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#1 |
Soaring
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-19950670
Christopher meets Michael. I mean Mikha meets Ronny.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#2 |
Lucky Jack
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When Mike met Ronny.
![]() Looks like it might be an interesting film, it was certainly a momentous occasion in the Cold War, the beginning of the end, so to speak. I wonder if it will be filmed with Gorbie speaking English or Russian? The fact that the talks collapsed at the end will make for a chance to put some drama in it, but ultimately it was the first step on the road to the end. Thank God we got Gorby and not a hardliner. Although his plans did threaten to collapse Russia completely, and were far ahead of what the Soviet Union was capable of doing, it was better that it end that way than in the chaos of a nuclear war. ![]() |
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#3 |
Navy Seal
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What always fascinates me is the difference in views on Gorbachev between Russia and the West. The West still seems to be in love with him as a cold-war-stopper and visionary reformist; Russians have never liked him and only like him less over time. He was and remains incredibly unpopular, and (not unfairly) assigned a large part of the blame for the manner in which the USSR broke up, which was a massive (social, economic, political) disaster.
I can certainly respect Gorby's values - never doubted that he was a good man. I think the credit given to him for de-escalating the cold war and trying to bring reform to the USSR is deserved. The problem is that beyond those noble ideals, I don't think there was much substance to him. As a politician and leader, I think I'll have to side with the popular Russian view of him as someone who was unfit for the power that he was given, and ultimately mismanaged it. He in utterly lost control of the situation, at several crucial points, in a manner that was very irresponsible and downright unbecoming of a president, allowing people with not-so-positive interests run the show. All with good intentions, of course, but results that aren't only what most people in the West think them to be. |
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#4 | |
Lucky Jack
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Of course, this comes from a western viewpoint, and I can understand those who view him as betraying Russia at a crucial time in her history...however I think the downfall of the creaking apparatus of the Warsaw Pact was inevitable, likewise that of the Soviet Union, and Gorbachev made sure that when it did collapse, it didn't take the world down with it. I think Russia has rebounded well from the lost decade though, thanks to good oil prices and a nice arms market, and credit where it is due, thanks to careful manoeuvring by Putin and the siloviki, of course they're going in a direction that the west will find disappointing and non-western (such as the 'Pussy Riot' incident) but that is how Russia has always been run, with an iron fist in a velvet glove, with a couple of exceptions (Krushchev also comes to mind) and Russians respect a strong leader, well, those that I've seen on media of course...I cannot speak for every Russian, naturally there are those who cannot abide Putin, and Gorby is probably one of them. What are your views on Putin CCIP? You have a better insight of Russia than I. |
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#5 |
Navy Seal
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Oh gosh, I'm not sure I'm prepared to talk about Putin tonight. Too much to say
![]() I've always been deeply critical of Putin, not without acknowledging his stabilizing influence - but the fact is that I've never thought of Putin as the real power in Russia. Russia has been basically ruled by consensus between several very different factions (that form United Russia) that always had some parallel interests and disagreed on others. They met in the middle and sorted things out behind closed doors. As such, Russia coasted along on a wave of stability for the previous 10 years, which benefitted the tiny elite and kept the rest of the country in poverty. Russia under Putin returned to its usual two-class order (small, incredibly wealthy elite; overwhelming majority of impoverished masses, and not much in between) that was so well-entrenched in the USSR. I think something very, very disturbing took place in Russia approximately 12-13 months ago, though. I don't even know what, and I'm not sure anyone outside Russia's power circles does - but the nature of the Putin regime has changed drastically. Something broke down in the consensus between the different factions in United Russia, and suddenly virtually all the power is in the hands of very conservative, authoritarian types - chiefly the army and intelligence community. It has been largely ignored in the Western press, and people have only started paying attention when the Pussy Riot story broke (although it isn't even the tip of the iceberg...) The tone of Putin's regime right now worries me a lot. The people who run Russia now have very little regard for civic society as such, and I hate to say it, but the first thought that comes to mind about many recent events in Russia is "it's sure starting to resemble Iran..." So that's my thought on the Putin regime. As for Gorbi, like I said, I've liked him as a person. The Soviet regime had to fall in any case, and Gorbachev knew that better than almost anyone. He knew he got a tough lot, and he knew he couldn't just sit by and wait idly. I just feel that for all his good intentions, he simply let history happen as the sentiment of the time willed, both when it should have (which were he brilliant moments in the liberation of Eastern Europe) and his darker moments (his sidelining politically, the putsch, and the arbitrary and thoughtless process by which the USSR was disassembled in Belavezha). |
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#6 |
Lucky Jack
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Well put, Putin has always been a bit of an enigma to me. He weaves a very clever mask and you're not quite sure just what he's going to do next. He's a shrewd man, and seems to have a long term game to bring Russia back as a major power which has been in the planning since his first term.
Certainly though, I agree, something has changed slightly in his third term, the line (already quite hard) has become almost concrete. Before Putin won the elections there was a rumour floating around that he and Medvedev had had a falling out, this makes me wonder if Putin had to turn deeper to the siloviki for assistance in solidifying his third term. Alternatively this could be the beginning of an all out war against the Mafia, he's taken down most organised resistance to government control, he neutralised the oil barons, the monopolists, the moguls, and that just leaves the Mafia, so either he's working with them, or gathering his arsenal to take them down, in which case I wish him luck because he's probably going to need it. Alternatively it could be the groundwork for some form of change of government, after all it's unlikely he could possibly go for a fourth term and expect to maintain some pretense of a democratic voting system. Like you say, only the inner circles really know the answer, it's like watching a chess game when you're only able to see one sides pieces. It's interesting watching the foreign relations of Russia alter over the years since the end of the lost decade, firstly the resumption of the long distance bomber flights, not exactly outlandish, after all we violate their waters quite frequently on the quiet I am sure, but then the whole Litvininko affair, things have cooled quite a bit...although we did do our bit in annoying Russia by giving asylum to several of Putins enemies, including Chechen rebels. I'm sure Putin doesn't want things to dissolve to the point that we get into a new Cold War, but at the same time he wants to push his might in areas he feels he needs to. Syria and Iran, and Russias ties with both do concern me, and I'd wager they concern Washington too, if push comes to shove, will Russia support a nuclear Iran? Will it help defend it? Interesting times, certainly, almost makes one wish for the simpler times of Reagan and Gorbachevs meeting in Reykjavik. |
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