Gen. Wojciech
Jaruzelski
former president of Poland
105th Landon Lecture
March 11, 1996
Let me
express my gratitude for the invitation to Kansas State University.
For the hospitality received and the warmth of your reception.
I feel
honored to stand today within the walls of so merited a university.
My satisfaction is all the greater when I remember that Kansas State
University has hosted so many eminent politicians, men of learning and
journalists. Clearly, today's meeting is far from usual. Some of you
perhaps look at me like some exotic or rather archaic animal. That is
wholly natural. After all, it would have been impossible only a short
time ago even to imagine the rate and the depth of the transformations
which developed in recent years in Eastern and East Central parts of
Europe. But they did happen. Those few years are a whole epoch when
measured by the crucial impact they exerted.
Naturally,
I shall focus my remarks on Poland's problems since I accept that self-examination
should always have a personal starting point -- in this case, the Polish
people. Above all, an assessment of our own shortcomings and errors
must be made, though I have no intention to restrict myself to a narrow
Polono-centric viewpoint.
Poland
is not situated in a territorial vacuum on some uninhabited island.
Indeed, the opposite is true. It lies in the most geostrategically sensitive
part of Europe. In those recent years, Europe and the world were divided
into two opposing political and military blocks. That meant that all
internal conflicts inevitably led to external repercussions, reflecting
on the climate of relations and the pattern of international forces.
Such
was the scourge of those days. Which was why I found myself, to use
a descriptive phrase, between the 'anvil' of internal conflicts and
the 'hammer' of external danger.
Politicians,
historians and men-in-the-street differ in their evaluation of the erstwhile
situation. These differences are bound to exist for many decades to
come. Perhaps even longer. Such is the fate of all controversial historical
events. That is one side of the coin. The other, to which I attach particular
importance, is the result of opinion polls held inside Poland. For years,
now, they have displayed a decisive superiority of those who accept
that the introduction of martial law was justified, over those who express
a different view.
I must
admit I spent much time deliberating how to construct this lecture addressed
to the eminent persons present in this hall. Should I focus on the historical
aspect? Or perhaps on the political? Or should I present my personal,
reflective thinking? But everything is, obviously, important so I have
to touch on each such aspect. But I am, simultaneously, counting on
being allowed to expand on them when replying to the questions which
you may wish to ask. That apart, I wish to focus my greatest attention
on presenting my own stance on what I observed, felt and decided in
that complex year of 1981.
The introduction
of martial law was the most dramatic decision I had ever taken. And
life had treated me harshly. I experienced my country's tragedy in 1939.
My deportation to the Siberian taiga. Finally, the long front-line road
I travelled as a young officer of reconnaissance units from Central
Russia to Central Germany, from the Oka River to the Elbe.
I had
to face up to many a dangers, often looking death in the face. Later,
in the decades which ensued, I often had to resolve complex dilemmas.
But that dilemma of 1981 was of a quite different dimension and of the
very greatest specific weight since I bore the responsibility for the
fate of the nation and country.
The civilized
world, through literature, theatre and film is well acquainted with
the perplexities which Hamlet had to face. But the perplexities of politicians
are much less known and spectacular though carrying an enormous dramatic
charge. I spent the weeks prior to taking the decision on martial law
as in some horrible nightmare. I entertained thoughts of suicide. So
what held me back? The sense of responsibility for my family, friends
and country; the awareness that suicide would be a form of desertion
unworthy of an old soldier.
You might
well ask -- why was another way out of the situation not found? Who
carries the blame for that?. My reply is -- everyone and no one. "Everyone"
since all parties: the authorities and "Solidarnosc" committed errors,
though each evaluates them to differing extents. "No one" -- since such
is the outcome of assessing the realities of the internal situation
and erstwhile international conditions. Karl Marx, an author who is,
admittedly unfashionable today, wrote in his "Louis Bonaparte's Eighteenth
Brumaire," "People create their history by themselves but do not create
it freely, nor in circumstances they themselves have chosen, but in
those in which they directly find themselves, which were given them
and inherited by them." End of quotation. So, what were the circumstances
in which the history of 1981 was created? It was very much something
of a political, social and economic earthquake for which we were quite
unprepared. Government and "Solidarnosc" were miles apart. The high
temperature of the conflict raised an emotional barrier between us and
darkened what could have been a rational picture.
The most
important thing is to hit the bull's-eye at the historically most appropriate
moment. Which is why all opportunist dilatory foot-dragging is intolerable.
But any historical false starts and voluntaristic acceleration are also
dangerous. Grain and fruit and also society must have time to ripen,
especially the home politicus. How much time it took and how much blood
was shed for Ortega's agreement with Chamorro, De Klerk's with Mandela,
Arafat's with Rabin, to come to fruition. Time was also required for
Jaruzelski's agreement with Walesa to mature.
I would
like you treat this personification in symbolic terms since neither
Walesa nor Jaruzelski acted alone but in specific political formations,
in concrete psychological, social and economic conditions.
"Solidarnosc"
clearly enjoys historical merits. But it was a movement of many millions
and also a conglomerate of diverse orientations, from right-wing nationalist
to extreme left-wing populist. It boasted moderate, realistic members
but there were also extreme currents. And it was those which gained
an increasingly strong and predominant position. This movement was cemented
and bonded by the struggle with the system. When the system collapsed,
"Solidarnosc" disintegrated into numerous mutally combatant political
groupings. That was, I have to state, one of the reasons for the election
successes registered by left-wing forces in recent years.
The authorities
of the Polish People's Republic, pro-socialist forces in the widest
meaning of the terms, were also no homogenous organism. It included
reformatory, democratic circles, of which Jerzy Wiatr -- member of Parliament
and minister of national education who is present here today -- was
a leading representative.
But active
and influential, dogmatic, conservative circles also existed. Even worse,
some of these cooperated in various ways with our neighbors and even
exhorted them to intervene in Poland. This, in effect, was tantamount
to treason. One must regret that it was difficult give sufficient proof
of this in those days. You must remember that we were within the block
of states where real socialism was the prevailing feature. Such was
the outcome of the post-war division of Europe. A sick division. Even
so, I accepted our place in the Warsaw Pact as the optimal solution
for Poland, particularly as regards the inviolability of our frontiers.
One can
always change one's views. I also have fundamentally changed mine, not
only in theory but in practice. It may sound immodest but I must say
that as the initiator of the "round table" and, next, as president of
the Republic of Poland, I effectively contributed to the dismantling
of the old system. I am not trying to claim that I differed from what
I really was during the period of real socialism. Such is an elementary
requirement of political credibility.
I am
saying this to avoid any suspicion that I want to defend, at no matter
what price, the decisions I took. Martial law was an evil which resulted
in various human vexations and sufferings which I very much regret.
But even so, they were a lesser evil than the multidimensional catastrophe
which faced us as a very real danger.
Jacek
Kuron, a leading representative of the erstwhile opposition, once said:
"Solidarnosc is like a train which travels around the country outside
the timetable. So a major crash is inevitable, sooner or later." I would
like, at this point, to use a metaphor of my own construction. A train
is travelling fast in a fog. The rails are unstable and increasingly
shaky. The train could jump the track. The train driver suddenly puts
on the brakes. The passengers are thrown around in shock. A number are
bruised and injured. But they have all survived! The track is repaired.
The fog lifts. The train continues on its way, to reach its safe destination,
the "round table."
How did
that track become so unstable. It was a devilish coincidence of causes,
facts and circumstances. The situation in Poland was becoming increasingly
dangerous. All the erstwhile dangers accumulated and intensified in
the closing weeks of 1981. Anarchy and chaos prevailed. The structures
of the state were paralyzed. "Solidarnosc" rejected our offer to reach
accord. A general strike was imminent. Huge demonstrations were planned
for the 17th December in Warsaw and several other cities. Emotions were
explosive and spiralling. "The petrol had been spilled." All that was
needed was an innocent incident, not to suggest provocation, for those
demonstrations to explode into something similar to what happened in
Budapest in 1956.
The economy
had become the scene of political infighting. Industrial production
plummeted. The shops were empty. We were staring hunger, cold and blackout
in the face. Events were developing at a furious pace, like some huge
foaming river in spate.
The situation
had got completely out of control, the government, the "Solidarnosc"
leadership and the Church's authority proving futile. The extreme forces
within "Solidarnosc" had imposed a radical course of events, while conservative
groupings within the organs of government were unable to compromise.
A coup d'etat, even, was possible. They were counting, not without grounds,
on assistance from the Soviet Union and other countries of this block.
It is
not difficult, with hindsight, to speculate theoretically and "to discover
miraculous solutions." But the realities and practice of those days
were enormously complex. No ideal way out existed; there could only
be a greater or lesser evil. In politics, one speaks of a disaster of
historical dimensions; of defeat of strategical dimensions; of a setback
of tactical dimensions. The latter are part and parcel of each and every
government, but should they not be too numerous and not become a negative
process, they may be painful but not serious in final outcome.
Strategical
defeat does not have always to be related to a specific decision, act
or fact. I would situate the inability to reach national concord before
the 13th December 1981 among such defeats. Finally, a historical disaster
occurs when its national effects are of enormous specific weight and
are, primarily, irrevocable while being soaked in a river of spilled
blood. Should you ask whether we in Poland successfully passed our historical
exam, I again have to reply both yes and no. "No" because -- as I have
already mentioned -- we proved unable, incapable of finding accord.
"Yes" because we passed through those turbulent times without greater
casualties, without burning the bridges towards future positive solutions.
Indeed,
the opposite is true. We were gradually creating the bridgeheads for
the reforms which lay ahead. We were in the group of their forerunners.
The outcome was that when Gorbachev appeared we had become something
of a perestroika laboratory and, in the late 1980s, the motive force
and pattern for transformations throughout the whole region.
To recapitulate
one could say that we were all losers when we found ourselves unable
to reach accord and avoid martial law. Though it was no catastrophe,
it was a transient, lesser evil. But in the longer time dimension we
were all winners. The nation, Poland and peace in Europe had won.
You have
the right to ask whether the role and responsibility of government and
"Solidarnosc" can be situated on one plane. After all, government was
defending a state of limited sovereignty, of a stunted democracy, of
poor economic effectiveness. "Solidarnosc" fought against that state
and, in consequence, was reaching for the reins of government.
My reply
is that 1980 and 1981 were a period of enormous ferment. All, from the
far left to the far right, government and opposition, accepted that
changes were imperative. The drama lay in the government footdragging
and offering too little, while "Solidarnosc" was moving too fast and
demanding too much. And all that was happening in a concrete historical
moment. It was in 1980 and 1981 that East-West relations deteriorated
yet again. Poland became something of a testing ground for that process.
I am
a military professional. In my office as government prime minister and
minister of defense, a large map hung on the wall. I often used to study
it intently. The divisions in Europe and the world were clearly visible.
"A" had been declared in Yalta and Potsdam. The Brezhnev doctrine was
a "B" of fatal consequences. I knew many Soviet marshals and generals.
Some were my friends. They also could read maps. I knew, full well that
there was a limit beyond which the Polish "schism" and the "Polish heretic
road" could not and would not be tolerated.
Let it
not be thought that I am looking for some simple self-justification.
I never claimed that the Soviet Union was quivering with the desire
for military intervention in Poland. This for them, too, was a black
scenario. But to lose Poland as an exceptionally important, indeed crucial,
link within the block was even darker. I would, at this moment point
to a place in Alexander Haig's book "Caveat, Realism, Reagan and Foreign
Policy" where he says that Poland, to the Soviet Union was a casus belli,
an issue for which it was ready to go to war.
The Poles
cannot alone become the masters of their own fate, he suggested, as
long as the USSR holds superior power and opposes it. There was never
any doubt that the universal movement in Poland would be strangled by
the USSR. The only question was when and with what degree of brutality
would that happen, claimed Aleander Haig.
In turn,
Zbigniew Brzeinski, in his book "Game Plan," wrote that for the Soviets,
to rule Poland was the key to control East Europe. Poland's geostrategical
importance, he remarked, exceeds the fact that it lies on the way to
Germany. Moscow needed to exert rule of Poland, also because that made
it easier to control Czechoslovakia and Hungary and isolated non-Russian
minorities in the Soviet Union from western influence. A Poland with
greater autonomy would undermine control of Lithuania and Ukraine.
The 37
million strong Poland was the largest East European country under Soviet
rule, its armed forces being the Warsaw Pact's largest non-Soviet army.
That position, wrote Brzezinski, cost Moscow a lot but would cost it
even more were it to relinquish it. So much Zbigniew Brzezinski's thinking.
It is significant that book was published in 1987, when the international
situation was incomparably better than in 1981.
I was
fully aware of the situation. I was subject to a continuous wave of
grievances, accusations and threats in which not only the Soviet voice
was audible. It was amplified by non-stop barracking, particularly from
the GDR (East Germany) and Czechoslovakia. I shall never forget the
dramatic meeting I had with Marshal Dymitr Ustinov, Soviet defense minister,
during the wide-flung "West 81" maneuvers held in September 1981 near
Poland's eastern and northern frontier. Warsaw Pact army concentrations
and movements around our borders had been going on for a considerable
time, continuing even after martial law had been introduced. This took
place against a background of political and economic pressure. I could
highlight the message, approved on the 21st November 1981 by the Soviet
Communist Party political bureau which Leonid Brezhnev sent me, very
similar in tone to the notorious letters addressed to Aleksander Dubczek
in 1968. A no less threatening situation was caused by what was, in
effect, an ultimatum announcing a drastic cut in the supplies of gas,
crude oil and many other vitally important materials, as of the 1st
January 1982.
Were
it not for the declaration of martial law, the substantiation of that
announcement in mid-winter would have signified not only economic but
also biological catastrophe. No grand issues and dilemmas may be studied
without their historical backgrounds in separation from the realities
of a given moment. A historian seated in the tranquility of archives
and libraries can allow his thoughts to wander in various directions.
Basing on continually supplemented sources, he knows today what took
place in the past. But a politician active at that time knew only what
was happening at a given moment. And he also had to take into account
that which could take place. A historian enjoys the comfort of delivering
evaluations which have no practical effects. A politician has to bear
the weight of decisions whose effects are often enormous. And those
decisions have to be taken. A controversial decision is better than
no decision or waiving it, since it permits a situation to be brought
under control while allowing it to be reined in with the possibility
of correction.
The absence
of a decision could result in an impetuous, dangerous development of
a situation which has got out of any control. There is no ideal solution
in such circumstances. The only thing is to find the optimal solution,
"a lesser evil."
With
the 14 years of hindsight which we enjoy today, I can say that I am
still firmly convinced that the introduction of martial law was the
optimal, indeed salutary decision. The final outcome is the over-riding
factor, the fundamental transformations of 1989 and 1990 being its most
evident illustration. Without the "purgatory" of martial laws, those
tranformations would be unrealistic today. I beg you not to treat what
I have said as some expression of megalomania. The imminent explosion,
confrontation within Poland and the inevitable internationalization
of events would have pushed positive historical processes into the indefinite
future. They could have commenced in the mid-1980s only in conditions
of peace and international detente. Destabilization in Poland and around
Poland would have erected barriers to those processes and, in the final
accounts frustrated them.
The Polish
people have always admired and displayed warm sentiment for the United
States of America, that large and magnificent country. I still bear
in my memory that moment on the 4th, May 1945 when I reached the Elbe
River in the ranks of the Polish army. American troops had appeared
at much the same time on its opposite bank. We greeted one another with
very great warmth. Many years have passed since then. The "iron curtain"
set us apart but distinct from other nations of this block we succeeded
in creating and widening various gaps in that curtain. Cooperation and
various forms of contacts continued to exist. The early 1980s saw tensions
developing between our two countries. Many are the issues which remain
unsatisfactorily explained, which politologists and historians will
continue to debate for many a long year.
I must
admit that I did react painfully and even nervously to a number of American
opinions, decisions and activities. I sensed that U.S. politicians were
presenting the erstwhile Polish authorities as out-and-out devils and
whitewashing erstwhile "Solidarnosc." This was a reflection of what
medieval theologists used to say that "even should Satan speak the truth,
he must be lying."
I also
got the expression that I was being treated on a par with Pol Pot, Khadafi
and Noriega, taken together. Then there were the restrictions, the sanctions
imposed on the Polish economy. I really do feel that they were unjustified.
They harmed not so much the government as the Polish people, above all.
It was they who suffered the vital, material consequences. More, these
restrictions harmed the reform process and pushed us even deeper into
the embrace of the USSR, making the economy dependent on Poland's socialist
partners. That was when the bitter saying was coined that President
Reagan should be awarded a medal for what he did for COMECON.
You must
not read what I have said as some expression of grievance or rancor.
Today I see the mechanisms of the grand historical confrontation between
East and West in a much wider and deeper aspect. The Polish issue was
only one link in this whole front of events. Peter Schweitzer, the American
journalist, had some interesting and very competent things to say on
this matter in his recently published book "Victory." The USA has pursued
and continues to pursue a global policy the major purpose of which was
to put the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact on the defensive, to undermine
and disintegrate it. The long-term goal is such transformations as would
eliminate the bi-polar structure of the world and disseminate the basic
standards of democracy, the market economy and human rights. It has
to a large extent been the West, above all its principal force -- the
USA -- which has led to this coming about. But one should never forget
the historical part played by perestroika, Gorbachev and those democratic
currents which made their way to the East, above all to Poland.
I would
like to say how positive, interesting and inspiring were the meetings
and talks I held with Vice President and, later, President George Bush
in 1987 and 1989 and also with many other American politicians, businessmen
and journalists. May I be allowed to say that today's meeting with you
is, thereby, of great value to me as a continuation of that kind of
experience. Once more, permit me to thank you most warmly for creating
such a possibility.