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Submitted URL: http://www.gwu.edu//~nsarchiv//news//19991105//
Effective URL: https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/news/19991105/
Submission: On July 10 via api from US — Scanned from DE
Effective URL: https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/news/19991105/
Submission: On July 10 via api from US — Scanned from DE
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> > National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 22 > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > The Revolutions of 1989: > > New Documents from Soviet/East Europe > > Archives Reveal Why There Was No Crackdown > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > Edited by Thomas S. Blanton > > November 5, 1999 > > > WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Ten years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the > > National Security Archive and its research partners in East and Central > > Europe today released previously secret documents from behind the Iron > > Curtain detailing the ultimately futile scramble by the Communist parties of > > the region to stay in power in 1989 -- evidence which explains in the actual > > words of Communist leaders now for the first time in English how the system > > imposed by Stalin’s armies gave way in the face of popular protest, largely > > without violent repression. > > > > The documents include verbatim transcripts of such historic meetings as the > > Polish Communist party’s leadership on the day after Solidarity swept the > > June 1989 elections, Solidarity leader Walesa’s talk in Warsaw with German > > chancellor Kohl on the day the Berlin Wall was to fall, Soviet leader > > Gorbachev’s meetings with Hungarian communist reformers, and the > > Czechoslovak Communist Party’s central committee’s rationale for not calling > > in the troops in the face of mass protests in November 1989. > > > > The documents are the product of a five-year multinational research project > > organized by George Washington University’s National Security Archive, in > > collaboration with scholars, journalists and activists in Poland, Hungary, > > the Czech Republic, Russia, Germany, Romania and Bulgaria, focused on the > > collapse of Communism in 1989. The project organized four landmark "critical > > oral history" conferences in which former adversaries, divided by ideology > > and the struggle for power, sat at the same tables and discussed the end of > > the Cold War, face to face with each other and their own documents. (Similar > > gatherings co-organized by the Archive in recent years focused on the crisis > > years of 1953, 1956, 1968, and 1980-81 in Eastern Europe.) The 1989 > > conferences began last year with a May 1998 meeting on St. Simons Island, > > Georgia, and continued this year in Budapest on June 9-11, in Prague on > > October 14-16, and in Warsaw on October 21-23. Participants included Czech > > president Vaclav Havel, former Polish prime minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki, > > current Polish foreign minister Bronislaw Geremek, Gorbachev aide Gyorgy > > Shakhnazarov, former U.S. ambassador to Moscow Jack Matlock, and top > > communist party officials and dissidents. > > > > Research partners of the National Security Archive include: > > > > > > > Cold War History Research Center, Budapest > > > > > > Institute for the Study of the 1956 Revolution > > > > > > Hungarian Academy of Sciences > > > > > > Cold War International History Project, The Woodrow Wilson International > > > Center for Scholars, Washington, D.C. > > > > > > The Czechoslovak Documentation Center, Prague (Dobrichovice) > > > > > > The Institute of Contemporary History, Academy of Sciences of the Czech > > > Republic > > > > > > Institute of Political Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences > > > > > > Gorbachev Foundation, Moscow > > > > > > Institute of Universal History, Moscow > > > > > > Memorial, Moscow > > > > > > Cold War Research Group, Sofia > > > > > > Civic Academy Foundation, Bucharest > > > > > > DOCUMENTS > > > > Click on a document number to view the transcription. > > > > Document 1. Memorandum of Conversation between M.S. Gorbachev and Karoly > > Grosz, General Secretary of the Hungarian Socialist Workers Party, Moscow, > > March 23-24, 1989. This document from Hungarian Archives reveals Gorbachev’s > > contradictions, as the Soviet leader proclaims again that the Brezhnev > > doctrine is dead and military interventions should be "precluded in the > > future, yet at the same time, tries to set "boundaries" for the changes in > > Eastern Europe as "the safekeeping of socialism and assurance of stability." > > As it turned out, the boundaries crumbled along with the Wall. > > > > Document 2. Transcript of the Central Committee secretariat meeting of the > > Polish United Workers Party (PZPR), Warsaw, June 5, 1989. On the day after > > Solidarity had swept Poland’s first open elections, ultimately winning 99 of > > 100 Senate seats, the Polish Communists vent their shock and dismay ("a > > bitter lesson," "the party are not connected with the masses," "We trusted > > the Church and they turned out to be Jesuits" were typical comments). > > Comrade Kwasniewski (who now serves as the elected President of Poland) > > remarks that "It’s well known that also party members were crossing out our > > candidates" (only two out of 35 Party candidates survived the epidemic of > > X’s). But they see no choice but to negotiate a coalition government, and > > specifically "[w]arn against attempts at destabilization, pointing at the > > situation in China" -- since the Tienanmien massacre occurred the same day > > as the Polish elections, the road not taken. > > > > Document 3. Transcript of the Opening Full Session of the National > > Roundtable Negotiations, June 13, 1989. This remarkable document > > (transcribed from previously unpublished video recordings) points to the > > unwritten "rules" of mutual civility that arose in the nonviolent dissident > > movements and found an echo among the Communist reformers during the > > negotiated revolutions of 1989. For example, Dr. Istvan Kukorelli from the > > Patriotic People’s Front proposes to "refrain from questioning the > > legitimacy of each other, since the legitimacy of all of us is debatable. It > > is a question which belongs to the future - who will be given credit by > > history and who will be forgotten." > > > > Document 4. Report of the President of People’s Republic of Hungary Rezso > > Nyers and Karoly Grosz, General Secretary of the Hungarian Socialist Workers > > Party on their talks with Gorbachev in Moscow, 24-25 July, 1989. The excerpt > > translated into English contains economic reformer Nyers’ assessment of the > > political situation in Hungary, and first among the factors that "can defeat > > the party," he lists "the past, if we let ourselves [be] smeared with it." > > The memory of the revolution of 1956 and its bloody repression by the > > Soviets was Banquo’s ghost, destroying the legitimacy of the Hungarian > > Socialist Workers Party, just as 1968 in Prague and 1981’s martial law in > > Poland and all the other Communist "blank spots" of history came back in > > 1989 to crumble Communist ideology. For their part, the Communist reformers > > (including Gorbachev) did not quite know how to respond as events > > accelerated in 1989, except not to repeat 1956. > > > > Document 5. Record of conversation between West German Chancellor Helmut > > Kohl and the leader of Polish Solidarity Lech Walesa, Warsaw, November 9, > > 1989. In this extraordinary conversation (available previously only in > > German), Solidarity’s leader fears the collapse of the Wall would distract > > West Germany’s attention - and money - to the GDR, at the time when Poland, > > the trail-blazer to the post-communist era in Eastern Europe, desperately > > needed both. "Events are moving too fast," Walesa said, and only hours > > later, the Wall fell, and Kohl had to cut his Poland visit short to scramble > > back to Berlin, thus proving Walesa’s fear correct. > > > > Document 6. Entry from the Diary of Gorbachev’s Foreign Policy Assistant > > Anatoly Chernyaev, 10 November 1989. This extraordinary diary entry from > > inside the Kremlin, the day after the Wall fell, documents in the form of a > > "snapshot" reaction the revolutionary mood of one of the closest and most > > loyal of Gorbachev’s assistants. Chernyaev realized that this event meant > > "the end of Yalta" and of "the Stalinist legacy" in Europe, and in a > > striking statement, he welcomed this change, saying the key was Gorbachev’s > > decision not to stand in the way. > > > > Document 7. Speech by Premier Ladislav Adamec at the extraordinary session > > of the Czechoslovak Communist Party Central Committee, 24 November 1989. > > This remarkable previously secret transcript shows the party elites choosing > > against violent repression of the mass protests in Wenceslas Square. More > > clearly than in almost any other Party document, the reasons for nonviolence > > are spelled out: such a solution would only temporarily "return calm," it > > would radicalize the youth, "the international support of the socialist > > countries can no longer be counted on," and "the capitalist states" might > > react with a "political and economic boycott." > > > > > > Return to the National Security Archive homepage > > > >