The Firebird: The Elusive Fate of Russian Democracy

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Andrei Kozyrev was foreign minister of Russia under President Boris Yeltsin from August 1991 to January 1996. During the August 1991 coup attempt against Mikhail Gorbachev, he was present when tanks moved in to seize the Russian White House, where Boris Yeltsin famously stood on a tank to address the crowd assembled. He then departed to Paris to muster international support and, if needed, to form a Russian government-in-exile. He participated in the negotiations at Brezhnev’s former hunting lodge in Belazheva, Belarus where the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus agreed to secede from the Soviet Union and form a Commonwealth of Independent States. Kozyrev’s pro-Western orientation made him an increasingly unpopular figure in Russia as Russia’s spiraling economy and the emergence of ultra-wealthy oligarchs soured ordinary Russians on Western ideas of democracy and market capitalism.
The Firebird takes the reader into the corridors of power to provide a startling eyewitness account of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the struggle to create a democratic Russia in its place, and how the promise of a better future led to the tragic outcome that changed our world forever.
 

Author(s): Andrei Kozyrov
Series: Russian and East European Studies
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: xvi+352

Contents
Foreword by Michael McFaul
Author’s Note
Introduction: A Matter of Life and Death
Part I. Russia versus the Soviet Union, 1991
1. The Russian White House under Siege
2. A New Russia Is Born from the Flames
Part II. Climbing a Steep Slope, 1992–1994
3. Cooperation with the Post-Socialist States
4. Putting Out Fires in Conflict Zones
5. Reinventing Relationships with the West and East
6. Shared Fate: Foreign Policy and Domestic Politics
7. Balkan Complications
8. The Battle for the Kremlin
9. Opportunities and Anxieties
Part III. The Downward Slope, 1994–1996
10. The End of the Beginning
Epilogue: Can Russian Democracy Rise Again?
Acknowledgments
Index