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Factors responsible for the disintegration of the Soviet Union?

Introduction:Generally, the capability of the USSR to maintain its internal and


external economic structure eventually failed, and the political structure followed.
Factors included the dissatisfaction of its citizens, nationalist movements in Eastern
Europe and Asia, and an unworkable, inflexible bureaucracy.

Economy:The Soviet's tightly controlled economy was not able to compete with the
free-market economy of the US and its allies. In almost every area of competition -
excepting only nuclear armaments - the Soviet system fell behind. One example of
this can be found in the production of Soviet steel. Around and after WWII, the
Soviet system was behind the US in steel production. Since they used a command
economy, this was a factor that had to be settled not via supply and demand but
rather through the Soviet government's use of limited resources and time (e.g.
currency and time). By the 1990s, Soviet steel production surpassed that of the US.
Unfortunately for the Soviets, by this time there was a plethora of steel traded on
the open markets. So while they did indeed begin to produce more steel than the
US, it was more expensive for them to produce steel domestically than it was for
the US to import it. This left the US with resources to spend on other "projects" -
such as computer technology. This phenomenon was to repeat itself in a variety of
other areas as well.

Military:The move away from nuclear arms to conventional arms was one that the
USSR was ill-prepared to exploit, although Russian scientists were among the best
in the world. When Ronald Reagan became President in 1981, he embarked on an
ambitious expansion of the armed forces, requiring the Soviets to expand their own
cumbersome military apparatus. When the Russian and Soviets economies fell on
hard times, they could no longer afford to control their satellite countries in Asia and
Eastern Europe.

Communism vs. Religion: Russia fell primarily because the Great God of
Abraham Isaac and Jacob caused it to fall. For more than 60 years Godless
communism had enslaved and murdered people all over the globe and espoused
that the state was God. Afghanistan was the first chink in the mighty Soviet armor.
Then the other "stans" broke away. All those soviet vassal states with great
numbers of Muslims broke away, and the communists lost control of their empire.
Mainly God allowed thousands of Jews to return to return to Israel from Russia. The
great red bully of the world was shaken to the core and split up when God decided
that enough was enough

Fall of the Soviet Union


In December of 1991, as the world watched in amazement, the Soviet Union
disintegrated into fifteen separate countries. Its collapse was hailed by the west as
a victory for freedom, a triumph of democracy over totalitarianism, and evidence of
the superiority of capitalism over socialism. The United States rejoiced as its
formidable enemy was brought to its knees, thereby ending the Cold War which had
hovered over these two superpowers since the end of World War II. Indeed, the
breakup of the Soviet Union transformed the entire world political situation, leading
to a complete reformulation of political, economic and military alliances all over the
globe.

What led to this monumental historical event? In fact, the answer is a very complex
one, and can only be arrived at with an understanding of the peculiar composition
and history of the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was built on approximately the
same territory as the Russian Empire which it succeeded. After the Bolshevik
Revolution of 1917, the newly-formed government developed a philosophy of
socialism with the eventual and gradual transition to Communism. The state which
the Bolsheviks created was intended to overcome national differences, and rather
to create one monolithic state based on a centralized economical and political
system. This state, which was built on a Communist ideology, was eventually
transformed into a totalitarian state, in which the Communist leadership had
complete control over the country.

However, this project of creating a unified, centralized socialist state proved


problematic for several reasons. First, the Soviets underestimated the degree to
which the non-Russian ethnic groups in the country (which comprised more than
fifty percent of the total population of the Soviet Union) would resist assimilation
into a Russianized State. Second, their economic planning failed to meet the needs
of the State, which was caught up in a vicious arms race with the United States. This
led to gradual economic decline, eventually necessitating the need for reform.
Finally, the ideology of Communism, which the Soviet Government worked to instill
in the hearts and minds of its population, never took firm root, and eventually lost
whatever influence it had originally carried.

By the time of the 1985 rise to power of Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet Union’s last
leader, the country was in a situation of severe stagnation, with deep economic and
political problems which sorely needed to be addressed and overcome. Recognizing
this, Gorbachev introduced a two-tiered policy of reform. On one level, he initiated a
policy of glasnost, or freedom of speech. On the other level, he began a program of
economic reform known as perestroika, or rebuilding. What Gorbachev did not
realize was that by giving people complete freedom of expression, he was
unwittingly unleashing emotions and political feelings that had been pent up for
decades, and which proved to be extremely powerful when brought out into the
open. Moreover, his policy of economic reform did not have the immediate results
he had hoped for and had publicly predicted. The Soviet people consequently used
their newly allotted freedom of speech to criticize Gorbachev for his failure to
improve the economy.

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The disintegration of the Soviet Union began on the peripheries, in the non-Russian
areas. The first region to produce mass, organized dissent was the Baltic region,
where, in 1987, the government of Estonia demanded autonomy. This move was
later followed by similar moves in Lithuania and Latvia, the other two Baltic
republics. The nationalist movements in the Baltics constituted a strong challenge
to Gorbachev’s policy of glasnost. He did not want to crack down too severely on
the participants in these movements, yet at the same time, it became increasingly
evident that allowing them to run their course would spell disaster for the Soviet
Union, which would completely collapse if all of the periphery republics were to
demand independence.

After the initiative from Estonia, similar movements sprang up all over the former
Soviet Union. In the Transcaucasus region (in the South of the Soviet Union), a
movement developed inside the Armenian-populated autonomous region of
Nagorno-Karabagh, in the Republic of Azerbaijan. The Armenian population of this
region demanded that they be granted the right to secede and join the Republic of
Armenia, with whose population they were ethnically linked. Massive
demonstrations were held in Armenia in solidarity with the secessionists in Nagorno-
Karabagh. The Gorbachev government refused to allow the population of Nagorno-
Karabagh to secede, and the situation developed into a violent territorial dispute,
eventually degenerating into an all-out war which continues unabated until the
present day.

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Once this “Pandora’s box” had been opened, nationalist movements emerged in
Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova, Byelorussia, and the Central Asian republics. The power
of the Central Government was considerably weakened by these movements; they
could no longer rely on the cooperation of Government figures in the republics.

Finally, the situation came to a head in August of 1991. In a last-ditch effort to save
the Soviet Union, which was floundering under the impact of the political
movements which had emerged since the implementation of Gorbachev’s glasnost,
a group of “hard-line” Communists organized a coup d’etat. They kidnapped
Gorbachev, and then, on August 19 of 1991, they announced on state television
that Gorbachev was very ill and would no longer be able to govern. The country
went into an uproar. Massive protests were staged in Moscow, Leningrad, and many
of the other major cities of the Soviet Union. When the coup organizers tried to
bring in the military to quell the protestors, the soldiers themselves rebelled, saying
that they could not fire on their fellow countrymen. After three days of massive
protest, the coup organizers surrendered, realizing that without the cooperation of
the military, they did not have the power to overcome the power of the entire
population of the country.

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After the failed coup attempt, it was only a few months until the Soviet Union
completely collapsed. Both the government and the people realized that there was
no way to turn back the clock; the massive demonstrations of the “August days”
had demonstrated that the population would accept nothing less than democracy.
Gorbachev conceded power, realizing that he could no longer contain the power of
the population. On December 25, 1991, he resigned. By January of 1992, by popular
demand, the Soviet Union ceased to exist. In its place, a new entity was formed. It
was called the “Commonwealth of Independent Republics,” and was composed of
most of the independent countries of the former Soviet Union. While the member
countries had complete political independence, they were linked to other
Commonwealth countries by economic, and, in some cases, military ties.

Now that the Soviet Union, with its centralized political and economic system, has
ceased to exist, the fifteen newly formed independent countries which emerged in
its aftermath are faced with an overwhelming task. They must develop their
economies, reorganize their political systems, and, in many cases, settle bitter
territorial disputes. A number of wars have developed on the peripheries of the
former Soviet Union. Additionally, the entire region is suffering a period of severe
economic hardship. However, despite the many hardships facing the region, bold
steps are being taken toward democratization, reorganization, and rebuilding in
most of the countries of the former Soviet Union.

The dissolution of the Soviet Union was a process of systematic disintegration,


which occurred in its economy, social structure and political structure. It resulted in
the destruction of the Soviet Federal Government ("the Union centre") and
independence of the USSR's republics on December 25, 1991. The process was
caused by weakening of the Soviet government, which led to disintegration and
took place from about January 19, 1990 to December 31, 1991. The process was
characterized by many of the republics of the Soviet Union declaring their
independence and being recognized as sovereign nation-states.

Contents [hide]

1 Early stages

1.1 Multi-party elections

2 The August Coup

3 Formation of the CIS and end of the USSR

[edit] Early stagesOn 16 November 1988, the Supreme Soviet of the Estonian
adopted a declaration of national sovereignty under which Estonian laws should
have precedence over those of the Soviet Union.[1] Estonia's parliament also laid
claim to the republic's natural resources: land, inland waters, forests, mineral
deposits and to the means of industrial production, agriculture, construction, state
banks, transportation, municipal services, etc. in the territory of Estonia's borders.
[2]
[edit] Multi-party electionsIn February 1990, the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union agreed to give up its monopoly of power. Over
the next several weeks, the 15 constituent republics of the USSR held their first
competitive elections. Reformers and ethnic nationalists won many of the seats.

The constituent republics began to declare their national sovereignty and started a
"war of laws" with the Moscow central government, wherein the governments of the
constituent republics rejected union-wide legislation where it conflicted with local
laws, asserting control over their local economies and refusing to pay tax revenue
to the central Moscow government. This strife caused economic dislocation as
supply lines in the economy were severed, and caused the Soviet economy to
decline further.[3]

The pro-independence movement in the Lithuanian SSR, S?j?dis, established on


June 3, 1988, caused a visit by President Mikhail Gorbachev in January 1990 to the
Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, which provoked a pro-independence rally of around
250,000 people.

On March 11, 1990, the Lithuanian SSR, led by Chairman of the Supreme Council
Vytautas Landsbergis, declared restoration of independence. However, the Soviet
Army attempted to suppress the movement. The Soviet Union initiated an economic
blockade of Lithuania and kept troops there "to secure the rights of ethnic
Russians."[4]

On March 30, 1990, the Estonian Supreme Council declared Soviet power in
Estonian SSR since 1940 to have been illegal, and started a process to reestablish
Estonia as an independent state. The process of restoration of independence of the
Latvian SSR began on May 4, 1990, with a Latvian Supreme Council vote stipulating
a transitional period to complete independence.

Barricade in Riga to prevent the Soviet Army from reaching Latvian Parliament, July
1991On January 13, 1991, Soviet troops, along with KGB Spetsnaz Alpha Group,
stormed the Vilnius TV Tower in Vilnius, Lithuania to suppress the nationalist media.
This ended with 14 unarmed civilians dead and hundreds more injured. Later that
month in Georgian SSR, anti-Soviet protesters at Tbilisi demonstrated support for
Lithuanian independence.[5]

On January 14 1991 Nikolai Ryzhkov resigned from his post as Chairman of the
Council of Ministers, literally Premier of the Soviet Union, and was succeeded by
Valentin Pavlov in the newly-established post of Prime Minister of the Soviet Union.

On March 17, 1991, in a Union-wide referendum 76.4% of all voters voted for the
retention of the Soviet Union in a reformed form.[6] The Baltics, Armenia, Georgia,
Chechnya (which was by now referring to itself as Ichkeria and despite previously
being a region within Russia officially, had a strong desire to emulate the
independence of its neighbors)[7] and Moldova boycotted the referendum. In each
of the other nine republics, a majority of the voters supported the retention of the
renewed Soviet Union.

On June 12, 1991, Boris Yeltsin won 57% of the popular vote in the democratic
elections for the post of president of the Russian SFSR, defeating Gorbachev's
preferred candidate, Nikolai Ryzhkov, who won 16% of the vote. In his election
campaign, Yeltsin criticized the "dictatorship of the centre", but did not suggest the
introduction of a market economy. Instead, he said that he would put his head on
the railtrack in the event of increased prices. Yeltsin took office on July 10.

On the night of July 31, 1991, Russian OMON from Riga, the Soviet military
headquarters in the Baltics, assaulted the Lithuanian border post in Medininkai and
killed seven Lithuanian servicemen.

[edit] The August CoupMain article: 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt

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Tanks in the Red Square during the 1991 coup attempt

Mass demonstration in Moscow against the 1991 coup attemptFaced with growing
republic separatism, Gorbachev attempted to restructure the Soviet Union into a
less centralized state. On August 20, 1991, the Russian SFSR was scheduled to sign
the New Union Treaty, which was to convert the Soviet Union into a federation of
independent republics with a common president, foreign policy and military. The
new treaty was strongly supported by the Central Asian republics, which needed the
economic power and common markets of the other Soviet republics to prosper.
However, this meant the preservation of the Communist Party's control over
economic and social life.

The more radical reformists were increasingly convinced that a rapid transition to a
market economy was required, even if the eventual outcome included the
disintegration of the Soviet Union into several independent nation-states.
Disintegration of the USSR also accorded with the desires of Yeltsin's presidency of
the Russian Federation as well as regional and local authorities, to establish full
power over their territories and get rid of pervasive Moscow ideological control. In
contrast to the reformers' lukewarm approach to the new treaty, the conservatives
and remaining 'patriots' and Russian nationalists of the USSR, still strong within the
CPSU and military establishment, were opposed to anything that might contribute to
the weakening of the Soviet state and its centralized power base.

On August 19, 1991, Gorbachev's vice president Gennadi Yanayev, prime minister
Valentin Pavlov, defense minister Dmitriy Yazov, KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov, and
other senior officials acted to prevent the signing of the union treaty by forming the
"General Committee on the State Emergency." The "Committee" put Gorbachev (on
holiday in Foros, Crimea) under house arrest, reintroduced political censorship, and
attempted to stop the perestroika. The coup leaders quickly issued an emergency
decree suspending political activity and banning most newspapers.

While coup organizers expected some popular support for their actions, the public
sympathy in large cities and in republics was largely against them, manifesting
itself in a campaign of civil resistance, especially in Moscow. Russian SFSR President
Boris Yeltsin was quick to condemn the coup and grab popular support for himself.

Thousands of people in Moscow came out to defend the "White House" (the Russian
Federation's parliament and Yeltsin's office), then the symbolic seat of Russian
sovereignty. The organizers tried but ultimately failed to arrest Yeltsin, who rallied
mass opposition to the coup. The special forces dispatched by the coup leaders took
up positions near the White House, but would not storm the barricaded building.
After three days, on August 21, the coup collapsed, the organizers were detained,
and Gorbachev returned as president of the Soviet Union. However, Gorbachev's
powers were now compromised, as neither the Union nor Russian power structures
heeded his commands.

[edit] Formation of the CIS and end of the USSR

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Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced
material may be challenged and removed. (November 2009)

The final round of the Soviet Union's collapse took place following the Ukrainian
popular referendum on December 1, 1991, wherein 90% of voters opted for
independence. The leaders of the three principal Slavic republics (the Russian,
Ukrainian and Byelorussian SSRs) agreed to meet for a discussion of possible forms
of relationship, alternative to Gorbachev's struggle for a union.

On December 8, 1991, the leaders of the Russian, Ukrainian, and Byelorussian


republics met in Belavezhskaya Pushcha and signed the Belavezha Accords
declaring the Soviet Union dissolved and replacing it with the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS). Gorbachev described this as an unconstitutional coup, but
it soon became clear that the development could not be halted.

On December 12, 1991, Russia's secession from the Union was sealed, with the
Supreme Soviet of the Russian SFSR formally ratifying the Belavezha Accords and
denouncing the 1922 Treaty on the creation of the Soviet Union.

On December 17, 1991, alongside 28 European countries, the European


Community, and four non-European countries, twelve of the fifteen Soviet republics
signed the European Energy Charter in the Hague as sovereign states.[8]

Five double-headed Russian coat-of-arms eagles (below) substituting the former


state emblem of the Soviet Union and the “CCCP” letters (above) in the facade of
the Grand Kremlin Palace after the dissolution of the USSRDoubts remained over
the authority of the Belavezha Accords to effect the dissolution of the Soviet Union,
since they were signed by only five of the Soviet Republics. However, on December
21, 1991, representatives of all member republics except Georgia signed the Alma-
Ata Protocol, in which they confirmed the dissolution of the Union. That same day,
all former Soviet republics agreed to join the CIS, with the exception of the three
Baltic States and Georgia. The documents signed at Alma-Ata also addressed
several issues raised by the Union's extinction. Notably, Russia was authorized to
assume the role of the USSR in the United Nations, which meant inheriting its
permanent membership on the Security Council. The Soviet Ambassador to the UN
delivered to the Secretary General a letter by Russia's president, Boris Yeltsin,
dated December 24, 1991, informing him that, in virtue of that agreement, Russia
was the successor state to the USSR for purposes of UN membership. After being
circulated among the other UN member states with no objection raised, the
statement was declared accepted on December 31.

In the early hours of December 25, 1991, Gorbachev resigned as president of the
USSR, declaring the office extinct and ceding all the powers still vested in it to the
president of Russia, Yeltsin. That night, the Soviet flag was lowered for the last time
over the Kremlin. The next day, the Council of Republics (a chamber) of the
Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union formally recognized the dissolution of the Soviet
Union and dissolved itself (another chamber of the Supreme Soviet had been unable
to work during some months before this, due to absence of a quorum). By
December 31, 1991, all official Soviet institutions had ceased operations, as
individual republics assumed the central government's role.

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