Read Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000 Online
Authors: Stephen Kotkin
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Politics, #History
Prague Spring
2,
22,
39,
46,
49,
50,
nationalism, warnings of
city of Moscow’s exemption
215
plundering of Soviet assets
115,
242
index
taking over from Soviet Union
119,
172,
174,
195
effects on the Soviet Union tax police
161,
189
as legitimizer of socialism
44
–45,
Russia, reforms
viii-ix, x,
165
–
166
surrendering the gains of
90
dissillusion with
8
exaggerated role of the West
9,
lack of neo-liberal reforms Shushkevich, Stanislav
109
–
110
decline of
16
Marshal Plan, misplaced calls for discovery of
15
effect on Soviet economy
referendum in favor of
150
‘socialism with a human face’
2,
also
Gorbachev;
Russia, regions
154
–156,
158,
162
Khrushchev; Mlynárˇ; and
Sovietologists
Solidarity
see
Eastern Europe Kaliningrad
194
Soviet Union (USSR)
viii,
1,
2,
3
–
4,
Moscow, as an island of relative
171–
172,
173,
174,
179,
alcoholism and anti-alcohol Sakha (Yakutia)
156
St Petersburg (as ‘democratic’) censorship
46
claims on other nations’ debt Tatarstan
156
crackdown on Czechoslovakia Russian Empire of the Tsars
21,
(Prague Spring—1968)
2,
Russian Revolutions (1917)
31,
37,
crackdown on Hungary (1956)
76,
78
as bedrock of communities and Second World War
viii,
9,
17,
19,
social constituencies
7
243
index
Soviet Union (
cont’d
)
21,
29,
30,
46,
57,
72,
83,
concentration in heavy
industries
17
crimes of building socialism
19,
decline with increasing social
75
death and the post-Stalin years
2,
obsolete industries as a drag
28,
31
–
32,
35,
36,
79
denounced by Gorbachev
71
computers
63
denounced by Khrushchev
22,
steel sector
64
supported by energy exports State Emergency Committee
see
15–
16,
50,
66
putsch
Suslov, Mikhail
46,
49,
51,
55,
82,
lifestyle, access to the West
48
worry and defection over
Soviet decline
28
ambitions to become General-foreign debt
119,
173
Secretary
203
foreign trade
125
Tocqueville [Alexis de]
143
as a kleptocracy
29
US Administrations and the Soviet organized uprisings
27,
46,
201
Union/Russia
175
popular allegiance to socialism Bush, George
61,
89,
110,
172,
post-war inability to inspire youth ‘chicken-Kiev’ speech
110
and Gorbachev
212
post-war quality of life
16,
39
–
43
Clinton, Bill
185
comparison between attempt stability before perestroika
27
at health care reform and
Russian reform
7
weakness of national movements Reagan, Ronald
61,
171,
172,
Soviet Union, dissolution
9
military spending spree
172
accompanying civil wars
4
declaration of sovereignty
90
possibilities of a chaotic and non-existent economic
lack of autonomous region for Sovietologists
181
–
2
Stalin, Joseph and Stalinism
4,
20,
rigged post-Soviet elections
168
244
index
Union Treaty, negotiations
90
–
91,
and the nuclear suitcase
weapons of mass destruction
101–
102
Chemical Weapons Convention
121,
127,
142,
143,
146,
disarmament and negotiations
191,
194
and his 1991 ‘counter-putsch’
nuclear forces
27
precarious cold-war stockpiles and August putsch
99
–
101,
103
Soviet weapons complex
chairmanship of the Russian compared with Iraq
Congress of People’s
The West
see also
cold war and compared with Gorbachev
Russia, reforms
growing technological
fears of an assassination attempt superiority
53
by KGB
95
restructuring of economies in the and the final days of the Soviet 1970s
51
Soviet elite, access to
48
leadership style and populism welfare state democracies
20,
21
and competition with Soviets
179–
180
mental depression
208
Western culture invading the moves against the Union
world economy
rise to Russian presidency
95–
96
sacking of his governments
152
Russia’s hopes of joining
struggle with Russian legislature
194–
195
and socialist planning
199
transfer to Moscow
94
Zhirinovsky, Vladimir
191
and Gorbachev
206
Zyuganov, Gennady
191
245