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NINE DAYS OF SUSPENSE OVER THE MAKEUP OF RUSsia's new government finally broke: President Boris Yeltsin's key reformist ministers will keep their jobs after all. Yeltsin's abrupt abandonment of his acting Prime Minister, free- market maven Yegor Gaidar, made the announcement a relief for those who feared that the Russian President was forsaking the country's radical reform path altogether. Among the key players from the Gaidar team retaining their posts are Deputy Prime Ministers Alexander Shokhin and Anatoli Chubais. Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev was also kept on. No changes were announced in the key Interior, Defense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Boris' Shell Game | 1/4/1993 | See Source »

...YEGOR GAIDAR NEVER EXPECTED TO LAST LONG IN power. Appointed to Boris . Yeltsin's government a year ago, the 36-year-old architect of Russia's economic reforms foresaw a "kamikaze" mission: launch Russia's transition to a market economy and then withdraw, battered and no doubt vilified for making his nation suffer. His prediction proved accurate last week, when he was ousted as acting Prime Minister. In his place rose fears that Russia had begun a slow retreat from democratic reform...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Bone for the Dogs | 12/28/1992 | See Source »

...Gaidar's demise came after two weeks of turmoil at the Congress of People's Deputies. After compromises had collapsed and a constitutional crisis had been averted, Gaidar fared poorly in a vote, and a weary Yeltsin caved in to the conservatives. To succeed Gaidar, Yeltsin sullenly chose Victor Chernomyrdin, 54, a former Communist Party apparatchik from the powerful energy industry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Bone for the Dogs | 12/28/1992 | See Source »

Yeltsin promised "no backtracking" and named Gaidar as his economic adviser. On Saturday he cut short a visit to China, claiming he had to "restore order" in Moscow and ensure that the "inner core" of Gaidar's team was not excluded from the new government. But the show of authority could not obscure Yeltsin's political weakness. And his nation remains impoverished. Although officials from the G-7 industrialized nations agreed to permit Russia to defer payments on $15 billion of the $16 billion it owes in foreign debts for this year and next, the country is still $86 billion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Bone for the Dogs | 12/28/1992 | See Source »

Yeltsin was furious at the Congress for refusing to confirm acting Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar, his handpicked architect of reform. When confronted with a stark choice of submitting or facing the President at the ballot box, the balky Deputies under leader Ruslan Khasbulatov became more inclined to deal. So, on reflection, did Yeltsin. By week's end he had agreed to submit three candidates for Prime Minister and modified his referendum. Although a popular vote would still be Yeltsin's to lose, Russians will not be asked to choose directly between him and the Congress. Instead, they will determine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kremlin Compromise | 12/21/1992 | See Source »

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