Read Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000 Online
Authors: Stephen Kotkin
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Politics, #History
5 Soviet and post-Soviet ecocide
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Further reading
Probably the best starting point for analyses of the Soviet collapse is Fred Halliday, ‘A Singular Collapse: The Soviet Union, Market Pressure and Inter-State Competition’,
Contention
, 1/2
(1992), 121–41. Another concise, early overview of explanatory factors can be found in Alexander Dallin, ‘Causes of the Collapse of the USSR’,
Post-Soviet Affairs
, 8/2 (1992), 279–302.
Unusually suggestive essays include Vladimir Bukovsky, ‘Who Resists Gorbachev?’,
Washington Quarterly
, 12/1 (1989), 5–19; ‘Djilas on Gorbachev’,
Encounter
, 71/3 (1988), 3–19; Donna Bahry, ‘Society Transformed? Rethinking the Social Roots of Perestroika’,
Slavic Review
, 52/3 (1993), 512–54; and Alex Alexiev, ‘Soviet Nationalities in German Wartime Strategy 1941–1945’, RAND, Santa Monica, CA, 1982. For the post-mortems among Sovietologists, there is Michael Cox (ed.),
Rethinking the Soviet Collapse: Sovietology, the Death of Communism
and the New Russia
(London, 1998).
Unfortunately, most of the avalanche of Soviet and post-Soviet memoirs have not been translated into English, including exceptionally valuable ones by bodyguards, press secretaries, prime ministers, officers of the general staff and army command, high officials of the KGB, and the long-serving Kremlin doctor. Valuable secondary studies on the collapse are Steven L.
Solnick,
Stealing the State: Control and Collapse in Soviet Institutions
(Cambridge, MA, 1998); John Dunlop,
The Rise of Russia and
the Fall of the Soviet Empire
(Princeton, 1993, 1995); Murray 233
further reading
Feshbach and Alfred Friendly, Jr.,
Ecocide in the USSR
(London, 1992); Kazimierz Z. Poznan śki,
Poland’s Protracted Transition:
Institutional Change and Economic Growth 1970–1994
(New York, 1996); and Charles S. Maier,
Dissolution: The Crisis of Communism
and the End of East Germany
(Princeton, 1997). Alternatives to the interpretation presented here can be found in Moshe Lewin,
The Gorbachev Phenomenon
(Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1988, 1991); Scott Shane,
Dismantling Utopia: How Information
Ended the Soviet Union
(Chicago, 1994); Ben Fowkes,
The Disintegration of the Soviet Union: A Study in the Rise and Triumph of
Nationalism
(New York, 1997); and Robert M. Gates,
From the
Shadows: The Ultimate Insider’s Story of Five Presidents and How They
Won the Cold War
(New York, 1996). Valerie Bunce,
Subversive
Institutions: The Design and Destruction of Socialism and the State
(New York, 1999), also argues that Soviet institutions subverted themselves, but her explanation differs from that offered here.
Few books on post-Soviet Russia take account of the Soviet collapse or exhibit a grasp of history, geopolitics, and institutions. Exceptions include Eugene Huskey,
Presidential Power in
Russia
(Armonk, NY, 1999); Mary McAuley,
Russia’s Politics of
Uncertainty
(New York, 1997); Clifford G. Gaddy,
The Price of the
Past: Russia’s Struggle with the Legacy of a Militarized Economy
(Washington, 1996); William E. Odom,
The Collapse of the Soviet
Military
(New Haven, 1998); and David Woodruff,
Money
Unmade: Barter and the Fate of Russian Capitalism
(Ithaca, NY, 1999). Among outstanding short pieces are Thomas Graham, ‘The Fate of the Russian State’,
Demokratizatsiya
, 8/3 (2000), 354–75; Richard E. Ericson, ‘Economics and the Russian Transition’,
Slavic Review
, 57/3 (1998), 609–25; Vladimir Shlapentokh, ‘Russia: Privatization and Illegalization of Social and Political Life’,
Washington Quarterly
, 19/1 (1996), 65–85; Jeremy 234
further reading
R. Azrael and Alexander G. Rahr, ‘The Formation and Development of the Russian KGB, 1991–1994’, RAND, Santa Monica, CA, 1993; and Peter H. Solomon, ‘The Limits of Legal Order in Post-Soviet Russia’,
Post-Soviet Affairs
, 11/2 (1995), 89–114.
Analyses of Russia that differ from that expressed here can be found in Tim McDaniel,
The Agony of the Russian Idea
(Princeton, 1996), and Peter Reddaway and Dmitri Glinski,
The Tragedy of
Russia’s Reforms: Market Bolshevism Against Democracy
(Washington, 2001).
Typically, English-language journalism on the late Soviet Union and especially post-Soviet Russia left something to be desired, but numerous instances of outstanding reporting are cited in the notes. Very highly recommended is Ryszard Kapusćin
śki,
Imperium
(New York, 1994).
Perhaps the most incisive, albeit brief, discussion of the wider significance of Russia’s example can be found in Stephen Holmes, ‘What Russia Teaches us Now: How Weak States Threaten Freedom’,
American Prospect
, 33 (1997), 30–9.
For those interested in studying the art of contemporary history, there is no better place to turn than Thucydides,
The
Peloponnesian War
(New York, 1951).
235
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Index
Afghanistan, war in
16,
50,
61,
68,
bureaucracy versus civil service Aganbegyan, Abel
62–
63
suicide
211
reshuffling of inner circle
52
Chechnya, war in
4,
155,
156,
167,
suspicion of West
95
Chernenko, Konstantin
viii,
49,
51,
AvtoVAZ car factory
132
Belarus (Belarussia)
72,
90,
110,
China, reforms
221
and Union Treaty
109
compared with perestroika
Brezhnev, Leonid and Brezhnevism civic organizations and NGOs
144,
clientalism
29
gas industry as top investment détente
25
objective
138
as a geopolitical conflict
24
ignoring Soviet decline
27
Soviet socialism competing with on liberalism and democra—
tization as counter-
revolution
58
Commonwealth of Independent with Nixon
25
rouble zone
121
as Russia’s own potential NAFTA Brezhvev era
16,
43,
45,
46,
153
237
index
Czech Republic, proximity to
142–
143,
148,
165,
178,
Austria and Germany
193
Czechoslovakia, and Soviet Communist Youth League
crackdown (Prague Spring—
competitive elections and loss of
63,
85,
175
–176, 176
dependence on loans from the
158
defense of by Gorbachev
103–
former officials assuming
and ‘goulash Communism’
65,
regional office
157
as implementing perestroika
30,
proximity to Austria and
Germany
193
membership
5
and Soviet crackdown (1956) as a monopoly
85,
117
after the Soviet dissolution
146,
Poland, proximity to Germany returning to the ideals of
193
role in the Soviet system, and crackdown on
22–
23,
27,
Congress of People’s Deputies contrast with August putsch (Russian)
149
Congress of People’s Deputies Wojciech
88
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
184
Constitution, Russian
Slovenia, proximity to Austria (presidential)
150,
151,
and Germany
193
Constitution, Soviet-era
150
Milosevic, Slobodan
112
Tudjman, Franjo
112
democracy
see
liberalism and a Estonia
xi,
8,
72,
90,
91,
103,
110
liberal order
proximity to Scandinavia
193
Democratic Union
71
euro
194
force of institutional
238
index
comparison with the Chinese France
175
creation of new Soviet
Gaidar, Yegor
108,
126, 126,
129,
defense of the Communist Party
131