Resurrection: The Struggle for a New RussiaResurrection plunges the reader directly into the thick of events so that one all but feels Yeltsin's breath upon one's face - he is drunk one day, in command the next, as volatile as the fragmented country he tries to lead. Remnick's new Russia springs to life through vivid portraits of its players: the half-Jewish anti-Semite Zhirinovsky, "a hater, a crank, a nut"; the young (and purged) economist Yegor Gaidar, champion of "shock therapy" and market reform; Vladimir Gusinsky, Russia's Citizen Kane ("a first-generation capitalist living in a jungle world with few rules or restraints"); Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who returned from a twenty-year exile to find a country freed from communism but still steeped in misery - and nostalgia. These portraits emerge against a background dominated by the war in Chechnya, which Remnick visits in a bloody and unforgettable chapter, and a Moscow in turbulent transition. |
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Page 13
... collapse ? Lukyanov smiled , indulging once more the naiveté of his visitor . " Gorbachev could have stopped it all , " he said . " Belovezhskaya Pushcha❞ — the hunting lodge near Minsk where the leaders of Belarus , Russia , and ...
... collapse ? Lukyanov smiled , indulging once more the naiveté of his visitor . " Gorbachev could have stopped it all , " he said . " Belovezhskaya Pushcha❞ — the hunting lodge near Minsk where the leaders of Belarus , Russia , and ...
Page 28
... collapse was “ the natural outcome of the events . We had a choice between a controlled and an un- controlled collapse . An uncontrolled collapse would have reached every neighborhood . I don't think that those who did this were ...
... collapse was “ the natural outcome of the events . We had a choice between a controlled and an un- controlled collapse . An uncontrolled collapse would have reached every neighborhood . I don't think that those who did this were ...
Page 143
... collapsed for economic reasons . Its economy was completely ab- surd . It could survive only with an iron grip . When Gorbachev first tried to ease the iron grip , the process of collapse accelerated . Gorbachev did not have in mind the ...
... collapsed for economic reasons . Its economy was completely ab- surd . It could survive only with an iron grip . When Gorbachev first tried to ease the iron grip , the process of collapse accelerated . Gorbachev did not have in mind the ...
Contents
The Lost Empire | 3 |
The October Revolution | 37 |
The Great Dictator | 84 |
Copyright | |
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aides Aleksandr American army asked became become began beginning believe building called campaign Chechen collapse Communist Party coup course democratic deputy early economic elections everything face fact forces foreign former friends Gorbachev Gusinsky head hundred idea interests kind knew Korzhakov Kremlin language late later leaders leading least Lebed less liberal lived look meeting military million minister months Moscow nationalist never night once parliament played political president question reform regime reporters Russian Rutskoi seemed sense Solzhenitsyn Soviet Union streets talk television thing thought thousand tion told took tried trying turned various vote wanted West Western White House writer wrote Yeltsin young Zhirinovsky Zyuganov