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Perestroika - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Soviet political reform movement

For other uses, see Perestroika (disambiguation).
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Perestroika
5 kopeck perestroika commemorative postage stamp, 1988
Russianперестройка
Romanizationperestroyka
IPA[pʲɪrʲɪˈstrojkə]
Literal meaningreconstruction
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Perestroika (/ˌpɛrəˈstrɔɪkə/ PERR-ə-STROY-kə; Russian: перестройка, romanized: perestroyka, IPA: [pʲɪrʲɪˈstrojkə] ⓘ)[1] was a political reform movement within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) during the late 1980s, widely associated with CPSU general secretary Mikhail Gorbachev and his glasnost (meaning "transparency") policy-reform.Perestroika literally means "restructuring", referring to the restructuring of the political economy of the Soviet Union in an attempt to end the Era of Stagnation.[a]

Perestroika allowed more independent actions from various ministries and introduced many market-like reforms. The purported goal of perestroika was not to end the planned economy, but rather to make socialism work more efficiently to better meet the needs of Soviet citizens by adopting elements of liberal economics.[2] The process of implementing perestroika added to existing shortages and created political, social, and economic tensions within the Soviet Union.[3][4] Furthermore, it is often blamed for the political rise of nationalism and nationalist political parties in the constituent republics of the USSR.[5]

The motivation for perestroika stemmed from a combination of entrenched economic stagnation, political sclerosis, and growing social dissatisfaction that had taken root in the early 1980s. These conditions compelled Gorbachev and his allies to initiate broad reforms to save the system from collapse.[6]

Gorbachev first used the term perestroika in a speech on December 10, 1984, and began implementing his reforms three months later, upon coming to power.[7][8] The era of perestroika lasted from 1985 until 1991, and is often argued to be a significant cause of the collapse of the Eastern Bloc and the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[9]

Russian-British sociologist Mikhail Anipkin views perestroika as a revolution of quadragenarians. In his 2024 book, Party Worker: The Rise of a Soviet Regional Leader, Anipkin argues that perestroika was desperately sought by the younger generation of Party functionaries, and that Mikhail Gorbachev sensed that demand. Anipkin draws his arguments from the political biography of his own father, Alexander Anipkin [ru], a high-ranking Party apparatchik, who enthusiastically accepted perestroika and sought to further democracy within the Party.[10]

With respect to foreign policy, Gorbachev promoted "new political thinking": de-ideologization of international politics, abandoning the concept of class struggle, prioritizing universal human interests over the interests of any class, increasing interdependence of the world, and promoting mutual security based on political rather than on military instruments. This doctrine represented a significant shift from the previous principles of Soviet foreign relations.[11][12][13] Its implementation marked the end of the Cold War.[14]

Political reforms

[edit]
Main article: Demokratizatsiya (Soviet Union)

Gorbachev had concluded that implementing his reforms outlined at the Twenty-Seventh Party Congress in February 1986 required more than discrediting the "Old Guard", those with a Marxist-Leninist political orientation. He changed his strategy from trying to work through the CPSU as it existed to embracing a degree of political liberalization. In January 1987, he appealed over the heads of the party to the people and called for democratization. Earlier members of local soviets were appointed by local Communist Party branches; now they were to be elected by the people from among various candidates.

The March 1989 election of the Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union marked the first time that voters of the Soviet Union ever chose the membership of a national legislative body. The election results stunned the ruling elite. Throughout the country, voters crossed unopposed Communist candidates off the ballot, many of them prominent party officials, taking advantage of the nominal privilege of withholding approval of the listed candidates.

By the time of the Twenty-Eighth Party Congress in July 1990, it was clear that Gorbachev's reforms came with sweeping, unintended consequences, as nationalities of the constituent republics of the Soviet Union pulled harder than ever to break away from the Union and ultimately dismantle the Communist Party.

Economic reforms

[edit]

In May 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev gave a speech in Leningrad in which he admitted the slowing of economic development and inadequate living standards.[15]

The program was furthered at the 27th Congress of the Communist Party in Gorbachev's report to the congress, in which he spoke about "perestroika", "uskoreniye" (acceleration), "human factor", "glasnost" (transparency), and "expansion of the khozraschyot" (accounting).

During the initial period (1985–1987) of Mikhail Gorbachev's time in power, he talked about modifying central planning but did not make any truly fundamental changes (uskoreniye; "acceleration"). Gorbachev and his team of economic advisors then introduced more fundamental reforms, which became known as perestroika (restructuring).

At the June 1987 plenary session of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Gorbachev presented his "basic theses", which laid the political foundation for economic reform for the remainder of the Soviet Union's existence.

In July 1987, the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union passed the Law on State Enterprise.[16] The law stipulated that state enterprises were free to determine output levels based on demand from consumers and other enterprises. Enterprises had to fulfil state orders, but they could dispose of the remaining output as they saw fit. However, the state still retained control over the means of production for these enterprises, thus limiting their ability to implement full-cost accountability. Enterprises bought input from suppliers at negotiated contract prices. Under the law, enterprises became self-financing; that is, they had to cover expenses (wages, taxes, supplies, and debt service) through revenues. Finally, the law shifted control over the enterprise operations from ministries to elected workers' collectives. Gosplan's responsibilities were to supply general guidelines and national investment priorities.

The Law on Cooperatives, enacted in May 1988,[17] was perhaps the most radical of the economic reforms during the early part of the Gorbachev era.[18] For the first time since Vladimir Lenin's New Economic Policy was abolished in 1928, the law permitted private ownership of businesses in the services, manufacturing, and foreign-trade sectors. The law initially imposed high taxes and employment restrictions, but it later revised these to avoid discouraging private-sector activity. Under this provision, cooperative restaurants, shops, and manufacturers became part of the Soviet scene.

Alexander Yakovlev was considered to be the intellectual force behind Gorbachev's reform program of glasnost and perestroika.[19] In the summer of 1985, Yakovlev became head of the propaganda department of the CPSU Central Committee. He argued in favor of the reform programs and played a key role in implementing them.

After the XX Congress, in an ultra-narrow circle of our closest friends and associates, we often discussed the problems of democratization of the country and society. We chose a simple – like a sledgehammer – method of propagating the "ideas" of late Lenin. A group of true, not imaginary reformers developed (of course, orally) the following plan: to strike with the authority of Lenin at Stalin, at Stalinism. And then, if successful, – to strike with Plekhanov and Social Democracy – at Lenin, and then – with liberalism and "moral socialism" – at revolutionarism in general .... The Soviet totalitarian regime could be destroyed only through glasnost and totalitarian party discipline, while hiding behind the interests of improving socialism. [...] Looking back, I can proudly say that a clever, but very simple tactic – the mechanisms of totalitarianism against the system of totalitarianism – has worked.[20]

— Yakovlev, as quoted in the introduction to Black Book of Communism

The most significant of Gorbachev's reforms in the foreign economic sector allowed foreign investors to invest in the Soviet Union through joint ventures with Soviet ministries, state enterprises, and cooperatives. The original version of the Soviet Joint Venture Law, which took effect in June 1987, limited foreign shareholdings in a Soviet venture to 49 percent and required that Soviet citizens hold the positions of chairman and general manager. After potential Western partners complained, the government revised the regulations to allow majority foreign ownership and control. Under the terms of the Joint Venture Law, the Soviet partner supplied labor, infrastructure, and a potentially large domestic market. The foreign partner supplied capital, technology, entrepreneurial expertise, and in many cases, products and services of world-competitive quality.

Gorbachev's economic reforms did little to improve the country's sluggish economy in the late 1980s. The reforms decentralized things to some extent, although price controls remained, as did the ruble's inconvertibility and most government controls over the means of production.

Comparison with China

[edit]

Perestroika and Deng Xiaoping's reform and opening up have similar origins but very different effects on their respective countries' economies. Both efforts occurred in large socialist countries attempting to liberalize their economies, but while China's GDP has grown consistently since the late 1980s (albeit from a much lower level), national GDP in the USSR and in many of its successor states fell precipitously throughout the 1990s, a period often referred to as the wild nineties.[21] Gorbachev's reforms were gradualist and maintained many of the macroeconomic aspects of the planned economy (including price controls, inconvertibility of the ruble, exclusion of private property ownership, and the government monopoly over most means of production).[22]

Reform was largely focused on industry and cooperatives, with a limited role given to the development of foreign investment and international trade. Factory managers were expected to meet state demands for goods, but to find their own funding. Perestroika reforms went far enough to create new bottlenecks in the Soviet economy but arguably did not go far enough to streamline it effectively.[citation needed]

Reform and opening up were, by contrast, a bottom-up attempt at reform, focusing on light industry and agriculture (namely, allowing peasants to sell produce grown on private holdings at market prices).[23] Economic reforms were fostered through the development of "Special Economic Zones", designed for export and to attract foreign investment, municipally managed Township and Village Enterprises and a "dual pricing" system leading to the steady phasing out of state-dictated prices.[24] Greater latitude was given to managers of state-owned factories, while capital was made available to them through a reformed banking system and through fiscal policies (in contrast to the fiscal anarchy and fall in revenue experienced by the Soviet government during perestroika). Perestroika was expected to lead to results such as market pricing and privately sold produce, but the Union dissolved before advanced stages were reached.[citation needed]

Another fundamental difference is that where perestroika was accompanied by greater political freedoms under Gorbachev's glasnost policies, reform and opening up has been accompanied by continued authoritarian rule and a suppression of political dissidents, most notably at Tiananmen Square. Gorbachev acknowledged this difference but maintained that it was unavoidable and that perestroika would have been doomed to defeat and revanchism by the nomenklatura without glasnost, because conditions in the Soviet Union were not identical to those in China.[25] Gorbachev cited a line from a 1986 newspaper article that he felt encapsulated this reality: "The apparatus broke Khrushchev's neck and the same thing will happen now."[26]

Another difference is that the Soviet Union faced strong secession threats from its ethnic regions and a primacy challenge by the RSFSR. Gorbachev's extension of regional autonomy eased the suppression of existing ethnic-regional tensions, while Deng's reforms did not alter the tight grip of the central government on any of its autonomous regions. The Soviet Union's dual nature, part supranational union of republics and part unitary state, played a part in the difficulty of controlling the pace of restructuring, especially once the new Russian Communist Party was formed and posed a challenge to the primacy of the CPSU. Gorbachev described this process as a "parade of sovereignties" and identified it as the factor that most undermined the gradualism of restructuring and the preservation of the Soviet Union.[citation needed]

Perestroika and glasnost

[edit]
"Wall of Sorrow" at the first exhibition of the victims of Stalinism in Moscow, 19 November 1988

One of the final important measures taken on the continuation of the movement was a report from the central committee meeting of the CPSU titled "On Reorganization and the Party's Personnel Policy".[27][28][29] Gorbachev emphasized the need of a faster political personnel turnover and of a policy of democratization that opened the political elections to multiple candidates and to non-party members.[28]

This report was in such high demand in Prague and Berlin that many people could not get a copy. One effect was an abrupt demand for Russian dictionaries to understand the content of Gorbachev's report.[citation needed]

In an interview with Mieczyslaw Rakowski, he states the success of perestroika was impossible without glasnost.[30]

Despite early enthusiasm, the reforms of perestroika and glasnost ultimately failed to deliver lasting improvements. By the late 1980s, the Soviet Union faced a deepening economic crisis, with widespread shortages and deficits. Gorbachev's leadership lost credibility as the public saw little tangible progress. Scholars argue that he and his advisors underestimated the severity of the crisis and the political risks of decentralization. Without a clear strategy and amid rising public disillusionment, these reforms contributed to growing instability and the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union.[31]

The role of the West in Perestroika

[edit]
A young boy and Ronald Reagan in Red Square, Moscow, 1988

During the 1980s and 1990s, the United States President George H. W. Bush pledged solidarity with Gorbachev, but never brought his administration to support Gorbachev's reforms. In fact, "no bailout for Gorbachev" was a consistent policy line of the Bush administration, further demonstrating the lack of true support from the West. President Bush had a financial policy to aid perestroika that was shaped by a minimalist approach, foreign-policy convictions that set Bush apart from other U.S. leaders, and a frugal attitude, all of which influenced his unwillingness to aid Gorbachev. Other factors influenced the West's lack of aid, for example, the "in-house Gorbi-skeptics" advocacy, the expert community's consensus about the undesirability of rushing U.S. aid to Gorbachev, strong opposition to any bailout at many levels, including foreign-policy conservatives, the U.S. Congress, and the American public at large. The West seemed to miss an opportunity to gain significant influence over the Soviet government. The Soviets aided the expansion of Western capitalism by allowing an inflow of Western investment, but the "perestroika" managers ultimately failed. President Bush had the opportunity to aid the Soviet Union in ways that would bring the governments closer together, as Harry S. Truman did for many nations in Western Europe.

Early on, as perestroika was getting underway, I felt like the West might come along and find it a sensible thing to do—easing Russia's difficult transition from totalitarianism to democracy. What I had in mind in the first place, was the participation [of the West] in the conversion of defense industries, the modernization of light and food industries, and Russia's inclusion on an equal-member footing in the frameworks of the international economic relations;... [U]nlike some democrats, I did not expect "manna from Heaven", but counted on the Western statesmen to use their common sense.[32]

President George H. W. Bush continued to dodge helping the Russians and the President of Czechoslovakia, Václav Havel, laid bare the linkage for the Americans in his address to a joint session of Congress on 21 February 1990:

... I often hear the question: How can the United States of America help us today? My reply is as paradoxical as the whole of my life has been: You can help us most of all if you help the Soviet Union on its irreversible, but immensely complicated road to democracy. ... [T]he sooner, the more quickly, and the more peacefully the Soviet Union begins to move along the road toward genuine political pluralism, respect for the rights of nations to their own integrity and to a working—that is a market—economy, the better it will be, not just for Czechs and Slovaks, but for the whole world.

When the United States needed help with Germany's reunification, Gorbachev proved instrumental in finding solutions to the "German problem," and Bush acknowledged that "Gorbachev was moving the USSR in the right direction". Bush, in his own words, even gave praise to Gorbachev "to salute the man" in acknowledgment of the Soviet leader's role as "the architect of perestroika ... [who had] conducted the affairs of the Soviet Union with great restraint as Poland and Czechoslovakia and GDR ... and other countries [that had] achieved their independence", and who was "under extraordinary pressure at home, particularly on the economy".

See also

[edit]
  • History of the Soviet Union (1982–1991)
  • Corrective Movement program
  • Infiraj
  • Infitah
  • Perestroika in Kazakhstan

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Non-fans sometimes follow Alexander Zinoviev in referring to perestroika disparagingly as "catastroika" (Russian: катастройка, romanized: katastroika).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Professor Gerhard Rempel of the Department of History at Western New England College (2 February 1996). "Gorbachev and Perestroika". Mars.wnec.edu. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  2. ^ Mikhail Gorbachev, Perestroika (New York: HarperCollins, 1987), quoted in Mark Kishlansky, ed., Sources of the West: Readings in Western Civilization, 4th ed., vol. 2 (New York: Longman, 2001), p. 322.
  3. ^ "How 'Glasnost' and 'Perestroika' Changed the World". Time. 2022-08-30. Archived from the original on 2022-08-30. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  4. ^ Kolesnikov, Andrei (August 8, 2022). "Gorbachev's Revolution". Carnegie Politika. Archived from the original on September 2, 2022. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  5. ^ "Perestroika: Glasnost, Definition & Soviet Union". History. 2022-11-01. Archived from the original on 2024-01-24. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  6. ^ Kotkin, Stephen (2008). Armageddon averted: the Soviet collapse, 1970-2000 (Updated ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 58–85. ISBN 978-0-19-536863-5.
  7. ^ McNair, Brian (1991). Glasnost, Perestroika, and the Soviet Media. Psychology Press. p. 43. ISBN 0-415-03551-1.
  8. ^ Brown, Archie (2023). "Mikhail Gorbachev and the Politics of Perestroika". Russian History. 49 (2–4): 123–145. doi:10.30965/18763316-12340044.
  9. ^ Kotkin, Stephen (2001). Armageddon Averted. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280245-3.
  10. ^ Anipkin, Mikhail. Party Worker: The Rise of a Soviet Regional Leader (Lanham, Boulder, New York, London: The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 2025)
  11. ^ "Gorbachev's New Thinking" Archived 2018-11-28 at the Wayback Machine, by David Holloway, Foreign Affairs, vol.68 no.1
  12. ^ "Gorbachev and New Thinking in Soviet Foreign Policy, 1987-88" Archived 2017-11-17 at the Wayback Machine, United States Department of State archive
  13. ^ New Thinking: Foreign Policy under Gorbachev Archived 2019-09-22 at the Wayback Machine, in: Glenn E. Curtis, ed. Russia: A Country Study, Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1996.
  14. ^ Katrina vanden Heuvel & Stephen F. Cohen (16 November 2009). "Gorbachev on 1989". Thenation.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  15. ^ "Leningrad under Gorbachev: Perestroika and the fall of Communism (1984–1991)". Archived from the original on 2025-03-05. Retrieved 2019-05-05.
  16. ^ Bill, Keller (4 June 1987). "New struggle in the Kremlin: How to change the economy". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 4 March 2025. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  17. ^ Brooks, Karen M. (1988). The Law on Cooperatives, Retail Food Prices, and the Farm Financial Crisis in the U.S.S.R. Archived 2011-08-09 at the Wayback Machine (PDF). University of Minnesota. Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics. Retrieved on 14 August 2009.
  18. ^ "LEGISLATORS WEIGH IN ON COOPERATIVES LAW". The Washington Post.
  19. ^ "Deadlock of "Perestroika"". UaWarExplained.com. 2022-03-29. Archived from the original on 2022-11-27. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  20. ^ "ЧЕРНАЯ КНИГА КОММУНИЗМА". agitclub.ru. Archived from the original on 2020-11-04.
  21. ^ "IMF World Economic Outlook Database April 2006". International Monetary Fund. 29 April 2003. Archived from the original on 11 June 2010. Retrieved 31 March 2010.
  22. ^ David Stuckler and Sanjay Basu, The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills (NY: Basic Books, 2013), 31. ISBN 0465063977
  23. ^ Deakin, Simon; Meng, Gaofeng (August 2022). "Resolving Douglass C. North's 'puzzle' concerning China's household responsibility system". Journal of Institutional Economics. 18 (4): 521–535. doi:10.1017/S1744137421000746. ISSN 1744-1374.
  24. ^ Susan L. Shirk in The Political Logic of Economic Reform in China, University of California, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1993. ISBN 0-520-07706-7.
  25. ^ Gorbachev (1996), pp. 494–495
  26. ^ Gorbachev (1996), p. 188
  27. ^ "On Reorganization and the Party's Personnel Policy". Pravda (in Russian). 27 January 1987. Archived from the original on 12 June 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2021. (Gorbachev's report to the Plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU).
  28. ^ a b Mishota, Yugina; Mantovani, Manuela; Pietrobon, Alessandra (31 January 2019). The right of peoples to self-determination in the Post Soviet area: the case of Abkhazia (PDF). University of Padua, Faculty of International Private and Labour Law. pp. 22, 18. OCLC 1138915891. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 July 2021. (PhD thesis).
  29. ^ Gidadhubli, R. G. (1987). "Perestroika and Glasnost". Economic and Political Weekly. 22 (18): 784–787. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4376986. Archived from the original on 2024-12-20. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  30. ^ McForan, D.W.J. (Autumn 1988). "Glasnost, Democracy, and Perestroika". International Social Science Review. 63 (4): 166. JSTOR 41881835.
  31. ^ Strovsky, Dmitry; Schleifer, Ron (2021-07-21). "Soviet Politics and Journalism under Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika and Glasnost: Why Hopes Failed" (PDF). Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications. 7 (4): 239–256. doi:10.30958/ajmmc.7-4-2. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2025-04-29. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
  32. ^ LaFeber, Walter (2002). America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945–2000. New York, New York: McGraw Hill.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Abalkin, Leonid Ivanovich (1986). Kursom uskoreniya [The strategy of acceleration]. Moscow: Politizdat.
  • Albuquerque, Cesar (2015). Perestroika in Progress: An Analysis of the Evolution of Gorbachev's Political and Economic Thought (1984–1991) (PDF) (Master Thesis) (in Portuguese). University of São Paulo. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2018-07-19. Retrieved 2018-07-30.
  • Albuquerque, Cesar (2019). "Gorbachev as a Thinker: The Evolution of Gorbachev's Ideas in Soviet and Post-Soviet Times" (PDF). In Segrillo, A. (ed.). Karl Marx and Russia: Pre-Socialist, Socialist and Post-Socialist Experiences and Visions. São Paulo: FFLCH/USP. ISBN 978-85-7506-349-1. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2019-02-04. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
  • Baikov, V.D. (2017). Ленинградские хроники: от послевоенных 50-х до "лихих 90-х" [Leningrad Chronicles: from the postwar fifties to the "wild nineties"]. Moscow: Карамзин. ISBN 978-5-00071-516-1. Archived from the original on 2017-11-30. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  • Buzev, Е. (2013). Z-Library single sign on Коктейль Полторанина: Тайны ельцинского закулисья [Cocktail Poltoranin: Secrets of the Yeltsin Behind the Scenes]. Наследие царя Бориса (Heritage of the tsar Boris). Москва: Алгоритм. ISBN 978-5-4438-0357-9. Archived from the original on 2020-09-17. Retrieved 2019-08-29.
  • Cohen, Stephen F.; Katrina Vanden Heuvel (1989). Voices of Glasnost: Interviews With Gorbachev's Reformers. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-30735-1.
  • Goldman, Marshall I. (1992). "Perestroika". In David R. Henderson (ed.). Concise Encyclopedia of Economics (1st ed.). Library of Economics and Liberty. OCLC 317650570, 50016270, 163149563
  • Golitsyn, Anatoliy (1984). The Perestroia Deception [The World's Slide towards The Second October Revolution]. London & New York: Edward Harle.
  • Gorbachev, Mikhail (1988). Perestroika: New Thinking for Our Country and the World. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-091528-5.
  • Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeevich (1996). Memoirs. Doubleday. ISBN 9780385480192.
  • Jha, Prem Shankar (2003). The Perilous Road to the Market: The Political Economy of Reform in Russia, India and China. Pluto Press. ISBN 978-0-7453-1851-6.
  • Островский, А. В. (2010). Кто поставил Горбачёва? [Who brought Gorbachev to power?]. Алгоритм-Эксмо. ISBN 978-5-699-40627-2. Archived from the original on 2020-02-13. Retrieved 2019-08-24.
  • Островский, А. В. (2011). Глупость или измена? Расследование гибели СССР [Foolishness or treason? Investigation into the death of the USSR]. Moscow: Крымский мост. ISBN 978-5-89747-068-6. Archived from the original on 17 August 2019.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Perestroika.
Look up perestroika in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • Mikhail Gorbachev on perestroika
  • Chris Harman & Andy Zebrowski. Glasnost – before the storm (Summer 1988)
  • Yakovlev on perestroika Archived 2007-02-10 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Economic Collapse of the Soviet Union
  • Perestroika – TM in Ukraine
  • The Decline of the Soviet Union: A Hypothesis on Industrial Paradigms, Technological Revolutions and the Roots of Perestroika by Angelo Segrillo
  • Key Dates and Events of Perestroika
Preceded by
Brezhnev stagnation
History of Russia
History of the Soviet Union

10 March 1985 – 25 December 1991
Succeeded by
Dissolution of the USSR
In Russia:
Yeltsinism
  • v
  • t
  • e
Revolutions of 1989
Internal
background
  • Era of Stagnation
  • Communism
  • Anti-communism
  • Criticism of communist party rule
  • Eastern Bloc
  • Eastern Bloc politics
  • Eastern Bloc media and propaganda
  • Emigration from the Eastern Bloc
  • KGB
  • Nomenklatura
  • Shortage economy
  • Totalitarianism
  • Anti-communist insurgencies in Central and Eastern Europe
International
background
  • Active measures
  • Cold War
  • List of socialist states
  • People Power Revolution
  • Predictions of the collapse of the Soviet Union
  • Reagan Doctrine
  • Soviet Empire
  • Terrorism and the Soviet Union
  • Vatican Opposition
  • Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia
Reforms
  • Uskorenie
  • Perestroika
    • Demokratizatsiya
    • Khozraschyot
    • 500 Days Program
    • New political thinking
    • Sinatra Doctrine
  • Glasnost
  • Reform and opening up
  • Socialism with Chinese characteristics
  • Đổi Mới
Government
leaders
  • Ramiz Alia
  • Nicolae Ceaușescu
  • Mikhail Gorbachev
  • Károly Grósz
  • Erich Honecker
  • Miloš Jakeš
  • Egon Krenz
  • Wojciech Jaruzelski
  • Slobodan Milošević
  • Mathieu Kérékou
  • Mengistu Haile Mariam
  • Ne Win
  • Denis Sassou Nguesso
  • Heng Samrin
  • Deng Xiaoping
  • Zhao Ziyang
  • Todor Zhivkov
  • Siad Barre
Opposition
methods
  • Civil resistance
  • Human chains
  • Magnitizdat
  • Polish underground press
  • Political demonstration
  • Protests
  • Samizdat
  • Strike action
Opposition
leaders
  • Lech Wałęsa
  • Václav Havel
  • Alexander Dubček
  • Ion Iliescu
  • Liu Gang
  • Wu'erkaixi
  • Chai Ling
  • Wang Dan
  • Feng Congde
  • Joachim Gauck
  • Sali Berisha
  • Sanjaasürengiin Zorig
  • Vladimir Bukovsky
  • Boris Yeltsin
  • Viacheslav Chornovil
  • Vytautas Landsbergis
  • Zianon Pazniak
  • Zhelyu Zhelev
  • Aung San Suu Kyi
  • Meles Zenawi
  • Isaias Afwerki
  • Ronald Reagan
  • George H. W. Bush
  • Pope John Paul II
Opposition
movements
  • Beijing Students' Autonomous Federation
  • Charter 77
  • New Forum
  • Civic Forum
  • Democratic Party of Albania
  • Democratic Russia
  • Initiative for Peace and Human Rights
  • Sąjūdis
  • People's Movement of Ukraine
  • Solidarity
  • Popular Front of Latvia
  • Popular Front of Estonia
  • Public Against Violence
  • Belarusian Popular Front
  • Rastokhez
  • National League for Democracy
  • National Salvation Front
  • Union of Democratic Forces
  • Inter-regional Deputies Group
  • Alliance of Free Democrats
  • Hungarian Democratic Forum
Events
by location
Central and
Eastern Europe
  • Albania
  • Bulgaria
  • Czechoslovakia
  • East Germany
  • Hungary
  • Poland
  • Romania
  • Soviet Union
  • Yugoslavia
Soviet Union
  • Armenia
  • Azerbaijan
  • Belarus
  • Chechnya
  • Estonia
  • Georgia
  • Latvia
  • Lithuania
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Moldova
  • Russia
  • Tajikistan
  • Turkmenistan
  • Ukraine
  • Uzbekistan
Elsewhere
  • Afghanistan
  • Angola
  • Benin
  • Burma
  • Cambodia
  • China
  • Congo-Brazzaville
  • Ethiopia
  • Mongolia
  • Mozambique
  • Somalia
  • South Yemen
Individual
events
  • Jeltoqsan
  • 1987–1989 Tibetan unrest
  • Wars in the Caucasus
  • 1988 Polish strikes
  • Polish Round Table Agreement
  • April 9 tragedy
  • Removal of Hungary's border fence with Austria
  • Hungarian Round Table Talks
  • Pan-European Picnic
  • Baltic Way
  • Monday Demonstrations
  • Alexanderplatz demonstration
  • Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • Fall of the inner German border
  • Malta Summit
  • Black January
  • 1990s post-Soviet aliyah
  • Helsinki Summit
  • Revolution on Granite
  • Reunification of Germany
  • January Events
  • The Barricades
  • Transnistria War
  • 1991 protests in Belgrade
  • 1991 Belarusian strikes
  • Dissolution of the Warsaw Pact
  • August Coup
  • Dissolution of the Soviet Union
  • Tajikistani Civil War
  • Dissolution of Czechoslovakia
Later events
  • Colour revolution
  • Decommunization
  • Lustration
  • Democratization
  • Economic liberalization
  • Post-Soviet conflicts
  • Neo-Sovietism
  • Neo-Stalinism
  • Post-communism
  • Yugoslav Wars
  • Pink tide
Related
  • Human rights in the Soviet Union
  • v
  • t
  • e
Cold War
  • United States
  • Soviet Union
  • NATO
  • Warsaw Pact
  • ANZUS
  • METO
  • SEATO
  • NEATO
  • Rio Pact
  • Non-Aligned Movement
1940s
  • Morgenthau Plan
  • Jamaican political conflict
  • Dekemvriana
  • Guerrilla war in the Baltic states
    • Operation Priboi
    • Operation Jungle
    • Occupation of the Baltic states
  • Cursed soldiers
  • Operation Unthinkable
  • Gouzenko Affair
  • Division of Korea
  • Chinese Civil War
    • Chinese Communist Revolution
  • Indonesian National Revolution
  • Civil conflicts in Vietnam (1945–1949)
  • Operation Beleaguer
  • Operation Blacklist Forty
  • Iran crisis of 1946
  • Greek Civil War
  • Baruch Plan
  • Corfu Channel incident
  • Hukbalahap rebellion
  • Turkish Straits crisis
  • Restatement of Policy on Germany
  • First Indochina War
  • 1947 Polish parliamentary election
  • 1947 Paraguayan Civil War
  • Truman Doctrine
  • Asian Relations Conference
  • May 1947 crises
  • Partition of India
  • India–Pakistan war of 1947–1948
  • 1947–1949 Palestine war
    • 1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine
    • 1948 Arab–Israeli War
    • 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight
  • Marshall Plan
  • Comecon
  • 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état
  • Incapacitation of the Allied Control Council
  • Al-Wathbah uprising
  • Tito–Stalin split
  • Berlin Blockade
  • La Violencia
  • Annexation of Hyderabad
  • Madiun Affair
  • Western betrayal
  • Iron Curtain
  • Eastern Bloc
  • Western Bloc
  • Malayan Emergency
  • Nepalese Democracy Movement
  • March 1949 Syrian coup d'état
  • Operation Valuable
1950s
  • Bamboo curtain
  • McCarthyism
  • First Indochina War
  • Korean War
  • Arab Cold War (1952–1979)
  • Egyptian revolution of 1952
  • Iraqi Intifada
  • Mau Mau rebellion
  • Batepá massacre
  • East German uprising of 1953
  • 1953 Plzeň Uprising
  • 1953 Iranian coup d'état
  • Massacre of 14 July 1953 in Paris
  • 1953 Colombian coup d'état
  • Pact of Madrid
  • Bricker Amendment
  • 1954 Syrian coup d'état
  • Petrov Affair
  • Domino theory
  • 1954 Geneva Conference
  • 1954 Paraguayan coup d'état
  • 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état
  • Capture of the Tuapse
  • First Taiwan Strait Crisis
  • Jebel Akhdar War
  • Algerian War
  • Kashmir Princess
  • Bandung Conference
  • Geneva Summit (1955)
  • Cyprus Emergency
  • Vietnam War
  • "On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences"
  • 1956 Poznań protests
  • Hungarian Revolution of 1956
  • Polish October
  • Suez Crisis
  • "We will bury you"
  • Operation Gladio
  • Syrian Crisis of 1957
  • Sputnik crisis
  • Ifni War
  • Iraqi 14 July Revolution
  • 1958 Lebanon crisis
  • Second Taiwan Strait Crisis
  • 1959 Mosul uprising
  • 1959 Tibetan uprising
  • Kitchen Debate
  • Cuban Revolution
    • Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution
  • Sino-Soviet split
  • Night Frost Crisis
1960s
  • Congo Crisis
  • Laotian Civil War
  • Vietnam War
  • Simba rebellion
  • 1960 U-2 incident
  • Bay of Pigs Invasion
  • 1960 Turkish coup d'état
  • Albanian–Soviet split
  • Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
    • First Iraqi–Kurdish War
  • Berlin Crisis of 1961
  • Berlin Wall
  • Annexation of Goa
  • Papua conflict
  • Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation
  • Sand War
  • Portuguese Colonial War
    • Angolan War of Independence
    • Guinea-Bissau War of Independence
    • Mozambican War of Independence
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
  • El Porteñazo
  • Sino-Indian War
  • Communist insurgency in Sarawak
  • Ramadan Revolution
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • North Yemen civil war
  • 1963 Syrian coup d'état
  • Assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Aden Emergency
  • Cyprus crisis of 1963–1964
  • Shifta War
  • Mexican Dirty War
    • Tlatelolco massacre
  • Guatemalan Civil War
  • Colombian conflict
  • 1964 Brazilian coup d'état
  • Dominican Civil War
  • Rhodesian Bush War
  • Indonesian mass killings of 1965–1966
  • Transition to the New Order (Indonesia)
  • ASEAN Declaration
  • 1966 Syrian coup d'état
  • Cultural Revolution
  • Cambodian Civil War
  • Argentine Revolution
  • South African Border War
  • Korean DMZ Conflict
  • 12-3 incident
  • Greek junta
  • 1967 Hong Kong riots
  • Years of Lead (Italy)
  • Six-Day War
  • War of Attrition
  • Dhofar rebellion
  • Al-Wadiah War
  • Nigerian Civil War
  • Protests of 1968
    • May 68
  • Prague Spring
  • USS Pueblo incident
  • 1968 Polish political crisis
  • Communist insurgency in Malaysia
  • Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia
  • 17 July Revolution
  • 1968 Peruvian coup d'état
    • Revolutionary Government
  • 1969 Sudanese coup d'état
  • 1969 Libyan revolution
  • Goulash Communism
  • Sino-Soviet border conflict
  • New People's Army rebellion
  • Note Crisis
1970s
  • Détente
  • Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
  • Black September
  • Alcora Exercise
  • 1970 Syrian coup d'etat
  • Western Sahara conflict
  • Communist insurgency in Thailand
  • December 1970 protests in Poland
  • Koza riot
  • Realpolitik
  • Ping-pong diplomacy
  • 1971 JVP insurrection
  • Corrective revolution (Egypt)
  • 1971 Turkish military memorandum
  • 1971 Sudanese coup d'état
  • 1971 Bolivian coup d'état
  • Four Power Agreement on Berlin
  • Bangladesh Liberation War
  • 1972 visit by Richard Nixon to China
  • North Yemen-South Yemen Border conflict of 1972
  • First Yemenite War
  • Munich massacre
  • 1972–1975 Bangladesh insurgency
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • Paris Peace Accords
  • 1973 Uruguayan coup d'état
  • 1973 Afghan coup d'état
  • 1973 Chilean coup d'état
  • Yom Kippur War
  • 1973 oil crisis
  • Carnation Revolution
  • Ethiopian Civil War
  • Vietnam War
  • Spanish transition to democracy
  • Metapolitefsi
  • Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
  • Second Iraqi–Kurdish War
  • Turkish invasion of Cyprus
  • 15 August 1975 Bangladeshi coup d'état
  • Siege of Dhaka (1975)
  • Sipahi-Janata revolution
  • Angolan Civil War
  • Indonesian invasion of East Timor
  • Cambodian genocide
  • June 1976 in Polish protests
  • Mozambican Civil War
  • Oromo conflict
  • Ogaden War
  • 1978 Somali coup attempt
  • Western Sahara War
  • Lebanese Civil War
  • Sino-Albanian split
  • Third Indochina War
    • Cambodian–Vietnamese War
    • Khmer Rouge insurgency
    • Sino-Vietnamese War
  • Operation Condor
  • Dirty War (Argentina)
  • 1976 Argentine coup d'état
  • Egyptian–Libyan War
  • German Autumn
  • Korean Air Lines Flight 902
  • Nicaraguan Revolution
  • Uganda–Tanzania War
  • NDF Rebellion
  • Chadian–Libyan War
  • Second Yemenite War
  • Grand Mosque seizure
  • Iranian Revolution
  • Saur Revolution
  • New JEWEL Movement
  • 1979 Herat uprising
  • Seven Days to the River Rhine
  • Struggle against political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union
1980s
  • Salvadoran Civil War
  • Soviet–Afghan War
  • Eritrean War of Independence
  • Summer Olympic boycotts (1980 · 1984 · 1988)
  • Gera Demands
  • Peruvian Revolution
  • August Agreements
    • Solidarity
  • Assassination of Jerzy Popiełuszko
  • 1980 Turkish coup d'état
  • Ugandan Bush War
  • Gulf of Sidra incident
  • Martial law in Poland
  • Casamance conflict
  • Falklands War
  • 1982 Ethiopian–Somali Border War
  • Ndogboyosoi War
  • United States invasion of Grenada
  • Able Archer 83
  • Star Wars
  • 1985 Geneva Summit
  • Iran–Iraq War
  • Somali Rebellion
  • Reykjavík Summit
  • 1986 Black Sea incident
  • South Yemeni crisis
  • Toyota War
  • 1987 Lieyu massacre
  • Operation Denver
  • 1987–1989 JVP insurrection
  • Lord's Resistance Army insurgency
  • 1988 Black Sea bumping incident
  • 8888 Uprising
  • Solidarity (Soviet reaction)
  • Contras
  • Central American crisis
  • Operation RYAN
  • Korean Air Lines Flight 007
  • People Power Revolution
  • Glasnost
  • Perestroika
  • Bougainville conflict
  • First Nagorno-Karabakh War
  • Afghan Civil War
  • United States invasion of Panama
  • 1988 Polish strikes
  • Polish Round Table Agreement
  • 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre
  • Revolutions of 1989
  • Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • Fall of the inner German border
  • Velvet Revolution
  • Romanian Revolution
  • Peaceful Revolution
1990s
  • Mongolian Revolution of 1990
  • Min Ping Yu No. 5540 incident
  • Gulf War
  • Min Ping Yu No. 5202
  • German reunification
  • Yemeni unification
  • Fall of communism in Albania
  • Breakup of Yugoslavia
  • Dissolution of the Soviet Union
    • 1991 August Coup
  • Dissolution of Czechoslovakia
Frozen conflicts
  • Abkhazia
  • China-Taiwan
  • Korea
  • Kosovo
  • South Ossetia
  • Transnistria
  • Sino-Indian border dispute
  • North Borneo dispute
Foreign policy
  • Truman Doctrine
  • Containment
  • Eisenhower Doctrine
  • Domino theory
  • Hallstein Doctrine
  • Kennedy Doctrine
  • Johnson Doctrine
  • Peaceful coexistence
  • Ostpolitik
  • Brezhnev Doctrine
  • Nixon Doctrine
  • Ulbricht Doctrine
  • Carter Doctrine
  • Reagan Doctrine
  • Paasikivi–Kekkonen doctrine
  • Rollback
  • Kinmen Agreement
Ideologies
Capitalism
  • Chicago school
  • Conservatism
    • American conservatism
  • Democratic capitalism
  • Keynesianism
  • Liberalism
  • Libertarianism
  • Monetarism
  • Neoclassical economics
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  • Supply-side economics
Socialism
  • Communism
  • Marxism–Leninism
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  • Eurocommunism
  • Guevarism
  • Hoxhaism
  • Juche
  • Ho Chi Minh Thought
  • Maoism
  • Stalinism
  • Titoism
  • Trotskyism
Other
  • Imperialism
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  • Nationalism
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  • Chauvinism
  • Ethnic nationalism
  • Racism
  • Zionism
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  • Fascism
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  • Islamism
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  • Authoritarianism
  • Autocracy
  • Liberal democracy
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  • Guided democracy
  • Social democracy
  • Third-worldism
  • White supremacy
  • White nationalism
  • White separatism
  • Apartheid
  • Finlandization
Organizations
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  • SEATO
  • METO
  • EEC
  • Warsaw Pact
  • Comecon
  • Non-Aligned Movement
  • NN States
  • ASEAN
  • SAARC
  • Safari Club
Propaganda
Pro-communist
  • Active measures
  • Izvestia
  • Neues Deutschland
  • Pravda
  • Radio Moscow
  • Rudé právo
  • Trybuna Ludu
  • TASS
  • Soviet Life
Pro-Western
  • Amerika
  • Crusade for Freedom
  • Paix et Liberté
  • Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  • Red Scare
  • Voice of America
Technological
competition
  • Arms race
  • Nuclear arms race
  • Space Race
Historians
  • Gar Alperovitz
  • Thomas A. Bailey
  • Michael Beschloss
  • Manu Bhagavan
  • Thomas Borstelmann
  • Archie Brown
  • Warren H. Carroll
  • Chen Jian
  • Adrian Cioroianu
  • John Costello
  • Michael Cox
  • Nicholas J. Cull
  • Nick Cullather
  • Norman Davies
  • Willem Drees
  • Robert D. English
  • Herbert Feis
  • Robert Hugh Ferrell
  • Sheila Fitzpatrick
  • André Fontaine
  • Anneli Ute Gabanyi
  • John Lewis Gaddis
  • Lloyd Gardner
  • Timothy Garton Ash
  • Gabriel Gorodetsky
  • Greg Grandin
  • Fred Halliday
  • Jussi Hanhimäki
  • Jamil Hasanli
  • John Earl Haynes
  • Patrick J. Hearden
  • James Hershberg
  • Tvrtko Jakovina
  • Tony Judt
  • Oleg Khlevniuk
  • Harvey Klehr
  • Gabriel Kolko
  • Bruce R. Kuniholm
  • Walter LaFeber
  • Walter Laqueur
  • Melvyn P. Leffler
  • Fredrik Logevall
  • Geir Lundestad
  • Vojtech Mastny
  • Jack F. Matlock Jr.
  • Thomas J. McCormick
  • Robert J. McMahon
  • Timothy Naftali
  • Marius Oprea
  • David S. Painter
  • William B. Pickett
  • Ronald E. Powaski
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  • Yakov M. Rabkin
  • Sergey Radchenko
  • M. E. Sarotte
  • Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
  • Ellen Schrecker
  • Giles Scott-Smith
  • Shen Zhihua
  • Timothy Snyder
  • Frances S. Saunders
  • Michael Szonyi
  • Fyodor Tertitskiy
  • Athan Theoharis
  • Andrew Thorpe
  • Vladimir Tismăneanu
  • Patrick Vaughan
  • Alex von Tunzelmann
  • Odd Arne Westad
  • William Appleman Williams
  • Jonathan Reed Winkler
  • Rudolph Winnacker
  • Ken Young
  • Vladislav M. Zubok
Espionage and
intelligence
  • List of Eastern Bloc agents in the United States
  • Soviet espionage in the United States
  • Russian espionage in the United States
  • American espionage in the Soviet Union and Russian Federation
  • CIA and the Cultural Cold War
  • CIA
  • MI5
  • MI6
  • United States involvement in regime change
  • Soviet involvement in regime change
  • MVD
  • KGB
  • Stasi
See also
  • Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War
  • Soviet Union–United States relations
  • Soviet Union–United States summits
  • Russia–NATO relations
  • War on terror
  • Brinkmanship
  • Pax Atomica
  • Second Cold War
  • Russian Revolution
  • Category
  • List of conflicts
  • Timeline
  • v
  • t
  • e
Soviet Union topics
  • Bibliography of the Russian Revolution and Civil War
  • Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union
  • Bibliography of the Post Stalinist Soviet Union
History
  • Outline
  • Russian Revolution
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Geography
Subdivisions
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Regions
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Politics
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Bodies
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Offices
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Political repression
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Sunting pranala
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