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AP. 25 December 2001. Anniversary of Soviet Collapse Passes Quietly in
Russia, Where Many Recall It With Regret.

MOSCOW -- Ten years after Mikhail Gorbachev closed the book on the
Soviet Union, the anniversary Tuesday went almost unnoticed in the
Russian capital.

For many, the day the red flag atop the Kremlin was replaced by the
Russian tricolor was a day of loss they prefer not to dwell on.

On Dec. 25, 1991, Gorbachev resigned as president of the Soviet Union.
He handed over the so-called nuclear suitcase -- containing the codes
and communication equipment for launching the country's nuclear missiles
-- to Russian President Boris Yeltsin. It marked the end of a process
that had been accelerating since the previous August, when pro-Yeltsin
forces defeated an attempted coup by Communist hardliners.

In a country that loves anniversaries, the date was noted by only one
major newspaper. NTV television ran a documentary about the Soviet
Union's final days, but most channels didn't mention it during their
news broadcasts.

Asked what anniversary fell Tuesday, most people approached on Red
Square were stumped. Once reminded, many recalled feeling deep anxiety
as they watched Gorbachev give his farewell speech on national
television.

"There was a certain amount of fear. The young people were happy, but I
wasn't young," said retiree Nina Kuznetsova as she strolled with her
friend across the snow-dusted square.

Poverty and social instability over the past decade have made many
Russians nostalgic for the Soviet Union.

According to the ROMIR polling agency, 55 percent of Russians believe
life was better before 1991.

"The worst thing is that there is no stability. You have no idea what
will happen tomorrow," said engineer Valery Pugachyov.

"There's more freedom for creative people, for intellectuals, but
there's also more freedom for criminals."

Many Russians still lament the Soviet collapse. Having grown up in one
country, they find it difficult to suddenly feel patriotic about a new
one.

"We lost our homeland, as it seemed to us then," said Alexander, a
47-year-old St. Petersburg resident who declined to give his last name.

"I never recall this anniversary without feeling pain. It wasn't
necessary to destroy everything to achieve well-being."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews

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