of the new parliament, and the first place in the party list vote went to the ultra-nationalist Liberal Democratic Party of Vladimir Zhirinovsky. In one of its first acts (February 1994), the State Duma granted amnesty to leaders of the coups of 1991 and 1993.

At the date of Gerashchenko's appointment to the position of the Central Bank Chairman in 1992, the exchange rate of rouble was equal to about 400 roubles to $1. On October 10, 1994, the exchange rate plunged from 2,896 to 3,081 roubles to $1. October 11, 1994, became known as the Black Tuesday. The beleaguered ruble lost over a fifth of its value against the dollar, falling a record 845 points to end at 3,926 to one. Three days later, President Yeltsin forced Gerashchenko's resignation.

On December 11, 1994, President Yeltsin sent Russian troops to Chechnya in an attempt to crush the three-year-old Chechen independence bid. By Spring, 1995, federal troops seized Grozny, the capital of the breakaway republic. Relentless bombardment killed thousands of Chechen civilians. Hundreds of thousands became refugees. Grigory Yavlinsky, Yegor Gaidar, and many other democrats condemned the war and withdrew their support of Yeltsin. The president's popularity hit all-time lows, and rating of his support eventually stabilized at the level of approximately 6%.

Part V. Four More Years?

Economic reforms conducted by the government of President Yeltsin and Prime Minister Chernomyrdin had serious negative consequences. Crime increased beyond all expectations, organized crime became a serious obstacle on the way of economic recovery. GDP fell rapidly, unemployment has risen several times. Living standards of most Russians plummeted, and one third of the population now lives below the poverty line set at about $60 per month. The budget-dependent sectors (education, health care, science, police, military industry) got hit the hardest by the crisis. In the meanwhile, in a sign of disparity unknown under communists, 10% of the adult population earn 28% of the money.

In 1995, President Yeltsin suffered two heart attacks. Pro-government Our Home is Russia won 10.13% of the party list vote in the December elections and formed the second largest Duma faction, behind Gennady Zyuganov's Communist Party of the Russian Federation. In the government reshuffle after the elections, the last members of the reformist Gaidar team were forced to resign.

In January, 1996, Yeltsin ordered a massive military operation in which surface-to-air missiles and artillery were used to resolve a hostage crisis. Some hostages were reportedly given weapons by Chechen terrorists and helped them to break through the lines of Russian forces trying to surround and eliminate them. Yeltsin spoke on national TV on details of the operation. He said that, according to his information, 38 snipers were supposed to keep the terrorists in their sights while a smokescreen would be created for hostages to run away through.

The parliamentary leader of Our Home Is Russia, Sergei Beliayev, announced on January 29, 1996, that the bloc, created initially to support Chernomyrdin, would now devote itself to electing Yeltsin.

Despite health problems and low ratings, Boris Yeltsin officially announced in Yekaterinburg (former Sverdlovsk) on February 15 that he will seek a second term. He said that his electoral platform is "practically ready" but needs some "smoothing" and that he will return to the city to present it, ITAR-TASS reported. The president said that he did not want to leave office when the future of reform still hangs in the balance. Yeltsin said that he hoped the Chechen war would be concluded before the presidential elections, arguing that "they are sending 18-year-old kids with no experience to fight against professionals, trained in camps in Turkey, Iran, and other countries, who are armed to the teeth." He asserted that he could not just pull the troops out, because in the case of Afghanistan, once the troops were withdrawn, "civil war flared up with new force." In issuing a decree on the establishment of a new anti-terrorist center, he demanded the capture of Chechen leaders Dzhokhar Dudayev, Salman Raduyev, and Shamil Basayev, saying that they should be shot. Boris Yeltsin also expressed dissatisfaction with the progress of military reform. Yeltsin criticized Defense Minister Pavel Grachev, saying that "reform is proceeding badly, but Grachev seems to think it is going well." Disagreement among the top brass has hampered efforts to restructure the post-Soviet Russian military. Yeltsin said a special presidential commission is considering an overall concept of military reform. Sverdlovsk Region Governor Eduard Rossel recommended that local factory managers support Yeltsin's reelection, but his call did not meet with unanimous support, Izvestia reported on February 15. At a meeting with Rossel, the managers complained that Yeltsin's current policies are damaging production and entrepreneurship. Viktor Korovin, CEO of Uralmash, said that people are looking for someone to blame and thus creating an atmosphere in which "extremist forces" could come to power.

Boris Yeltsin stressed the importance of "developing the market and bringing down the social cost of this process" in his annual state of the nation address to the parliament on February 23. Yeltsin said that economic reforms have passed through the stages of liberalization and financial stabilization, and are now entering the third step of stimulating production and investment, increasing productivity, and a complete structural overhaul of the Russian economy. He described the economic situation as "complicated" and said bringing inflation down to less than 25% a year is necessary to end the crisis. He warned that "we are near a dangerous limit beyond which exhaustion and discontent may outweigh patience and hope." In the political sphere, Yeltsin said that his reforms were "the first in Russia to be realized without repression and the destruction of political enemies." Yeltsin declared that the government had failed to carry out the social tasks spelled out in his last two addresses. Yeltsin threatened that if the government did not carry out these tasks, he would replace it. He ordered Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin immediately to prepare a presidential decree to compensate people who lost their savings due to inflation caused by the introduction of his reforms. He also called for the establishment of a public-private foundation to help deceived investors. Yeltsin stressed increased housing construction, support for small businesses, and the establishment of an insurance system for deposits in commercial banks. To combat economic crime, Yeltsin proposed tightening up the procedure for registering commerical entities and reforming the "unwieldy and contradictory tax system." He said that the government had failed to implement reform in the agricultural sector in 1995, leading to the dismissal of Agriculture Minister Alexander Nazarchuk. He blamed interest groups and a lack of executive discipline for these failures and called on the parliament to pass a land code to allow the buying and selling of land. On Chechnya, Yeltsin said that the two commissions on resolving the conflict had sent him recommendations and that a "peaceful resolution would be based on them." In spite of the ongoing fighting, he described his policy as a set of measures based on negotiations and strengthening the legitimacy of Chechnya's government. He rejected negotiations with "bandits" and a withdrawal of troops, saying that this would lead to war throughout the Caucasus.

Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin said on March 24 his centrist political bloc would try to create a broad coalition of parties to support Yeltsin's bid for re-election. Chernomyrdin's pledge confirmed his Our Home is Russia movement would back Yeltsin in the June 16 election. "To sum up why Our Home is Russia is for Yeltsin, I can say only one thing -- because we are for reforms, for the constitution of Russia, for peace in Chechnya, for a normal life in Russia," Chernomyrdin told Itar-Tass news agency.

Yeltsin was officially registered as candidate on April 3, 1996. By then, he had signed a decree allowing land sales and purchases and proposed a so-called "peace plan" for Chechnya.

On April 15, Yeltsin signed a decree doubling compensation payments for Russia's poorest pensioners, saying the elderly needed special support. He also ordered the government to send a draft law to parliament in the next few days which would increase all pensions by 10 percent. Earlier this year, Yeltsin has ordered increases in student grants, payment of three trillion roubles to workers in the depressed mining industry and pledged big sums on the reconstruction of war-torn Chechnya. In April, Yeltsin signed a decree on restoring the value of private savings, which were wiped out in the galloping inflation of 1992 and 1993.

According to a Reuter report, Yeltsin muffed his lines and fumbled papers at the April 20 G-7 nuclear summit.

On Saturday, May 11, Boris Yeltsin rejected a challenge by Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov for a live face-to-face debate on television ahead of their clash in the June presidential election. ``I was a communist for 30 years and I listened to so much of this demagoguery that now, with my democratic views, I can no longer stand it,'' Itar-Tass news agency quoted him as telling journalists in the southern Russian town of Astrakhan. Yeltsin said he was also against TV debates with other candidates.

Zyuganov, who has been leading in opinion polls ahead of the June 16 election, wrote to Yeltsin saying a face-to-face meeting between them would help the Russian people to make their choice. The commmunist leader, a text of whose letter was circulated to news agencies, proposed that he and the 65-year-old Kremlin chief should meet on television ``in open discussion and without aides or consultants.'' In this way, he said, they could give their views on ``the main problems facing the country, the ways in which it will develop, and the means whereby Russia is to be extricated from its current highly dangerous state.''

Boris Yeltsin sailed down the Volga river on May 11 to the southern city of Astrakhan where a warm welcome was marred by heckling over Chechnya and over delays in paying pensions and salaries. Yeltsin had hardly set foot on dry land when he was confronted by a banner reading ``Stop the genocide in Chechnya.'' It soon became clear that this final stop on a meet-the-people tour of Russia would not be easy. Many locals appeared to support the Kremlin leader's rivals in the June 16 election.

Yeltsin just wagged his finger at a heckler who called on him to end the war in Chechnya. But his wife Naina stopped to remonstrate with the protester as security guards quickly jumped between them. ``I have got the right to demonstrate,'' said Sergei Shcherbakov, who said he supported Yavlinsky's candidacy. Naina told him to calm down. ``We know everything,'' she said.

Yeltsin said that he had met Yavlinsky ``and we are uniting.'' But Yavlinsky, who is also running as a candidate in the June 16 poll, told commercial NTV television: ``The words of the president that we have united do not correspond to reality.''

The liberal economist, while not ruling out that he might finally throw his support behind Yeltsin, dwelt more on his policy differences with the Kremlin chief. ``I once more repeat that all discussions with the president touch on concrete essential problems -- Chechnya, change in economic policy, social problems, army reform and very broad, significant personnel changes,'' Yavlinsky said. ``We did not talk about duties. We did not talk about me withdrawing my candidature. We did not talk about him withdrawing his candidature.'' Yavlinsky said that Yeltsin had promised to think over his proposals. But the liberal reformer added that up to now Yeltsin had failed to fulfil any of the promises he had made him.

The president was also given a rough ride during a walkabout in an Astrakhan local park where people complained loudly and harrassed him over pension and salary arrears. ``Where are our pensions ?'' asked one woman close to tears. ``We have to increase pensions and we are doing so,'' Yeltsin replied, getting visibly hot under the collar. He even asked one of his aides for some money which he handed to one pensioner.

Yeltsin, 65, made similar gestures on previous campaign stops further up the river in the towns of Volgograd, Akhtubinsk and Kapustin Yar where he said he had signed a decree earlier this week on support for the military-industrial complex. State debts to the sector would be paid off completely by the end of this month and significant tax relief and other benefits would also be made available, he added.

Yeltsin said he would sign a decree compensating those whose savings depreciated after reforms were introduced. He even made a pitch for votes from church-goers. ``The state is supporting religion and religion should support the state and ensure believers make the right choice in the June 16 election.''

In the end of May, 1996, Economics Minister Yevgeny Yasin called President Boris Yeltsin's campaign promises "absolutely unrealistic" and said they could bankrupt the country after the presidential elections. Excerpts of a letter from Yasin to Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin were published in the Kommersant daily. These excerpts outlined Yasin's concerns that covering the budget deficit may cause "serious crises in the securities, credit and hard-currency markets". The Central Bank of Russia recently flooded the securities market with the so-called state credit obligations, which means raising money at the cost of rapid growth of the country's internal debt. Liberal economist and presidential candidate of the democratic opposition Grigory Yavlinsky recently called Yasin "about the only decent person" in Yeltsin's government. Yasin and Yavlinsky once worked together on the ill-fate "500 days" economic program rejected by Gorbachev in the end of 1990 in favor of the empty Ryzhkov plan, which was never implemented either. At his May campaign trip in Arkhangelsk region, President Yeltsin readily acknowledged he'd come to buy votes: "I came with full pockets. Today, a little money will be coming to Arkhangelsk region." Yeltsin personifies populism in Russia the way Huey P. Long once did in the United States.

Yeltsin finished first in the June 16 first round of the elections with about 35% of the vote. He was scheduled to compete with Zyuganov in the runoff (July 3).

Sergei Lisovsky and Arkady Yevstafyev were arrested on the evening of June 19 while leaving the White House of Russia. They were allegedly carrying a case containing $500,000, and were detained and questioned for 11 hours by Presidential Security Service, then released. Lisovsky is a wealthy advertising and showbusiness magnate with wide business interests who organized pop and rock concerts for Yeltsin and an advertising campaign under the slogan ``Vote or Lose.'' Yevstafyev is a close aide to former first deputy prime minister Anatoly Chubais and a former top television news excutive and businessman. Chubais, now the top organizer of Yeltsin's campaign, called the episode an attempt to get the runoff cancelled. As a first Vice Premier, Chubais once supervised Russia's privatization program when many state-run enterprises were allegedly transferred in the hands of well-connected people for fraction of the cost.

On June 20, President Boris Yeltsin fired First Deputy Prime Minister Oleg Soskovets, Federal Security Service (FSB) head Mikhail Barsukov, and Presidential Security Service (SBP) head Alexander Korzhakov. Korzhakov has been Yeltsin's loyal bodyguard since 1987. In August 1991, he stood next to his boss on top of a tank during Yeltsin's historic speech. Barsukov, who was appointed to head the FSB in 1995, has a reputation of a tough administrator long feared by his colleagues. Soskovets has ties to Korzhakov and has advocated a privatization slowdown.

Yeltsin's new security czar, Alexander Lebed, who had campaigned for president on an anti-crime and anti-corruption platform before accepting his position in the government, told the journalists he was not interested in "the murky case".

Lisovsky asserted that the money was planted by the SBP agents who detained him. Chernomyrdin told ITAR-TASS the morning of June 20 that the two aides actually had permission to remove the hard currency from the White House.

Prominent bankers Berezovsky and Gusinsky reportedly interfered to help Lisovsky and Yevstafyev out the night of June 19 by getting NTV and ORT to dispatch TV news crews and interview Lebed about the events. The NTV president, Igor Malashenko, is himself a member of Yeltsin's campaign team. Berezovsky and Gusinsky hold significant interests in NTV and ORT, respectively. A third of the NTV stock is owned by Gazprom, a monopoly formerly headed by Chernomyrdin and controlling about 8% of Russia's economy. ITAR-TASS reported that Korzhakov and Barsukov wanted to get Prime Minister Chernomyrdin replaced by Soskovets.

Duma Speaker Gennady Seleznev said that Korzhakov and Barsukov were fired because they "encroached on the ``sacred cow'' -- the secret financing of the Yeltsin campaign."

Obshchaya Gazeta on June 27 published a detailed account of the events of June 19-20. The paper reports that early on June 19 Boris Lavrov, the deputy head of the National Reserve Bank, was told by Deputy Finance Minister German Kuznetsov to pick up $538,850 from the office of V. Dmitriev, head of the Department of Foreign Credits at the Finance Ministry. The money was to be used to pay Yeltsin campaign expenses. The paper states that Lavrov took the money to the White House and was with Sergei Lisovsky and Arkady Yestafyev, carrying the cash, when they were detained leaving the building that evening. They were released early the next morning on orders from Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin's office. On June 20 Anatoly Chubais denied that the men were carrying any money.

Duma Security Committee Chairman Viktor Ilyukhin charged that the law enforcement agencies have considerable evidence that high government officials are engaged in corruption, bribe-taking, and squandering money allocated by the Central Electoral Commission. However, when former Federal Security Service head Mikhail Barsukov and former head of the presidential security service Alexander Korzhakov tried to stop Yeltsin's aides from taking $500,000 from the White House, they were fired, calling into question Yeltsin's commitment to fighting crime, Ilyukhin charged. He explained the recent firings in the Kremlin as the result of the ongoing battle between three groups: the former heads of the power ministries, representatives of the energy complex, and representatives from financial circles, Russian Public TV reported on June 27.

President Boris Yeltsin failed to attend a scheduled meeting with agricultural workers in the Kremlin on June 28. Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin said that Yeltsin had strained his voice during the campaign. Earlier Western reports had described the president as appearing tired. His Communist rival, Gennady Zyuganov, had dinner with a group of young supporters at the "Woodstock" rock club in Moscow on June 27. He was shown on television dancing to folk music.

Boris Yeltsin appeared briefly on national television on July 1, the final day of campaigning before the runoff. In a stiff, awkward and emotionless two-minute speech, Yeltsin asked voters to participate in the election and appealed for their support. In a slightly hoarse voice, he said "I know exactly what to do, I have the strength, will and decisiveness for that. What is needed now is your support." Yeltsin has canceled meetings and public appearances since June 28. Originally aides said he had lost his voice, but now say he has a cold. Zyuganov called for an offical medical investigation into Yeltsin's health.

On July 3, Yeltsin voted at a location near Barvikha sanitarium, instead of the Moscow polling station he was supposed to use.


Sources:

  1. Boris Yeltsin, Confession on the Assigned Topic, Moscow, 1990.
  2. Vladimir Solovyov and Yelena Klepikova, Boris Yeltsin, London, 1992.
  3. Boris Yeltsin, Notes of the President, Moscow, 1994.
  4. Open Media Research Institute.

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