From Deseret News archives:
Yeltsin leaves mixed legacy
Ex-president left 'great deeds, serious errors,' Gorbachev says
Minutes after the announcement, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev summed up the complicated legacy Yeltsin leaves for Russia, which has largely moved beyond the tumult and decline that marked his nine years in the Kremlin.
On Yeltsin's shoulders "are both great deeds for the country and serious errors," said Gorbachev, according to the news agency Interfax.
For many Russians, the proud and courageous Yeltsin who faced down hard-liners and ushered the USSR from history's stage never delivered on his pledges of a better post-Soviet life. The USSR's collapse was followed by hyperinflation, mass impoverishment, and the privatization of Russia's natural resources into the hands of a tiny elite of Kremlin insiders.
Others may be kinder to the huge, bear-like Siberian, born in the village of Butka in 1931, who went on to run his native region as Communist Party secretary during the 1970s. Many observers say he was an innovative leader, impatient with red tape and eager for improvement.
Brought to Moscow in 1985 by the new reformist leader Gorbachev, Yeltsin began to shake things up in the Communist Party's top council, the Politburo. After an angry showdown with Gorbachev over the slow pace of reform in 1987, Yeltsin was sacked and made head of a state construction committee. But he came roaring back from his banishment, and was overwhelmingly elected in 1989 to the new Congress of Peoples' Deputies, a semi-democratic parliament instituted by Gorbachev, and later as a member of Russia's Supreme Soviet legislature. In June 1991, he was elected as the first president of Russia, which was still a republic of the USSR.
In August of that year, when Communist hard-liners placed Gorbachev under house arrest and attempted to seize power, Yeltsin organized popular resistance, inspiring crowds from the top of a tank near Russia's parliament building. It was his finest moment.
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