They included former Vice President Alexander Rutskoi, and the ex-chairman of the disbanded parliament, Ruslan Khasbulatov.
Their opposition to real structural reform is no less intense than that of expendable front-men like Ruslan Khasbulatov and Alexander Rutskoi.
Khasbulatov has expressed solidarity with the seething Russian masses and threatened to recall parliament for the purpose of reversing this confiscatory measure and sacking those responsible.
Further bolstering this perspective is the conviction that hardliners have been effectively divided, with the weekend rebellion against Parliamentary Speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov throwing the anti-Yeltsin forces into disarray.
And yet, according to the 27 July edition of the New York Times, Gerashchenko maintains that he had as might be expected coordinated the currency "reform" initiative with Khasbulatov.
Yeltsin, Zorkin and Khasbulatov have worked in the past, this one only served to make most parliamentarians more intractable in their determination to preserve a largely centrally-controlled system and their privileged positions.
For his part, Khasbulatov managed to alienate a large block of his hardline supporters by favoring early elections for deputies most of whom took office in 1990 under the ancien regime.
According to a report broadcast today on National Public Radio, Khasbulatov has also assigned to this militia responsibility for the security of 75 buildings in Moscow, including state television, the Foreign Ministry, and the Constitutional Court.
Yeltsin himself seriously upset his own supporters by reaching an 11th-hour compromise with Khasbulatov on Saturday night in which he blithely abandoned his push for an April plebiscite in favor of presidential and parliamentary elections in November.
Under the orders of Parliament Speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, parliamentary guards have also surrounded the offices of Izvestia, today a relatively independent newspaper, for the purpose of subordinating the paper to the control of the communist-dominated Parliament .
And the wider battle in Russia between Boris Yeltsin and the Russian parliamentary chairman, Ruslan Khasbulatov, had come to an end a battle that had bedevilled Chechnya because Mr Khasbulatov was himself a Chechen and had used his connections there to embarrass Mr Yeltsin.
As Russian President Boris Yeltsin begins meeting with those who twenty-four hours ago were determined to impeach him Parliamentary Speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov and the Chairman of the Constitutional Court Valery Zorkin expectations are rising that yet another deal might be cut between them.
This means that the United States must "take sides" leaving no room for striking future deals with those like Rutskoi and the speaker of the parliament, Ruslan Khasbulatov, or more "pragmatic" hardliners (usually described by their apologists as "centrists") like Industrial Party chairman Arkady Volsky.
His refusal to support today's announcement by President Yeltsin marks the final rupture between the two and Rutskoi -- or his designee -- will seek to establish a new government with the military-industrial complex's Volsky, the parliament's Khasbulatov and the KGB's Primakov playing key, but likely subordinate, roles.
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