Russia's Dead End: An Insider's Testimony from Gorbachev to Putin

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Russia's Dead End: An Insider's Testimony from Gorbachev to Putin Page 44

by Andrei A. Kovalev


  China: migrants to Russian territories in Yeltsin era, 121–22, 124, 135; Russia’s post–Cold War foreign policy and, 257, 265

  Chubais, Anatoly, 83, 235

  Churkin, Alexander, Soviet psychiatry and, xiv–xv, 25, 48, 53, 57

  Cold War: end of, and new realities for Russian foreign policy, 255–56; end of, and nostalgia for phantom greatness of past, 265–90

  Collapse of the Pedestal (Boldin), 92

  Committee of State Security. See KGB

  Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), xxiii, 120–21, 260–62, 277

  Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF), 83–84

  Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), xxx, 178; “hypnosis” and, 206; Lockhart plot and, 245; redistribution of property and power after August 1991 coup, 142–43; special services and, 175, 176

  “Comrade Wolf,” 270

  Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE). See Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE); Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)

  Congress of People’s Deputies of the USSR (1989), 33, 38, 79

  conscience, freedom of, 23, 27, 35, 36, 40, 42, 44, 58, 197

  conservatism, concept of, xxvi

  Constitution of the USSR, 27, 33

  Council of Mutual Economic Assistance (Comecon), 259

  Council of the Russian Federation Assembly, 269–70

  Council on Religious Affairs, 24–25, 40–43

  Crimea, xv, xl, 12, 16, 121, 275, 293, 310

  Criminal Code of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic (RSFSR): perestroika and, 31–36, 60, 178; Putin era controls and, 222–23

  Dagestan, 126, 127, 130, 133, 229, 329n17

  dedovshchina (“systematic bullying”) in the military, xxii

  democracy: espionage and, 245–52; moves to end and to revive totalitarianism, 217–53; after perestroika and Gorbachev’s transition from totalitarianism to democracy, xiii–xvi, xxv, xxvii, 1; political assassination, 234–45; population’s rejection of, 7–15, 296; Putin’s vertical of power, 164, 179, 217–53, 273; Soviet Union’s collapse blamed on, 265; terrorism and need for enemy of Russia, 226–34, 333n4; violence against Russian citizens, 224–26

  Deriabin, Yury, 59

  dètente, 164, 289; Anatoly Kovalev and, xxxiii–xxxiv

  The Devils (Dostoevsky), 313

  Diachenko, Tatyana, xviii, 144, 148

  diplomatic service, in Yeltsin era, 152–64

  Directorate for Humanitarian and Cultural Cooperation, in Foreign Ministry, 18

  dishonor, right to, 313–14

  Dobroliubov, Nikolai, 187

  Doctor Zhivago (Pasternak), 107

  Dostoevsky, Fyodor, 298, 313

  Dovlatov, Sergei, 151, 331n3

  dualism, in Russia, 139, 161

  Dubrovka theater center attack, 230, 231, 232

  Dudaev, Dzhokhar, 128, 227

  Dzasokhov, Alexander, 69

  Dzerzhinsky, Feliks, 174; statue of, 170

  ecology: crises in Putin era, 311; crises in Yeltsin era, 116, 117–20; education, neglected since Yeltsin era, xxii, 112, 131, 150, 311–12; espionage and, 247

  Ekho Moskvy radio station, 170, 207–8, 216

  Ekonomtsev, Ioan, 192

  elections, control by state under Yeltsin and Putin, 219–26, 333n1

  Engels, Friedrich, 2–3, 24, 183, 218

  espionage, 174, 245–52, 282

  Estonia, 3, 93, 161, 259; ethnic Russians in, 335n5; NATO and, 271, 309; in post–World War II Soviet sphere, 158–59, 256; Putin’s policy toward, 277–79

  European Union, 230, 277, 302, 309; Kaliningrad and, 124, 138; Putin’s dislike of, 307; Russia and expansion of, 262, 264; Syrian refugees and, 308

  extermination of persons, OGPU circular on, 102–3

  “extremist activities,” Putin era control of elections and, 221–24

  Farrand, Robert, 52, 54, 56

  Federal Security Service (FSB): espionage and, 251; political assassinations and, 236–37, 239, 305; Putin as head of, xvi–xvii, xx; Russian elections and, 333n1; terrorism and need for enemy of Russia, 228–29

  Fedorov, Ivan, 240

  Filaret (of Minsk), 41

  Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), xx, xxxiii–xxxv, 19, 27, 47, 63, 168, 177, 258–59, 268

  First Chechen War, 112, 128–30, 191, 229, 286

  forest fires (2010), falsified news about, 214–16

  former socialist republics: European Union and, 262, 264, 277; NATO and, 120–24; reclaiming of sovereign rights, 125–27, 329nn16–17

  Fourth Main Department of the Ministry of Health of the USSR (Kremlin Clinic), 76–77

  Fradkov, Mikhail, 154–56

  Gaidar, Yegor, 112, 237–38

  Gamsakhurdia, Konstantin, 283

  Gamsakhurdia, Zviad, 280

  Gavrilov, Sergei, 195–96

  The Generation of the Thaw (Alekseeva), 327n1

  Georgia, xxiii, 267, 271; Chechnya and, 130; ethnic Russians in, 335n5; Putin’s policy toward, 225, 273–75, 279–84, 291, 292, 294, 303; Rose revolution in, 251, 274, 281; in Yeltsin era, 121, 124

  Giliarovskii, Vladimir, xxx

  glasnost (transparency), 32–34, 178. See also speech, freedom of

  Glukhov, Alexei, xiv, 22, 25, 29, 328n1

  Golovlev, Vladimir, 235

  Gorbachev, Mikhail, 1, 3, 12, 38, 88, 313; Anatoly Kovalev and, xxxii, xxxiii, xxxv–xxxvi, 19, 20, 76, 93–94; emasculation of Communist Party, xvi; hatred for, 78, 79; John Paul II and, 44; on LDPR, 209; loss of power, 91–95; speech at United Nations, 22–23, 61; “world imperialism” as enemy of, 226. See also Gorbachev era; perestroika

  Gorbachev era: absence of system of governance and, 217; August 1991 coup and outcomes of, xvi, 64, 67–72, 78, 79, 86–87, 88; diplomatic services and, 152–64; dismantling of Yalta-Potsdam system and end of Stalinist model of international relations, 257, 259–60; espionage and, 246; religious freedom and, 39; special services and, 218–19; West’s mistakes during, 286–90

  Grachev, Pavel, 128

  Grishin, Viktor, xxxvii

  Gromyko, Andrei, xxxvii, 17, 18, 163–64, 177, 335n1; Anatoly Kovalev and, xxxiv–xxxv

  Group of Eight (G8), 273

  GRU (military intelligence), 238–39, 241–42, 334n17

  GUBOP, 238, 240, 331n14

  GULAG (Main Directorate for Corrective Labor Camps), 11, 23; creation of “Soviet person” and, 101–5; forerunner of, 225; slave labor and, 107–8, 164; special services power and, 173

  The Gulag Archipelago (Solzhenitsyn), xxxiv–xxxv, 102

  Gusarov, Evgeny, 329n12

  Gusinskii, Vladimir, 170, 206, 207, 242

  Helsinki Act. See Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE)

  Herzen, Alexander, 292–93, 312–13

  homophobic law (2013), 303

  Hungarian revolution, xx, 176–77

  Hussein, Saddam, 162, 263

  Huxley, Aldous, dystopia of, 313

  “hypnosis” of Russian people: “active measures” (aktivka) and, 208–10; falsified current events, 214–16; falsified history, 211–14; as foundation of Russian politics, 182–83; propaganda and, 205–6; suppression of freedom of speech, 206–8

  ideological state, Soviet myths and national pride and, 183–86

  Idushchie vmeste (Going Together) youth movement, 208

  Ignatenko, Vitaly, 69, 94

  Iliumzhinov, Kirsan, 127

  Illarionov, Andrei, 142–43

  illegal arms sales, xxii, 145

  imperialism, “new” Russia, 255–90; nostalgia for Cold War and new realities for Russian foreign policy, 255–56; Putin and post-Soviet republics, 272–85; Putin’s anti-Western policies, 265–72; West’s mistakes and, 285–90; Yalta-Potsdam system and, 256–60; Yeltsin’s policies and missed opportunities, 260–65

  infantilizm (childish willfulness), xxiii, 7–8, 172, 292, 295,
299, 304–5

  Ingushetia, Republic of, 126, 329n16

  intellectual freedom, perestroika and, 35–36

  intelligentsia versus intellectuals, in Yeltsin era, 166–67

  internal enemies, National Idea and search for, 197–200

  International Bill of Human Rights, 26, 27

  International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights, 62

  International Treaty on Civil and Political Rights, 64

  Internet providers, surveillance and, 334n12

  Invitation to a Beheading (Nabokov), 9

  Iraq, 4, 109, 263

  Iskander, Fazil, 28

  Islam: filling of religious void left by National Idea, 191; fundamentalism of, 131–33, 308, 331n29

  Israeli visas, 29

  Ivanov, Igor, 52, 162–63, 307

  Ivanov, Sergei, xix, 149, 150

  Ivan the Terrible, 145, 181, 328n6

  Izvestiia, 41, 50

  Japan, 124, 127, 138, 247

  John Paul II, Pope: Gorbachev and, 44; visit to USSR, 23, 39

  journalism and journalists, Putin’s attacks on, 234–45

  Kabardino-Balkar Republic, 126, 329n17

  Kaliningrad region, 124, 135–38

  Kalmykia, 125

  Kalniete, Sandra, 158–59

  Karachaevo-Cherkessia Republic, 329n17

  Karadžić, Radovan, 161

  Karaev, Nikolai, 215

  Karelia, 126, 127

  Kazakhstan, 271, 276, 335n5

  KGB, xxx–xxxix, 173; Andropov and, 176; August 1991 coup and, 70, 76; hatred of Gorbachev, 79; hatred of West, 184; “hypnosis” and, 206; Pope John Paul’s visit and, 23; present in every Soviet department, 175; psychiatry and, 56; publication classification and, 203; redistribution of property and power after August 1991 coup, 80–84, 142–43; Russian Orthodox Church and, 39, 171, 180, 188, 192; special services in Yeltsin era and, 98, 99; U.S. rabbis’ visit to Ukraine and, 25; in Yeltsin era, 164, 165–66

  Khanty-Mansiiskii Autonomous District, 126

  Khasavyurt Agreement, 129, 330n20

  Khindrava, Georgy, 283

  Khodorkovsky, Mikhail, 169, 243, 244, 303

  Khokhol’kov, Yevgeny, 240

  Kholodov, Dmitry, 234, 238

  Khristenko, Viktor, 235

  Khrushchev, Nikita S., 99, 121, 165

  Kirill, Patriarch (Vladimir M. Gundyaev), 41–42, 191–92, 194–95

  Kiselev, Evgeny, 81

  Kiveledi, Ivan, xxi

  Kokoshin, Andrei, xviii, 147, 149, 150

  Kolosovskii, Andrei, 62

  Komi, 125, 126, 329n17

  Kommunist (Communist) journal, 206

  Komsomol (Communist Youth League), 205, 206, 208, 210–11

  Komsomolskaia pravda (Komsomol truth), 215

  Korol’kov, Igor, 238

  Korzhakov, Alexander, xvi, 110–11, 144, 177–78, 207

  Kosovo, 279

  Kovalev, Anatoly, xxxii–xxxvii, 168, 209, 288; character and personality, 19–20; Gorbachev and, xxxii, xxxiii, xxxv–xxxvi, 19, 20, 76, 93–94; hospitalized after August 1991 coup, 72–77; perestroika and, xiii–xv, 18, 22, 47, 60; special services and, 177

  Kovalev, Nikolai, 240

  Kovalev, Sergei, 65, 235, 330n23

  Kovalev, Valentin, 158

  Kovtun, Dmitry, 237

  Kozyrev, Andrei, 62, 153, 161, 262, 263

  Krasnodarskii and Stavropolskii territories, 329n17

  Kravchuk, Leonid, 78

  Kriuchkov, Vladimir, xxxvii, 63, 68–69, 70, 73, 75, 92–94, 209

  Kruchina, Nikolai, 71

  Kudrin, Aleksei, 301

  Kulikov, Anatoly, 228

  Kungaeva, Elza, 240–41

  Kuril Islands, 124, 127, 138

  Kuznetsov, Rudolf, 25, 29–30

  Kyrgyzstan, 335n5

  Latvia, 158–59, 161, 256, 259, 277; ethnic Russians in, 335n5; NATO and, 271, 309

  Lavrov, Sergei, 163, 282

  Law on Freedom of Conscience and of Religious Organizations (1990), 42

  Lazovsky, Maxim, 239, 334n15

  Lebed, Alexander, 129, 139, 330n20

  Lebedev, Alexander, 81

  Lebedev, Platon, 243, 244

  Lenin, Vladimir, xv, 15, 24, 99–100, 105, 113, 173, 175, 180, 183, 201, 205, 225

  Leninism-Stalinism, 10, 98–113, 164, 211, 218–19, 246, 301

  Leninist norms, 24, 32, 40, 50, 114

  Leonova, Lidia, 193

  Lesin, Mikhail, 207

  Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), 11, 90–91, 139, 209, 237

  Liberal Russia party, 235

  Ligachev, Yegor, xxxvii, 39, 61, 72–73, 210, 329n7

  Lithuania, 158–59, 256, 259; ethnic Russians in, 335n5; NATO and, 271, 309

  Litvinenko, Alexander, xxi, 13, 164, 209, 237, 267–68, 305

  Lockhart, R. H. Bruce, 245–46

  Lugovoi, Andrei, 209, 237

  Lukashenko, Alexander, 162, 263

  Lukyanov, Anatoly, 93

  Luzhkov, Yury, 207

  Magnitsky, Sergei, 303–4

  Malashenko, Igor, 206, 207

  Malkevich, V., 148

  Manzhosin, Alexander, 146–47

  Markelov, Stanislav, 241–42

  Marx, Karl, 2–3, 24, 183, 205, 208

  Marxism-Leninism, 2, 4, 15, 40, 108, 188

  Maskhadov, Aslan, 232, 233, 330n20

  media, Putin era control of, 167, 170, 211, 221

  Media-Most Group, 170, 206–7, 224

  medical information, secrecy and, 204

  Medvedev, Dmitry, xxi, 7, 9, 167, 181, 211, 223, 284, 300, 301, 302, 305

  Medvedev, Vadim, 89, 328n7

  Men, Alexander, xvi, 189, 322n10

  Milëkhin, Gennady, 56

  military: decline of power in Yeltsin era, 122–25, 142–43; dedovshchina (“systematic bullying”) in, xxii; remilitarization under Putin, xx, 4, 10, 270–74

  Milošević, Slobodan, 161, 162, 263

  Ministry of Health, psychiatry and, xiv–xv, 25, 34, 48, 50, 53–56, 58, 59, 76

  Moiseev, Valentin, 250

  Moldova, 121, 271; ethnic Russians in, 335n5; Putin’s policy toward, 279, 283, 284–85, 291

  Molodaia Gvardiia (Young Guard), 208, 278

  Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (1939), xxi, 65, 158, 213, 256, 277, 284

  Montesquieu, Charles de, xxxix, 187

  Moscow, terrorist acts in, 229, 239, 334n8

  Moscow Conference on the Human Dimension of the CSCE, 20, 22, 59–65, 88

  Moscow Patriarchate, 43–44, 191–95

  Moskovskie novosti, 82

  “Munich,” as shameful label, 289

  Murashkovites, 42, 328n4

  Nabokov, Vladimir, 9

  Nagorno-Karabakh, 36–37, 62, 121, 166

  The Naked King (Schwartz), 301, 335n7

  narodnost’ (dense xenophobia), 292. See also xenophobia

  Naryshkin, Sergei, 212

  Nashi (Ours) party, 170–71, 208, 278

  Natelashvili, Shalva, 283

  National Bolshevik Party, 208

  National Idea, 171, 186–87; search for internal enemies and, 197–200; suppression of religion and, 188–97

  nationality, as ethnicity in Russia, xxxviii–xxxix

  Nazarbaev, Nursultan, 79

  Nazism, in Russia today, 11

  Nekrasov, Nikolai, xx, 252

  Nemtsov, Boris, 304

  NHK television, 247

  Nicholas I, xii, 292

  Nicholas II, xxvi

  Nikitin, Alexander, 247

  nomenklatura (privileged elite): benefits of being, 107–8; coup’s outcomes and, 67, 83–85, 142–43; religion and, 188–89

  nongovernmental organizations (NGOs): espionage and, 251–52; laws controlling, 223–24

  Nord-Ost musical, terror attacks, 230, 231–32, 241

  North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), xxviii; former socialist republics and expansion of, 120–24, 261–62, 271, 277, 329n13, 329n15; in Gorbachev era, 87; in Yeltsin era, 158,
161–62

  North Caucasus, 127, 132–33, 138–39, 331n29, 335n5

  North Ossetia, 126, 280

  nostalgia: for Cold War, 255–56; for phantom greatness of past, 265–90; for stagnation, 168; for totalitarianism, 167–68, 302

  Novaia gazeta (New paper), 207–8, 231–32, 235, 238, 239–41

  Novocherkassk, restoring of order in, 225, 333n2

  NTV, 206–7, 224

  nuclear submarines, espionage and, 247

  nuclear weapons: Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty (1972), 271–72; dangers of Russian state disintegration and, 310; missile disarmament, 249; nonproliferation treaties, 146–48; restraint of use as foundation of Cold War, 268

  Öcalan, Abdullah, 227

  Ogata, Sadako, 156–57

  OGPU, 329n3; circular on physical extermination, 102–3

  oil and gas: Chechnya and, 128; Russian national pride and, 185; Russian policies toward former SSRs, 272–74; Russia’s energy blackmail and, 266–67

  “On Departure from the USSR and Reentry into the USSR of Citizens of the USSR” law, 63

  OPGs, 239, 334n17

  opinion, Putin’s suppression of freedom of, 170

  oprichnina: of Ivan the Terrible, 181, 328n6; perestroika and, 59; punitive psychiatry and, 59; Putin and new, 182, 218

  Orange Revolution in Ukraine, 251, 268, 274

  Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), xxi, 213, 261, 268, 270

  Orlov, Dimitri, 333n1

  Orwell, George, dystopia of, 313

  Owen, Robert, 305

  paganism, Soviets’ use of, 105

  Pamyat’, 11, 63

  Pankin, Boris, 246

  Paris, terror attacks in, 307–8

  Pas’ko, Grigory, 247

  Pasternak, Boris, 73, 107

  patriotism. See National Idea

  Patriots SS (Patriots of State Security), 80–81

  Patrushev, Nikolai, 305

  Pavlov, Ivan, 104

  perestroika, 17–66, 108–9, 164–65; achievements of, 178, 181; Anatoly Kovalev and, xiii–xv, xxxvii; criminal codes and political censorship, 31–36, 60; economics and, 143; freedom of information and, 201–2; as Gorbachev’s “Democratic Relief,” 3–4; and Gorbachev’s transition from totalitarianism, xiii–xvi, xxv, xxvii, 1; and human rights, generally, 17–22; “hypnosis” and, 206; international obligations of USSR and, 20–21, 26–27, 36–37, 40, 63–64; Moscow Conference on the Human Dimension, 20, 22, 59–65; political abuse of psychiatry and, 7, 20, 45–59, 60, 245; political power and, 36–39; refuseniks and right to leave and return, 20, 23, 25–31; religious freedom and, xiv, xv–xvi, 24, 36, 39–45, 60, 189, 197; special services and, 177; violence during, 225; within-system dissidents and, 2–3

 

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