Read Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000 Online
Authors: Stephen Kotkin
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Politics, #History
denunciation of Stalin
71
Arguments and Facts
68
final days of the Soviet Union
Moscow News
97
Ogonyok
(Flame)
70
first inner circle
59
Solzhenitsyn, Alexander, and
The
first moves at reform
60–
62
Gulag Archipeligo
68
Vzglyad
(Viewpoint)
69
Nina Andreeva manipulation
177,
200
general disillusionment with the reinvigorating the soviets
76
–
77
‘reorganization’ of the party Gorbachev, Mikhail
ix,
3,
5,
9,
27,
unwillingness to defend Soviet 1987–1988 economic reforms system by force
83
–
85,
104,
1990–1991 policy zig-zags
90
–92
and Yakovlev
206
arms reductions
87
ambitions to become General-call for a law-based state
147
–
148
Secretary
56
Catch-22 between reform and Gromyko, Andrei
49
–
50,
51,
52,
239
index
Gromyko, Andrei (
cont’d
) State Procuracy (Soviet)
6,
161
ambitions to become General-State Supply Commission— Secretary
203
Gossnab
x
Supreme Court (Soviet)
162
Helsinki Accords (1975)
24
Supreme Soviet (Russia)
149,
Hussein, Saddam, and invasion of
162
Kuwait
184
Supreme Soviet (Soviet)
49,
147,
institutions
viii
Supreme Soviet legislature Central Bank (Russia)
110,
121,
(Soviet)
152
International Monetary Fund Central Committee Apparat
Russia’s failure to meet loan
205,
218
conditions
222
Central Statistical Administration (Soviet), lack of a computer Karabakh
4,
72,
84,
90
in 1965
63
Kazakhstan
xi,
4,
99,
105–
106,
107,
Constitutional Court (Russia)
155
Council of Ministers (Soviet) KGB
5,
6,
39,
49,
53,
56,
58,
67,
83,
Defence Ministry (Russia)
97
Economics Ministry (Russia)
6
163,
167,
169,
173;
see also
executive branch (Russia)
146
– Chebrikov; Kryuchkov; and
Leonov
Federation Council (Russia)
151
judicial system (Russia)
162,
167
Ministry of Justice (Soviet)
161
and the Baltics
207
presidency (Russia)
149,
Gorbachev’s instructions for Presidential Administration martial law
211–
212
industrial espionage and funds Property Office of the
Presidential Administration methods
45
one known insubordination
221
post-Soviet (Russian)
97,
159
– State Planning Commission—
160
240
index
repression of dissent
27,
35–
36,
Ligachev, Yegor
ix,
52,
55,
59,
71,
strength
4
support for national and popular and Gorbachev
81–
82
Khasbulatov, Ruslan
149,
160,
217
Khrushchev, Nikita
31,
38,
82,
83,
and client networks
29
Machiavelli [Niccolò]
84
revived party role vis-à-vis the military
state
80
military-industrial complex, and socialist romanticism
2,
43,
expenditures for
61
secret speech and denunciation inability to conduct reform of Stalin
22,
35,
37,
70,
71
Kohl, Helmut
89
Korzhakov, Alexander
95
backing of Yeltsin over
Kryuchkov, Vladimir
98,
100,
101,
Gorbachev
110
arrest and release
211
as part of the elite
5
Kulakov, Fyodor
39
profiteering
115
pullout from Europe
88,
184
– Latvia
72,
90,
91,
103,
110,
193
Lenin, Vladimir and Leninism
30,
and the Second World War
strength
4
on Ukrainian territory
109
on lies permeating the Soviet Warsaw Pact
87,
89,
184
Union
210
Mlynárˇ, Zdeneˇk
175
–
176,
177,
182
on the doomed putsch
101
on the need for a new generation MVD (Interior Ministry)
83,
84,
and socialist romanticism
200
liberalism and a liberal order balooning in the 1990s
188–
189
strength
4
market-facilitating institutions
18–
19
241
index
Nazarbayev, Nursultan
97,
105
– Putin, Vladimir
146,
189
attempts at developing Russian Nixon, Richard
14
nationalism
192
with Brezhnev
25
Eurasian foreign policy
194
uncertain efforts to bring order oil shock
10
–12,
15
Arab–Israeli War (1973) as cause putsch (August 1991)
98
–103,
effect on Germany and Japan
12
effect on the United States
12–
14
long-run effect on worldwide
146,
147,
159,
163–
164,
172,
capitalism
26
agriculture
216
inflated role of
9
assuming Soviet debt
119
Orwell, George
21
barriers to economic
capital flight
127
perestroika
viii, ix, x,
58,
62,
68,
71,
democracy without liberalism
178,
183,
192
in the context of cold war executive branch
aggrandizement in the
in the context of socialist regions
156
–158
as destroying the Soviet Union
2
government advertising for as restructuring relationship with ministers
212
the West
62
institutional landscape
165–
167
stability before
27
lack of restructuring of the as a success
183
Pope John Paul II (Karol Woitlya) mafia and criminal groups
128