In March of 1985 Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Seviet Union.
Initially, one could discern serious changes in the policy and
statements of this new, young, and obviously efficient leader only with
great difficulty. While abroad, Gorbachev had said that anti-Stalinism
was a form of anti-Communism. The newspapers were filled with words
lauding "the sacred traditions of the 1930's". At the same time, the
campaign against drunkenness, corruption, and sloppiness launched by
Yuri Andropov was given a new impetus and the highest Party support. In
April, 1986, the Chernobyl tragedy took place. The first reaction of the
Soviet authorities was the usual one. The Soviet public was not properly
informed about the disaster and its unprecedented peril. Millions of
jubilant Soviet citizens crowded the squares and streets of Kiev and
Minsk during the May Day festivities. We can only guess what the
reaction of the Kremlin authorities would have been had not Swedish
scientists traced and announced to the world the threatening level of
radioactivity. Would the terms "glasnost'" and "perestrojka" have spread
through the world press with such intensity and alacrity? A popular
Soviet author wrote a year later in the Soviet media: "Chernobyl
appeared to be not only a national event, a disaster shared by each of
us, but also a dividing line between two eras of time.