Down with Big Brother (76 page)

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Authors: Michael Dobbs

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By seeking to reinvigorate the Communist system, Gorbachev succeeded in destroying it.

GLOSSARY
NOTES ON SOURCES
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
GLOSSARY
OF FOREIGN TERMS
POLISH
KOR Workers’ Defense Committee (human rights group)
MKS Interfactory Strike Committee
PZPR Polish United Workers’ Party (Communist Party)
Solidarity Solidarity trade union
stan wojenny
martial law (literally warlike state)
szlachta
petty nobility
vojvodship province
ZOMO riot police
RUSSIAN
Alpha Group elite KGB antiterrorist squad
apparat bureaucratic machine
apparatchik bureaucrat
Central Committee policy-making body of CPSU
chemodanchik
little suitcase (nuclear codes)
CPSU Communist Party of the Soviet Union
dacha country house
gensek
general secretary of CPSU
GKChP Committee for the State of Emergency (formed during August 1991 coup attempt)
glasnost openness
Gosplan State Planning Agency
Gosstroi State Construction Agency
KGB Committee for State Security (secret police), successor to Lenin’s Cheka and Stalin’s NKVD
kolkhoz collective farm
kolkhoznik collective farm worker
kremlin a fortified place
kulak landed farmer (prior to collectivization)
Lubyanka headquarters of KGB
muzhik peasant
narod
people, the masses
nomenklatura roster of officials nominated by Communist Party
osobaya papka
special file, top secret Communist Party documents
perestroika restructuring
plenum full Central Committee meeting
Politburo executive leadership of CPSU Central Committee (composed of full and alternate members)
PVO Antiaircraft defense
shestidesyatniki
men of the sixties, the generation that matured under Khrushchev
spetsnaz
KGB “special assignment” troops
stagnation term applied to Brezhnev era
Staraya Ploshchad
old square headquarters of Communist Party
terror term applied to Stalin’s rule
thaw term applied to period of political liberalization under Khrushchev
vertushka
Soviet government communications system
Volga car used by mid-level officials
Vremya
television news
White House headquarters of Russian government
Zhiguli popular compact car
Zil limousine used by senior party officials
SERBO-CROAT
chetnik Serbian nationalist (World War II term)
HDZ Croatian Democratic Union (governing party in Croatia)
JNA Yugoslav People’s Army
SDS Serbian Social Democratic Party of Bosnia (led by Radovan Karadžić) ustashi Croatian nationalist (World War II term)
OTHER
conducător
supreme leader (Romanian)
mujahedin Islamic guerrilla fighter
Securitate Romanian secret police
Stasi East German secret police
Trabi popular East German car

NOTES ON SOURCES

T
HE COLLAPSE
of communism opened up a treasure trove of previously untapped sources. In writing this book, I have drawn on interviews with direct participants, memoirs of Soviet and East European leaders, declassified archival materials, contemporary newspapers, and my own reporting notes. Unless otherwise stated, all interviews are with me. I have tried to provide a named citation for all direct quotations. During the course of my research I gathered transcripts of numerous meetings of the Soviet Politburo, which are marked in the notes with the Russian abbreviation TsKhSD. The translations are my own. Because access to the Soviet archives is still restricted, I have deposited copies of these materials with the National Security Archive in Washington, D.C.

Also helpful in reconstructing events were three documentary television programs prepared by the British Broadcasting Corporation by Brian Lapping Associates,
The Second Russian Revolution
, the
Fall of the Berlin Wall
, and
Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation
. I am grateful to Norma Percy and Brian Lapping for permission to quote from the original transcripts of
The Second Russian Revolution
, which are deposited at the library of the London School of Economics. Publishing details of all books cited in the notes are provided in the bibliography. I have used the following abbreviations in the notes:

BBC British Broadcasting Corporation transcript service
CDSP Current Digest of the Soviet Press
CNN Cable News Network
FBIS Foreign Broadcast Information Service
ICAO International Civil Aviation Organization
LAT Los Angeles Times
MN Moscow News
NSC National Security Council
NYT New York Times
RFE/RL Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
TsK KPSS Central Committee of Soviet Communist Party
TsKhSD Center for Storage of Contemporary Documentation
UN United Nations
WP Washington Post
NOTES
I:
REVOLT OF THE PROLES

1.
Weather report,
NYT
, December 27, 1979, p. B8.

2.
Sergo Mikoyan, son of the former Soviet leader Anastas Mikoyan, provided me with the details of Brezhnev’s dacha. See also the memoirs of his doctor, Yevgeny Chazov,
Zdorov’ye i Vlast’
, pp. 86–87.

3.
Roy Medvedev, “The Advantages of Mediocrity,”
Moskovskie Novosti
(Moscow), September 11, 1988, pp. 8–9, translated in
CDSP
, vol. XL, no. 36, p. 5.

4.
For a detailed discussion of Brezhnev health problems, see Chazov, pp. 115–44, and former bodyguard Mikhail Dokuchayev, “Devyatka,”
Novoye Vremya
(Moscow), no. 32 (1993), pp. 36–40.

5.
Chazov, p. 128.

6.
Vladimir Medvedev,
Chelovek Za Spinoi
, pp. 148–49.

7.
Chazov, p. 134.

8.
Ibid., pp. 149–51. For Western reports of the incident, see
NYT
. October 7, 1979, p. A1, and Reuters dispatches from Berlin on October 6, 1979.

9.
Chazov, p. 150. See also Edward Gierek,
Przerwana Dekada
, pp. 93–94.

10.
Zdenek Mlynář,
Nightfrost in Prague
, p. 156.

11.
See, for example, Defense Department estimates for 1980 reproduced in David Holloway,
The Soviet Union and the Arms Race
, pp. 134–40. The U.S. Defense Department publication
Soviet Military Power
(1981, p. 71) also claimed that the Soviets had “dramatically reduced” the U.S. lead in “virtually every important basic technology” during the 1970s.

12.
Vyacheslav Molotov,
Molotov Remembers: Conversations with Felix Chuev
, p. 8.

13.
Deputy Soviet Foreign Minister Georgi Kornienko,
Novaya i Noveishaya Istoria
(Moscow), no. 3 (May-June 1993), p. 107.

14.
Ibid., p. 108.

15.
Statement of Captain Abdul Hadud, reported in Colonel A. Lyakhovski and Lieutenant Colonel V. Zabrodin, “Secrets of the Afghan War,”
Armiya
(Moscow), no. 6 (March 1992), pp. 60–61.

16.
For Soviet suspicions of Amin, see report by the Politburo Commission on Afghanistan, quoted in Aleksandr Lyakhovski,
Tragediya i Doblest’ Afgana
, pp.
102–3. See also Kornienko, p. 110, Georgi Arbatov,
The System
p. 119, and Anatoly Dobrynin,
In Confidence
, p. 436.

17.
For KGB view, see memoirs of Col. Aleksandr Morozov, former KGB deputy station chief in Afghanistan, published in
New Times
(Moscow), no. 38–41 (1991).

18.
Andrei Gromyko,
Memoirs
, p. 99.

19.
Memorandum signed by Konstantin Chernenko, December 27, 1979, TsKhSD. Copy in author’s possession.

20.
Chazov, p. 133.

21.
Arbatov, p. 266.

22.
Larisa Vasilieva,
Kremlin Wives
, p. 219.

23.
NYT
, April 3, 1994. For details of Andropov activity in Budapest, see also
Izvestia
, July 24, 1992, and Arnold Beichman and Mikhail S. Bernstam,
Andropov
, pp. 145–60.

24.
Alexander Werth,
Russia at War
, pp. 213–17.

25.
Soviet Military Power
(1981), p. 12.

26.
Chazov, p. 90.

27.
Ibid., p. 205.

28.
Transcript of Politburo session, July 12, 1984, TsKhSD.

29.
Arbatov, p. 198.

30.
For Gromyko’s reasons for supporting invasion of Afghanistan, see reminiscences of former Foreign Minister Aleksandr Bessmertnykh and Gorbachev foreign policy aide Anatoly Chernyayev at Princeton University conference on the Cold War, vol. III, February 26, 1993.

31.
Vladimir Medvedev, p. 130.

32.
Voenno-Istoricheskii Zhurnal
(Moscow), no. 11 (1993), pp. 30, 35.

33.
Chernyayev, Princeton conference, vol. III, pp. 22–23. See also Dobrynin, P. 439

34.
Chazov, p. 152.

35.
A copy of the handwritten resolution, obtained from TsKhSD, was published in the
Washington Post
, p. A1, on November 15, 1992. The only full Politburo member not to countersign the resolution was Andrei Kosygin, who was gravely ill at the time and resigned from his post as Soviet prime minister shortly afterward. According to Kornienko, p. 110, the decision to invade was taken jointly by Brezhnev, Suslov, Andropov, Ustinov, and Gromyko.

36.
Voyenno-Istoricheskii Zhurnal
(Moscow), no. 11 (1993), pp. 32–34.

37.
Henry S. Bradsher,
Afghanistan and the Soviet Union
, p. 179.

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