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Crozier Brian. The rise and fall of the Soviet Empire. Part 2

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Crozier Brian. The rise and fall of the Soviet Empire. Part 2
Roseville: Prima Publishing; Forum, 2000. - XVIII, 830 p. - ISBN: 0-7615-2057-0
Part 2 - pp. 402-830.
In this seminal work, the eminent British writer and historian Brian Crozier tells the brutal history of the Soviet Empire — its birth, life, and sudden death. The book begins at the beginning, in 1917, when the oversized dreams of Lenin and the happenstance of events conspired to change the course of history. In meticulous detail, Crozier follows the Soviet conquests across Europe and into Asia, Africa, and the Western Hemisphere. He uses recently declassified information from Soviet archives to add texture and depth to familiar parts of the story — the betrayal at Yalta, the terror of Stalin, the tragedy of Hungary, the split with China, the false hope of Prague Spring, the rise of Castro, the invasion of Afghanistan, and the crumbling of the Berlin Wall. Revealed along the way is the dark underside of a regime whose march toward supremacy resulted in the loss of tens of millions of lives. The book concludes with reflections on the extraordinary disintegration of Lenin's utopia and the seemingly endless chaos left in its wake.
Many historians of the postwar period regard the 1983 American invasion of Grenada, a poor Caribbean island with a feckless Marxist government, as a misguided historical sideshow. English prime minister Margaret Thatcher did, too, remarking, "if you are going to pronounce a new law that whenever communism reigns against the will of the people... the United States shall enter, then we are going to have really terrible wars in the world." London-based historian and strategist Brian Crozier begs to differ. The invasion of Grenada marked the first time since the Russian Revolution of 1917, he writes, that "a Communist government in a sovereign state had been removed by an outside power's military force." Given the bloody effects of Communist rule around the world, Crozier suggests that outside intervention was not at all a bad thing, and he charts the growth of the Soviet state with apparent regret that someone did not put an end to it long before 1991, when the USSR disintegrated in the wake of an attempted coup against Mikhail Gorbachev.
Some readers may take issue with Crozier's right-of-center analysis and his support for such regimes as the dictatorship of the Chilean general Augusto Pinochet, but they will not easily fault his careful scholarship, supported by hundreds of pages of documents from Soviet archives, as he relates the tangled history of the Marxist-Leninist experiment.
Crozier, who has written scores of books on communism since the 1950s (his latest being The Gorbachev Phenomenon: "Peace" and the Secret War), cut his teeth by working the real world of news gathering and serving for various European think tanks; currently, he is Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Here he presents a comprehensive view of the rise and fall of the Soviet Union in a no-nonsense, hard-hitting style. Throughout, Crozier quotes extensively from primary sources, revealing a thorough knowledge of the literature. As a nonacademic, he adds his personality and offers opinions on events with which he is familiar. Each chapter is short and crisp, covering all of the Soviet republics and the process of their "satellization." This book provides an interesting contrast to recent, more academic books on the subject, including Roger Reese's The Soviet Military Experience: A History of the Soviet Army 1917-1991, which offers a different assessment of the impact of Stalin's late-1930s purges of the military. (Library Journal).
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