tv The Eighties CNN July 7, 2018 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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the only morality they recognize is what will further their cause. they reserve unto themselves the right to commit any crime, to lie, to cheat. >> the russians are gearing up for war. >> the senate today approved a record $136.5 billion defense budget. >> the largest anti-nuclear protest in u.s. history. >> president reagan is now much more eager to meet with the new leader of the soviet union. >> mr. gorbachev, tear down this wall.
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in several areas, but it is also clear the russians are meeting resistance from muslim tribes men and units of afghanistan's army. >> in 1980 the soviet union had moved into afghanistan. it was in anything raak nicarag. it was in the caribbean. there was a feeling, and i felt it, that the united states could lose the cold war. >> there was a model of behavior during the cold war, and the way i often described it, it was the red side of the map and blue side of the map, separated by the iron curtain. and the rest of the world we competed for. >> that fundamental clash between communism and capitalism, between dictatorship and freedom was the dividing line in the world that people assumed would last forever. but is a revolution starting to stir? >> there has been an unexpected development abroad. polish workers in the baltic area are standing firm in their strike against the government. >> the demands of the striking
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polish work included a free press, release of political prisoners, and the right to strike. >> along comes solidarity, but it's not a union run by communists. it's a union run by polish patriots. so it's a tremendous threat to the ussr because of the possible contagion. it would just wipe out communism if it were allowed to spread. >> some of the principal players in this country's season of discontent spent part of the weekend reinforcing the link between polish workers and the catholic church. >> it is important to understand solidarity without the impact of pope john paul ii. >> the soviets are nervous about john paul ii. he's an anti-communist, and he's beloved by the poles.
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these pressures are forcing the polish government to figure out how to keep control. >> the strike by polish ship yard workers is over. for the polish strikers, it was a day worthy of hyperbole, lech walesa telling his followers we are now co-masters of this land. >> lech walesa and solidarity are showing that you could have an independent union in a communist country. and the question was how independent were they going to be allowed to be? >> how the u.s. deals with poland, with the eastern bloc and with russia will be early challenges for the foreign policy of the president-elect, ronald reagan. >> reagan spent much of his career blasting the soviet union and attacking any republican or democrat who said we can negotiate. he had been the leading opponent of detente during the 1970s, the policy of trying to ease relations with the soviets. what he disliked about detente, was that they were hitting the negotiating team as equals. reagan thought there are two
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super powers, but we have moral superiority because democracy is inherently good and sovietism is inherently bad. >> the only morality they recognize is what will further their cause, meaning they reserve unto themselves to commit any crime, to lie, to cheat. i think when you do business with them, even at a detente, you keep that in mind. >> and everybody was like oh, this cowboy shoot from the hip actor, doesn't he understand that's not diplomatic? boy did he get the soviets' attention, but there was tush-tushing about whether this was appropriate for the president to say. >> ronald reagan had a more radical view of american goals in the cold war than any president before him. as he put it, my policy toward the communists is very simple. we win, they lose. it shocked people. >> it sounds as if, sir, you're saying that there isn't going to be any summit meeting with -- >> no, i don't know.
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but i do believe this, that it is rather foolish to have unilaterally disarmed by letting our margin of safety deteriorate and then you sit with the fellow who's got all the arms. what do you have to negotiate with? >> the senate today approved a record $136.5 billion defense budget for fiscal 1982. the vote was overwhelming. 92-1. >> reagan was trying to spend the ussr into oblivion. he said, what we spend on our armed forces is a much smaller proportion of our economy than is the case with you. now see if you can compete. >> ronald reagan's clear anti-communism made many people worry that though he didn't want war, the effect of his thinking would be the coming up of unwanted war. >> in poland the state council has decreed the introduction of
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martial law beginning today. >> the leader of solidarity is said to be in a government guest house, not under arrest, but dozens of polish activists and dissidents have been locked up along with some leaders of the communist government. >> we've made it plain how seriously we would view any interference by them. >> there was concern the soviets were going to invade and that the poles, in their drive for self-determination, were going to go beyond whatever mental threshold the soviet leadership had. >> at the vatican today, pope john paul ii expressed concern for the worsening situation in his native poland. pope john paul told some 200 polish pilgrims he knew were in the crowd that they and all fellow poles should pray for peace. >> the cold war became as cold as it had ever been before. it got so cold, it was capable of becoming hot. >> there have been rumors.
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secret pressure from the soviet union. the united states is taking immediate action to suspend major elements of our economic relationships with the polish government. >> the first crisis in poland provides a vehicle for reagan to begin to think maybe the communist system in eastern europe is not as stable as people imagined. >> this is the pershing missile, a new version of it will soon be deployed in europe. this is the cruise missile to join nato's arsenal and pointed toward the soviet union and the communist bloc. >> reagan started to push for having pershing missiles in europe and saying we are going the ratchet up the cold war further. >> many demonstrations in the next two days are protesting deployment of the new missiles. they fear in event of war, it makes europe a battlefield, and leave america unscathed. >> they are for the most part
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nonviolent, trapped by geography on the front line of the east/west struggle. >> the fears in the cold war period in the early 1980s that if things went wrong, they would go totally wrong. we might be at the cusp of total nuclear war. >> the largest anti-nuclear protest engulfed manhattan. >> up to 700,000, comparable to largest of the anti-vietnam rallies of a decade ago. >> this is life. this isn't political. this is about the future of life. >> ronald reagan thought the freeze movement was ridiculous. that the number of nuclear weapons, some 40,000 in the world, were way too high. that the freeze would lock in soviet superiority in certain numbers that he wanted to eliminate. >> the nuclear freeze proposals, beware the temptation of pride and temptation of declaring both sides equally at fault. to ignore the facts of history and the impulses of an evil
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empire. to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil. >> reagan delegitimized the soviet union. now the trouble is you're both poised with these weapons at each other, which is a terrible way to live. mutually assured destruction. reagan said, why don't we do something and put a protective shield between us so that i can have some other option? and that was the birth of the strategic defense initiative, called sdi, or unkindly called "star wars." >> what if free people could destroy strategic ballistic missiles before they reached our soil or that of our allies? >> the united states is spending a billion dollars on laser or directed energy directed at weapons, the buck rogers technology the president talked about. >> he didn't understand the technologies. what he understood was, wow, if we have a defensive system that
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stops their offensive missiles, then their offensive missiles have no value and we're safe. >> the soviets were nervous and very afraid. there is a stasis, almost a paralysis at the top of the leadership. they were fearful the reagan administration would take advantage of their weakness. as a result of this, the soviets are very reactive. >> if you were watching this broadcast last night, you probably went to sleep with the same impression we did. there had been some kind of hassle between soviet fighter jets and korean airline 747, and we led you to believe the plane had landed safely on soviet territory. sadly, that was not true. >> at approximately 1600 hours, the aircraft strayed into soviet airspace. the korean aircraft was reported by the soviet pilot at 10,000 meters. at 1826 hours, the soviet pilot reported that he fired a missile, and the target was destroyed.
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>> they went on a peaceful trip. they weren't any spies or anything like that. >> i think the russians are gearing up for war and doing everything that they can to prepare for it. >> it was not an intentional hostile act against korean airlines. it was a mistake of a system that was falling apart. >> this crime against humanity must never be forgotten here or throughout the world. it was an act of barbarism, born of a society which wantonly disregards individual rights and the value of human life and seeks constantly to expand and dominate other nations. >> the timing was particularly bad because the united states and soviets were not talking at all. two great powers are afraid of each other, and kl-007 happens almost at the climax of this period of fear. that makes 1983 one of the most dangerous years of the cold war. >> because of the suspicions about ronald reagan, the soviet
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intelligence agencies thought that under the cover of military exercise called able archer, a first nuclear strike on moscow could be launched. >> when reagan discovered that the soviets actually did think that the united states might launch a pre-emptive strike, it was kind of one of these moments. my gosh. i'm going to look upon them in a different light. >> an estimated 100 million americans watched last night as some of the horror of a nuclear bomb attack on the united states was portrayed in a tv movie. >> reagan processed a lot of history through movies, and the fact that this fear of nuclear annihilation was very real, he started feeling that maybe he was put on earth here to avoid nuclear war. >> just suppose with me for a moment than an ivan and an anya could find themselves, say, in a
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waiting room with a jim and sally. and there was no language barrier. would they then debate the differences between their respective governments, or would they find themselves comparing notes about their children, what etch other did for a living? they would have proven that people don't make wars. >> reagan comes to understand he's made a mistake by not trying to meet with the soviets, and his desire to do this gets much stronger after it becomes clear to him that there's such a level of misunderstanding between the two adversaries that an inadvertent war is possible. >> this is a cbs news special report. gorbachev takes control. >> when the death of konstantin chernenko was announced, the world waited to see who would win the struggle for control of the kremlin. it was a short wait, just 4:15.
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at 54, gorbachev is the youngest man to lead the soviet union since stalin. unlike his predecessors, gorbachev might feel less tied down by the burden of soviet history. >> gorbachev is a revolution in himself. he is talking about a new soviet union allowing some freedom of speech, allowing a more open society. >> gorbachev had seen the gap between how the soviet people lived and what the party said was growing wider and wider. but he is a child of the system. he did not want to destroy it. he had in his mind i have to save it. [ speaking foreign language ] >> i want him to fight for peace and for better life. >> i think that he will be a
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good leader, and i like him. >> those first couple of years of the reagan first term, reagan didn't meet any soviet leaders. when asked about it, reagan said well, they keep dying on me. well, that was true, but he wasn't really making much of an effort. and there was a fear that if you don't reach out to the soviets, they are so afraid of us, they will do something stupid. >> president reagan has had a change of heart. he is now much more eager to meet with the new leader of the soviet union, and he has sent mikhail gorbachev a letter suggesting a summit. ♪ >> all previous summits had had a communique worked out ahead of time by the two foreign ministries. here's what we say at the end, and some gaps to be filled in during the meetings. reagan said we are not doing any communiques. whatever comes from the summit will be what we develop while we're there. >> after 70 minutes with
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their advisers, mr. reagan invited gorbachev to stroll through the garden to the poolhouse where they sat alone before a fire. mr. reagan talk without notes, not about arms control but about of his personal feelings about reducing the level of fear and misunderstanding between the two nations. >> the main thing is they met each other as human beings, reagan, in particular, had concentrated his attention on gorbachev as a person. he spent more time studying gorbachev than he did the esoteric things having to do with arms control. >> it is understood the president tried to dispel gorbachev's negative image of the u.s. gorbachev wouldn't budge but was not nearly as combative as he's been with other american officials recently. >> is it a good sign? >> of course. >> i would think so. >> i was at lunch when ronald reagan came out of his first meeting with mikhail gorbachev, and he said this is a new type of soviet leader. >> the president announced gorbachev will visit the u.s.
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next year and that they agreed to accelerate the arms talks. but the soefiest leader was more negative. >> the solving of the most important problem concerning the arms race and increasing hopes of peace, we didn't succeed in reaching at this meeting. so of course there are important disagreements on matters of principle that remain between us. >> the general feeling here is that president reagan deserves credit for starting a dialogue with soviet leader gorbachev, that, in the nuclear age, any lessening of tension must be applauded. but many pronounced the summit only a modest success because it failed to achieve significant progress on arms control. >> the first word that something was seriously wrong came from this power plant in eastern sweden where workers coming on the job registered abnormally high levels of radiation on their bodies. as tests were conducted, similar
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puzzling reports of high radiation came in from all over scandinavia. but still no accidents were reported. finally, a surprise. the radiation was coming from 750 miles away at chernobyl in the soviet union, a terse announcement picked up from radio moscow. >> they report an accident at the chernobyl nuclear power plant in the ukraine. >> the instinctive reaction of the soviet bureaucracy was to deny that anything had really happened, as a result of which people died. not only were ordinary soviets not getting the truth about chernobyl, the top leaders were not getting the truth. gorbachev discovered that he was also in the dark as the soviet leader. >> soviet news casters deliberately played down the incident, reporting it after the latest five-year plan and crop reports. eight or nine minutes into the news, an announcer said that only two people had been killed in the incident, contradicting
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one news report that casualties numbered in the thousands. >> chernobyl was not a flash in the pan. every few weeks there would be something like chernobyl because of the structural defects of the soviet system. >> officials say because it took place at the newest reactor, it is another indication of the inferiority of soviet technology and they say the soviets brought on the accident by not taking the same kind of safety precautions taken in the united states. >> chernobyl reminded the soviets that they couldn't play in the game of modern technology. they couldn't protect their own people, and they couldn't hide it anymore. >> gorbachev's biggest challenge was how to get his country moving again, and in order to do that, he needed to end the arms race. he needed to spend more money on improving living standards of ordinary people, and that he needed a relax of tensions with the west. >> iceland? >> yeah, that's what i was here to tell you about.
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well, i am pleased to announce that general secretary gorbachev and i will meet october 11th and 12th and reykjavik, iceland. the meeting was proposed by general secretary gorbachev, and i've accepted. >> no agreements at the meeting next week? >> i don't know. all we've agreed upon is we're going to have a meeting. >> gorbachev needs a show of progress overseas to boost his stature in moscow. the irony of reykjavik will be that when reagan, the leader of the free world, meets gorbachev, the autocrat, it will be gorbachev who most needs the publicity back home. that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like any of these types of plans, they could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs.
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at reykjavik, the feeling was we didn't have to prepare all that much. according to everything we knew, it was going to be a howdy and hello, a handshake and photo opp. and it turned out to be anything else but that. after the first morning when reagan and gorbachev met, we were called into the embassy which was right nearby. reagan says gorbachev really wants to reduce nuclear weapons, so he hands a piece of paper to no one in particular. all of us kind of grab it, we
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looked it over, and it was a holy cow moment. this guy really wants to reduce nuclear weapons. here was a soviet leader who was not going by the script. here was a guy who wanted to do business. >> the first indication that some progress may have been made at today's talks at reykjavik came at a white house briefing a few minutes ago. there's no prediction yet on the outcome of these talks, but they do give rise to some optimism. >> i was up there as the clock was ticking down. they had worked and worked and worked on an arms control agreement and at the last minute, it fell apart. >> mr. president. >> do you have an agreement, mr. president? >> do we have an agreement, sir? >> will you meet again? >> when i saw reagan come out of that room with gorbachev, his face was a mask of rage. and gorbachev was very stiff walking out and the guy beside me said, i don't like the body
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language. >> president reagan and secretary gorbachev appeared to have reached tentative agreement on much of a historic breakthrough arms reduction arrangement. but in the end, the soviets insisted that president reagan must drop his star wars program to get the deal. president reagan wouldn't do that. >> the soviets feared that sdi was a lot more real than it was that the strategic defense initiative could protect the united states. it wasn't mutually assured destruction at that point, it was assured destruction of the soviet union but assured protection of the united states. so they went crazy about the sdi. >> the president insisted on the end on retaining for united states the right to test things relating to sdi. it would have taken a madman to accept that. >> after reykjavik, inside the united states, there is
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astonishment and, beyond that, fear of what reagan has talked about doing, banning nuclear weapons. >> a reagan administration move to sign an arms deal with the soviets was criticized today by former president nixon and former secretary of state henry kissinger. the two men said it would be, quote, a profound mistake, unquote, to eliminate all medium-range missiles in europe. >> many conservatives thought reagan had been charmed by gorbachev and reagan actually had more problem dealing with his hard right than he did the left. so reagan had to constantly let the right know, i know what i'm doing. >> reagan was being accused already of getting soft on communism, but he hadn't forgotten the problems we still had. europe is still divided. there was still a berlin wall. >> there is one sign the soviets can make that would be unmistakable, that would advance dramatically the cause of freedom and peace.
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mr. gorbachev, open this gate. mr. gorbachev, tear down this wall. >> it was perfect. it was beautiful. he had to insist on keeping it in the speech. and he did it. don't let anybody tell you it was a staffer or anybody else that did that. >> meanwhile, in the soviet union, gorbachev decides to do something bold. and he says, let's separate sdi from reducing the nuclear stockpile. once he does this, it opens up the possibility for a third summit. >> this week's summit may prove especially important, even historic. for the first time since the onset of the nuclear age, the united states and the soviet union will sign a treaty actually reducing the number of nuclear missiles. >> the inf agreement involved the elimination of an entire class of weapons, the
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intermediate-range ballistic missiles. it changes, it went from arms control to arms reduction. you're now getting rid of nuclear weapons. >> some say he is too anxious to ensure an arms agreement to ensure his place in the history books as a peace maker. >> well, i haven't changed from the time i made a speech about an evil empire. and i think i could sum up my own position on this with the recitation of a very brief russian proverb. "doveryai, no proveryai." it means trust but verify. ♪ >> the importance of this treaty transcends numbers. we have listened to the wisdom in an old russian maxim.
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doveryai, no proveryai. trust but verify. >> you repeat that at every meeting. i like it. >> the improbability of either of them, reagan, the cold war hawk, gorbachev, the party guy, doing this kind of thing is unheard of, and they did it. >> reagan had been at a low in 1987 with iran-contra, and many americans didn't like him. they didn't trust him. the negotiations with the soviet union in many ways saved his presidency. >> mr. gorbachev may not have seen much of america, but he certainly made sure a lot of americans saw him. motorcades don't very often turn a lot of heads in this city. but when they stop on a dime, so does everyone else. >> i want to say hello to you. >> that was very special. he didn't have to do it. he did it.
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i am very surprised and i'm pleased. >> what do you think of gorbachev? >> the guy is a p.r. genius. i mean jumping out of the car like that. unbelievable. >> congressional leaders say they gave president reagan a round of applause on the morning after the summit meeting, but there was caution against euphoria. >> everybody applauded when the president came in. >> the president said gorbachev is a different leader, he no longer wants world domination. do you agree? >> it's one thing to sign the inf agreement. it's something else to follow through on a number of areas. i still don't trust him.
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soviet leader mikhail gorbachev tonight is saying the war in afghanistan is about to come to an end. >> today's announcement seems to be another indication of how anxious the soviets are to get themselves out of afghanistan, out of a war they have not been able to win, out of a war that has proven too costly to continue. >> because of afghanistan, communism was no longer affordable. the idea of promoting your ideology around the world, defending its interests became too expensive. >> white house officials are
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thrilled at the idea that when the president arrives in moscow for a summit with gorbachev in late may, it now appears the soviet also have already begun their pullout from afghanistan. ♪ [ applause ] >> ronald reagan built his career saying communism is evil, and the notion that five years after his evil empire speech, ronald reagan lands in moscow and is welcomed and is greeted is mind-blowing. >> just about like every other american tourist who comes to moscow, president reagan today toured red square, which is the historic center of this capital, of course. he had the best possible tour guide, mikhail gorbachev. >> so friendly was it all that at one point, president reagan threw his arm around gorbachev. and at another point completely took back his evil empire pronouncement.
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>> you still think you're in an evil empire, mr. president? >> no. >> why not? >> i was talking about another time, in another era. >> the warmonger is essentially saying the cold war looks as if it's coming to an end. >> freedom is the recognition that no single person, no single authority or government has a monopoly on the truth. it is the right to put forth an idea scoffed at by the experts and watch it catch fire among the people. >> in gorbachev's soviet union, food has become even harder to get. once there was a selection, maybe two or three cheeses. now there is only one. there is a dangerous undertone to the complaints. we ate better, they say, in the days of brezhnev.
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>> there was stress in the soviet system because they were trying to change it to a system that was unchangeable and unable to adapt to a modern world. gorbachev thought the united states is so far ahead of him, the soviet system is so far behind, we need to accelerate the reforms. >> today i can report to you that the soviet union has taken a decision to reduce its armed forces. within the next two years, their numerical strength will be reduced by 500,000 men. the numbers of conventional arments will also be substantially reduced. >> gorbachev was relaxing the soviet's grip on eastern europe. they didn't have much choice about this because they couldn't bail out the eastern european economies. so what were they going to do? >> the impact in the united states is that finally the critics of reagan -- ask this is in final month of his
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presidency -- acknowledge that things are fundamentally changing. >> in china today, change in the name of democracy was the issue. more than 100,000 people defied the government and took to the streets demanding reform. >> in beijing, demonstrations grow and grow and grow to the point where they reach a couple million people. and in the middle of all this, in comes mikhail gorbachev. this was going to be a visit in which the chinese communist party hoped to improve its relations with the soviets. >> as the sun rose here, it was clear that the chinese students' protest for democracy is still gaining strength and urgency. students are dropping from exhausti exhaustion. some now are vowing to die if necessary. >> the chinese leadership didn't know what to do, but recognized that they couldn't reform the way they were being pushed to reform. they couldn't allow this challenge to their authority. >> the soviet leader largely
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ducked questions on china's student issue. i cannot be the judge, he said. >> in china tonight, the government declared martial law in central beijing. ominously foreign journalists face severe new restrictions that amount to a news blackout. >> there's chaos in tiananmen square. there are bodies and injured and dead all over the place, and there is no way to ascertain for sure how many people have been killed or wounded. >> china is now restored into a deeply repressive leninist regime. it's a question, both in moscow and throughout eastern europe, what's gorbachev's attitude going to be towards people who want to change the communist system? if you have medicare parts a and b and want more coverage, guess what? you could apply for a medicare supplement insurance plan whenever you want. no enrollment window. no waiting to apply.
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while china's communist rulers were brutally cracking down on democracy, poland's communist leaders today were accepting a form of democracy, the results of parliamentary elections, and admitting that solidarity was the big winner. >> for solidarity supporters the taste of victory is sweet. the numbers are overwhelming. in a dramatic announcement, the government conceded defeat and promised reforms. >> stupendous. first time it ever happened in
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eastern european communist history, and this was contagious. >> one of our producers from primetime live went into east germany posing as a tourist. our producer took a home video camera, went to leipzig and found an incredible scene there. >> in east germany, you see a series of demonstrations for change, and the question becomes, are these demonstrations going to be repressed and wiped out? what is gorbachev going to do? >> this was the show of mikhail gorbachev's show and tell day. guests of erich honecker in a military parade through the heart of east berlin. he preached reform and offered a gorbachev proverb. those being late, he said, will be punished by life itself. >> gorbachev felt like he could put a happy face on socialism, that he could modify it. but the freedom genie got out of
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the bottle, and he couldn't put it back in. >> overseas, time has finally run out for erich honecker, the 77-year-old leader of east germany. he resigned today. the official reason given was poor health, but growing political unrest made today's change inevitable. >> the people have their government on the run. today, in the bid to convince people that he's serious about reform, the east german leader, who has had the job for less than a month, managed to convince all of the members of the government he inherited they should resign. the question is this. what next? >> the pressure on the east german government was getting enormous. and as part of the kind of package to present themselves as human, there had been a resolution passed which was going to introduce new rules about immigration. gunter went to this press conference. he hadn't been at the meeting so he didn't know what was in it. he said, here's something i can tell you. it was the biggest administrative error in history.
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[ speaking foreign language ] >> when the east german government just opened the window a little bit and said, well, if you want to move from east germany into west germany, you may, that's all people needed to hear. >> history turns on these magnificent little pivots. there are border guards who could have fired at these first people, but they didn't. instead of firing on those who were coming close to the wall,
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instead of firing on them, they just let them do it. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> it is the sort of news that defies the possibility of a headline. what we know is that we are standing in attendance at a moment in history. as you look now at the berlin wall. >> we didn't really anticipate that the wall would come down like that, but there was so much pent up emotion and so much of a desire for freedom that it just overwhelmed them. but it wasn't anticipated. it was a surprise. >> our joy was just watching
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germans roll through that wall and knock it down and start making souvenir slices in it. it was truly an exciting night because we had wanted this for 40 years, and now it had happened. >> the long-time communist party leader of bulgaria, todor zhivkov, suddenly and surprisingly today announced his resignation. >> it turns out that these regimes are more brittle than gorbachev understood. and it also turned out that these regimes couldn't find any gorbachevs. he tried to encourage people like him to rise to the fore in these countries. they weren't successful. >> had gorbachev decided to use force, this whole scenario would have been totally different. and furthermore, the cold war might have ended in a far different way. it might have ended with a bang and not with a whimper. >> and finally this evening, how can one sum up the dramatic human events we have lived through these last months?
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perhaps a concert. the conductor was leonard bernstein, and they performed climax to the ode dejoy except one word was changed. tonight it became "ode to freedom." ♪ >> the playwright activist is czechoslovakia's first non-communist president in 41 years. >> the new rulers of romania said tonight that the deposed despot and his wife were executed after a military court found them guilty of genocide, stealing state funds and trying to escape prosecution. >> from our point of view, there was no argument about the most remarkable story of the decade. freedom. in some cases, freedom which had been unthinkable as the decade began.
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. hundreds of families separated and reuniting them is a mess. now the u.s. government says it might need more time, this as fallout continues other than the trump administration's immigration policy. also, divers trying to rescue -- evacuate rather the thai football team facing a critical point in the rescue efforts. we're on that story for you and heartbreak in brazil. saturday's world cup games draw near. live from cnn, world headquarters in
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