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Russia's Dead End

An Insider's Testimony from Gorbachev to Putin

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Elite-level Soviet politics, privileged access to state secrets, knowledge about machinations inside the Kremlin—such is the environment in which Andrei A. Kovalev lived and worked. In this memoir of his time as a diplomat in key capacities and as a member of Mikhail Gorbachev's staff, Kovalev reveals hard truths about his country as only a perceptive witness can. In Russia's Dead End, Kovalev shares his intimate knowledge of political activities behind the scenes at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Kremlin before the dissolution of the USSR in December 1991 and afterward, including during the administration of Vladimir Putin.

Kovalev analyzes Soviet efforts to comply with international human-rights obligations, the machinations of the KGB, and the link between corrupt oligarchs and state officials. He documents the fall of the USSR and the post-Soviet explosion of state terrorism and propaganda, and offers a nuanced historical explanation of the roots of Russia's contemporary crisis under Vladimir Putin. This insider's memoir provides a penetrating analysis of late-Soviet and post-Soviet Russian politics that is pungent, pointed, witty, and accessible. It assesses the current dangerous status of Russian politics and society while illuminating the path to a more just and democratic future.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 5, 2017
      Kovalev, a career bureaucrat in the Soviet and Russian foreign ministry, dampens hope for democratic reform in this behind-the–Kremlin Wall account. He begins with the Gorbachev years, during which Kovalev believes that Russia had its first—and last—chance for real change. Kovalev tells how fledgling reforms were trampled in 1991 during the August coup, which he suggests was the brainchild of the KGB, and which paved the way for the “kleptokrats.” He goes on to call Putin’s policies “madness.” (Kovalev immigrated to Belgium in 2007 due to Putin’s oppressiveness.) The book’s tone is shrill, its message dire. Russia is “a disintegrating ecological and chemical time bomb,” Kovalev writes, and he accuses Putin of fostering a new Russian imperialism characterized by infantilism, aggression, cruelty, and xenophobia. Readers may tire quickly of Kovalev’s ranting, rendered faithfully in translation, but he gets the details right. Stressing that perestroika got off to a bad start (an antivodka campaign soured many Russians on Western-style democracy), Kovalev examines why perestroika failed and revanchism become foreign policy. Kovalev delivers a long-winded answer, but in so doing he unmasks the Russian body politic in all its Gogol-like grotesquery. Agent: Peter Bernstein, Bernstein Literary.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2017
      Why will democracy refuse to take root in Russia?In this trenchant expose of Russia's totalitarian pathology, Kovalev--who was a member of Mikhail Gorbachev's secretariat and also worked in the foreign affairs ministry under Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin--blames the country's enduring "slave psychology" for many of its ills, from the time of the czars to the present. The author, whose high-level career took him into the apogee of government power and whose own father was an eminent Soviet diplomat, approaches the unending Russian cycle of tear-down, reaction, revanchism, and stagnation like a social psychologist. In his early job in the late 1980s, Kovalev worked on the "elimination of punitive psychiatry," which has helped him diagnose Russia's chronic problems. Perhaps his current exile in Belgium--he found the Putin regime to be too politically oppressive," and he includes a horrifying chart delineating the attacks on and murders of journalists and editors since 2001--has allowed him the freedom to skewer the unchecked power of the "secret services," which took on new life after the failed 1991 coup against Gorbachev. Kovalev methodically works through the stages of this failed coup as reflections of the same "monster" of totalitarianism that the liberal reforms of Gorbachev were supposed to eliminate. Under Yeltsin, a "new elite" formed (really just a replica of the old elite), assuming new powers under former KGB chief Putin, whose apotheosis demonstrated that the Russian population could still be manipulated into "subordinat[ing] its own real interests to the sham interests of the state." Moreover, Putin capitalizes on the Russian sense of nostalgia for the strong-armed leader who reverts to the familiar ideological dogmatism, sounding the hollow notes of the "National Idea"--i.e., patriotism, Russian Orthodoxy, suspicion of mysterious "interventionists," need for secrecy, renewed imperialism, infantilism, xenophobia, and so on. Ultimately, Kovalev brings us back to the totalitarian state that won't go away. Too dense and scholarly for some general readers but astonishing in its relentless frankness and a refreshing report from an insider.

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