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Loading... After the collapse : Russia seeks its place as a great powerby Dimitri K. SimesLibraryThing recommendationsMember recommendationsLoading...
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0684827166, Hardcover)"By the time I left the Soviet Union for the United States in January of 1973," writes Dimitri K. Simes, "I thought the Soviet totalitarian system was ugly, overbearing, and inefficient. I believed that it would continue losing ground to the West, and that the gap between East and West would create real pressure for change." History would prove him right sooner than he--or most other observers, for that matter--would ever have expected. From his vantage point in America, and in frequent conversation with his friend and associate, former president Richard Nixon, Simes watched as the perestroika reforms set in motion by Mikhail Gorbachev brought about the collapse of the Soviet state machinery, catching his colleagues in the Politburo completely off guard. "How could it occur to me," one conservative Communist asked Simes years later, "that the general secretary of the Communist Party was secretly an anti-Communist?"Simes has returned to post-Soviet Russia several times, and offers both a solid chronicling of the political travails of the Yeltsin administration and insightful analysis of the ramifications of those events. He also offers sharply critical advice to U.S. leaders--shaped, in part, by his professional association with Nixon--urging them to deal with the Russian state with a harder, more pragmatic line. As Russia continues to rediscover its strength as a world power, books like After the Collapse offer Western readers the perspective and depth necessary to make sense of the international scene. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:54 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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Two problems, however, have led me to take off two stars from my rating. First of all, large sections of the book are far too autobiographical for my taste. Much of the early chapters consists of Simes running through all the meetings he attended (often in the company of Richard Nixon) concerning Yeltsin, Gorbachev and Perestroika. In these sections, "After the Collapse" reads more like Simes' memoirs than an account of the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia. (In its worst moments, it reads more like Nixon's memoirs than anything else.) It's nice that Simes talked with Ronald Reagan once and once sat next to Barbara Bush at a state dinner, but reading about this adds nothing to my knowledge of Russia and its transition from Communism.
The second major problem is that the book is just not well organized. Most chapters have trouble developing an overarching theme and the narrative often jumps around in a disjointed fashion, without giving adequate treatment to many of the topics mentioned. Simes' writing is a little too punchy; people and policies are mentioned and then abandoned after a couple of sentences, only to be treated several more times later in the book. No wonder other reviewers complain of difficulty keeping things straight! From reading this, Simes strikes me as an excellent article writer, but one who has trouble organizing things for more than a few dozen pages.
These problems are generally worse in the early chapters of the book than in the later ones that take place after Nixon's death. Although for a few pages Simes' writing degenerates into pathetic statements like "I am sure that he [Nixon] would have agreed... I believe Nixon would also have been nonplussed..." (104), he quickly pulls himself together and begins writing in a more serious fashion - less autobiographical, with more notes and slightly better organization. Simes' obvious dislike of "Tsar Boris I" and the Clinton administration does not particularly bother me. After all, I happen to believe that much of his criticism is deserved.
So, in conclusion, this book has a lot of good information, but it's not that great. Besides the problems I've mentioned, a lot has happened in the five years since it was written. The Asian financial crisis is old news and Yeltsin has actually released the reigns of government. I am not aware of any better books on the collapse of the Soviet Union and the first decade of post-Soviet Russia, but I'm sure there are some out there. My suggestion is to pass this book by and keep looking for something better. If you do feel compelled to read this volume, at least get it from the library. (