CIA Intelligence Assessment: Rising Political Instability Under Gorbachev
Annotation
As President George H. W. Bush took office in January 1989, factions within his administration disagreed concerning the approach to take with regard to US-Soviet relations. In December 1988, Gorbachev had delivered what he called a “watershed” address at the United Nations, announcing that he planned unilaterally to reduce Soviet military forces by 500,000, cut conventional armaments massively, and withdraw substantial numbers of armaments and troops from Eastern European countries. Gorbachev had spoken of freedom, individual rights, and national self-determination, declaring that “the use of threat or force no longer can or must be an instrument of foreign policy.” Some in the Bush administration advised that the US should support Gorbachev’s liberalization efforts, while others doubted the Soviet leader’s sincerity, believing he was scheming to divide the US from its NATO allies and that Soviet force remained a real threat. In February, Bush ordered a “strategic review” of foreign policy to help determine his own course. The following declassified intelligence assessment from April was not unusual in its warnings concerning the instability of the situation in the Soviet Union regardless of Gorbachev’s intentions and may have been influential in persuading the administration to take a cautious attitude toward Gorbachev.
Credits
Central Intelligence Agency, "Rising Political Instability Under Gorbachev : Understanding the Problem and Prospects for Resolution," 1 April 1989, Cold War International History Project, Documents and Papers, CWIHP (accessed May 14, 2008).