Perhaps the most dangerous myth regarding the legacy of the late
President Ronald Reagan is that he was somehow responsible for the end of
the Cold War.
The Soviet Union and its Communist allies in Eastern Europe collapsed
primarily because their governments and economies rested upon an inherently
unworkable system that would have fallen apart anyway.
And they were doomed in part because they fell victim to pro-democracy
movements.
Totalitarian systems cannot survive without being able to control access
to information. Cracks in the system were becoming apparent as early as the
1970s.
In a December 2003 interview, former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
said the fall of the Soviet Union had nothing to do with the arms race.
"When it became clear to us that the one-party model
was mistaken, we rejected that model," he said. "A new generation of more
educated people started to be active. Then society required freedom, society
demanded freedom."
It was not Reagan's military buildup or bellicose threats against the
Soviets and their allies that brought down the system. Instead, such
threats possibly allowed these regimes to hold on to
power even longer as people rallied to support the government in the face of
the perceived American threat.
High Soviet military spending, in part as a reaction to the U.S.
military buildup that began in the latter half of the Carter administration,
certainly hurt the Soviet economy -- as it did (and
is still doing) to ours. But the reality is that it was the people
themselves who brought down the system.
The most significant case was Poland, where -- even before Reagan
became president -- the communist regime was forced to recognize the
independent trade-union movement Solidarity. This
helped expose the lie that the communist governments were "workers' states."
Despite the Polish regime's decision to ban Solidarity at the end of
1981, pro-democracy Poles continued to organize, as did dissidents in
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, East Germany, the Baltic states and elsewhere. Many
of these democratic leaders were openly skeptical of Reagan administration
policies. Dissident Czech playwright and later president, Vaclav Havel, when
asked about Western influences on his movement, replied that he had been
more inspired by musicians John Lennon and Frank Zappa than by British
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan.
Reagan's verbal support for democracy had little credibility in
many of these countries. For example, while he denounced Poland's martial
law regime, he was a strong supporter of the more repressive martial law
regime then in power in Turkey, a NATO ally.
In challenging left-wing governments in the Third World, Reagan
backed insurgents with ties to U.S.-backed dictatorships, and, in the case
of Afghanistan, even Islamic fundamentalists.
While Reagan was certainly capable of inspirational leadership,
idealism and personal charm, the myth that he is responsible for the
downfall of Communism and the end of the Cold War does a disservice to the
millions of Eastern Europeans and others who struggled against great odds
for their freedom.
It was not American militarism, but massive nonviolent action --
including strikes, boycotts, mass demonstrations and other forms of
ingenious noncooperation -- that finally brought down these communist
regimes.
Stephen Zunes is a professor of politics and chair of the Peace & Justice
Studies Program at the University of San Francisco. He is the author of
several books, including "Nonviolent Social Movements: A Geographical
Perspective" (Blackwell, 1999).
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