http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/12/27/opinion/edallison.php



Remember Russia's evil empire? 
Graham Allison The Boston Globe



TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 2005
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts Fourteen years ago, the Soviet Union disappeared. 
Mikhail Gorbachev resigned as president on Christmas Day 1991. Boris Yeltsin 
became independent Russia's first president. The Supreme Soviet, the highest 
governmental body of the Soviet Union, dissolved itself. The hammer- and-sickle 
flag that had flown over the Kremlin for seven decades came down. 

What President Ronald Reagan rightly called the "evil empire" was erased from 
the world map. In its place emerged Russia and 14 other newly independent 
states. 

As the former Czech president Vaclav Havel observed, "Things have changed so 
fast we have not yet taken time to be astonished." Nowhere is this truer than 
on the territory of the former Soviet Union. 

Who could have imagined the evil empire disappearing - without war? Who could 
have imagined a revolution that buried Communism - without blood? Who could 
have imagined U.S. victory over its Cold War rival - with a whimper rather than 
a bang? The tectonic collapse of one pole of a bipolar international system 
with so few aftershocks? 

Who could have imagined that a Communist, totalitarian dictatorship would be 
becoming a "normal" middle-income transitional society analogous to Brazil, 
Venezuela, Indonesia or Nigeria? 

Who could have imagined that 14 years on, not one single nuclear bomb from the 
entire Soviet arsenal would have been found outside Russia? In December 1991, 
Dick Cheney, then secretary of defense, told an interviewer: "If the Soviets do 
an excellent job at retaining control over their stockpile of nuclear weapons - 
let's assume they've got 25,000 to 30,000; that's a ballpark figure - and they 
are 99 percent successful, that would mean you could still have as many as 250 
that they were not able to control." 

Who could have imagined a Russian government that is wealthy? A government that 
worries today that it has too much money, rather than too little? A Russian 
economy growing at more than 7 percent annually since President Vladimir Putin 
came to power in 2000? International lenders stampeding to put money into 
Russia rather than take it out, just seven years after the August 1998 
financial crash? 

Who could have imagined a stable Russia - after years in which further 
disintegration of the former Soviet Union seemed as likely as stability? 

Who could have imagined that one week hence, on Jan. 1, 2006, the president of 
Russia would become chairman of the Group of Seven leading industrial 
democracies - soon to become the G-8? 

Russia remains a kaleidoscope of contradiction. It is still, in Winston 
Churchill's oft-quoted line, "a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an 
enigma." But who could have imagined that 14 years on, Russia would be where it 
is today? 

Most Americans see Russia's glass as half empty rather than half full. In light 
of the Putin government's backsliding on democracy, including the impending 
adoption of a law that would severely limit the activities of foreign 
nongovernmental organizations, there are always enough negatives to support the 
pessimists. 

In my view, Russia is still the land of the Matrushkas and Potemkin's village - 
much more subtle and complex than we realize. One peels off one shell only to 
find another - each layer embodying elements of truth, competing with 
contradictory realities both within and beyond. 

Relative to our grandest hopes, Russia disappoints. Compared with our darkest 
fears, who could have imagined Russia today? 

(Graham Allison is the director of the Belfer Center for Science and 
International Affairs at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and 
a former U.S. assistant secretary of defense. This article first appeared in 
The Boston Globe.) 

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts Fourteen years ago, the Soviet Union disappeared. 
Mikhail Gorbachev resigned as president on Christmas Day 1991. Boris Yeltsin 
became independent Russia's first president. The Supreme Soviet, the highest 
governmental body of the Soviet Union, dissolved itself. The hammer- and-sickle 
flag that had flown over the Kremlin for seven decades came down. 

What President Ronald Reagan rightly called the "evil empire" was erased from 
the world map. In its place emerged Russia and 14 other newly independent 
states. 

As the former Czech president Vaclav Havel observed, "Things have changed so 
fast we have not yet taken time to be astonished." Nowhere is this truer than 
on the territory of the former Soviet Union. 

Who could have imagined the evil empire disappearing - without war? Who could 
have imagined a revolution that buried Communism - without blood? Who could 
have imagined U.S. victory over its Cold War rival - with a whimper rather than 
a bang? The tectonic collapse of one pole of a bipolar international system 
with so few aftershocks? 

Who could have imagined that a Communist, totalitarian dictatorship would be 
becoming a "normal" middle-income transitional society analogous to Brazil, 
Venezuela, Indonesia or Nigeria? 

Who could have imagined that 14 years on, not one single nuclear bomb from the 
entire Soviet arsenal would have been found outside Russia? In December 1991, 
Dick Cheney, then secretary of defense, told an interviewer: "If the Soviets do 
an excellent job at retaining control over their stockpile of nuclear weapons - 
let's assume they've got 25,000 to 30,000; that's a ballpark figure - and they 
are 99 percent successful, that would mean you could still have as many as 250 
that they were not able to control." 

Who could have imagined a Russian government that is wealthy? A government that 
worries today that it has too much money, rather than too little? A Russian 
economy growing at more than 7 percent annually since President Vladimir Putin 
came to power in 2000? International lenders stampeding to put money into 
Russia rather than take it out, just seven years after the August 1998 
financial crash? 

Who could have imagined a stable Russia - after years in which further 
disintegration of the former Soviet Union seemed as likely as stability? 

Who could have imagined that one week hence, on Jan. 1, 2006, the president of 
Russia would become chairman of the Group of Seven leading industrial 
democracies - soon to become the G-8? 

Russia remains a kaleidoscope of contradiction. It is still, in Winston 
Churchill's oft-quoted line, "a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an 
enigma." But who could have imagined that 14 years on, Russia would be where it 
is today? 

Most Americans see Russia's glass as half empty rather than half full. In light 
of the Putin government's backsliding on democracy, including the impending 
adoption of a law that would severely limit the activities of foreign 
nongovernmental organizations, there are always enough negatives to support the 
pessimists. 

In my view, Russia is still the land of the Matrushkas and Potemkin's village - 
much more subtle and complex than we realize. One peels off one shell only to 
find another - each layer embodying elements of truth, competing with 
contradictory realities both within and beyond. 

Relative to our grandest hopes, Russia disappoints. Compared with our darkest 
fears, who could have imagined Russia today? 

(Graham Allison is the director of the Belfer Center for Science and 
International Affairs at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and 
a former U.S. assistant secretary of defense. This article first appeared in 
The Boston Globe.) 



  

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