ABSTRACT

 During the 1990s, the "roving bandits", big business or the oligarchs, stole Russia. They gained influence over President Yeltsin and his government, and gradually shaped policy in their own interests. In this first comprehensive account to explain why Russia took the course it did, Martin McCauley examines the period through the prism of government, including Yeltsin's shadow government, and looks at the military, police, security and intelligence services. Relations between Moscow and the regions, industry, agriculture, social policy and foreign policy are also explored.

chapter 1|30 pages

How and Why Did It Happen?

chapter 8|40 pages

Bandit Capitalism

chapter 9|14 pages

Agriculture: The Peasants Stay Poor

chapter 10|34 pages

A Society in Crisis

chapter 11|14 pages

Foreign Policy: Will the Empire Strike Back?

chapter 12|17 pages

Success Not Failure: The Baltic States

chapter |7 pages

Epilogue

The Spy Who Took over Russia: Vladimir Putin