End of empire plotted in secret forest talks

It had been a tough year in Soviet politics.

The president of the USSR, Mikhail Gorbachev, barely survived an attempted coup d’état; the president of the Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin, was openly contesting Gorbachev’s power. 

Read more about Soviet Union’s last president, Mikhail Gorbachev and Russia’s first president Boris Yeltsin in  Prominent Russians section of RT’s Russiapedia segment.

Meanwhile, the country was effectively bankrupt, with shops empty amid rising discontent.    

“At that time, the Soviet Union basically did not exist anymore. Not a single power or management institution of the government was functioning,” Burbulis remembers.   

The leaders of the USSR’s founding countries – Ukraine, Belarus and Russia – decided to meet to resolve the crisis. They chose Belovezhskaya Pushcha, a forest reserve on the border between Poland and Belarus, where a hunting lodge was built years earlier for former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.

Read more about ex-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in  Prominent Russians section of RT’s Russiapedia segment.

Although there was some discussion as to how the USSR’s problems could be solved, it quickly became clear that the Soviet Union itself was part of the problem.  

Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk made it clear his country wanted out – a position backed by a referendum there in which the public voted overwhelmingly to leave.

 “People in other republics viewed the Soviet Union as a barrier to economic activity,” recalls Vladimir Isakov, Supreme Soviet member, 1990-1993.

Though the gathering in Belovezhskaya Pushcha was aimed at somehow changing the situation in the Soviet Union, no-one there was really prepared for the creation of an entirely new political entity.

They had no administrative staff with them, so they had to improvise…

 “The director of the reserve was given an order, and he brought his secretary along with a typewriter,” recalls Stepan Martysyuk, gamekeeper at Belovezhskaya Pushcha.

“It took her a long time to type the text. She just typed with one finger on each hand. She said she understood what was happening, but I don’t think she did, really. Only later did the realization come to her, and she figured she would have to keep her mouth shut,” explains journalist Vadim Bitsan.

The legitimacy of the agreement on the creation of the Commonwealth of Independent States is still questioned to this day.

And many still wonder whether life has changed for the better.

Read more about Russia after the Soviet Union in Russian History section of RT’s Russiapedia segment.

 “The expectations were that once the USSR fell apart, an upsurge would begin. Grass would turn green in winter, everything would fall into place miraculously. But none of that happened,” explains Vladimir Isakov, Supreme Soviet member, 1990-1993.“It turned out that someone had to do the reforms, and it’s a hard and laborious job which no one was prepared for. Everybody was busy trying to grab a piece of the power cake, and after they were done, all the problems they began with were still there. “

Thirteen out of the 15 Soviet republics signed the Belovezha accords.

It effectively brought about the end of the USSR … but not the end of the debate … which 20 years on, continues to focus on the rights and wrongs of that turbulent time.

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