Available Formats
Who Lost Russia: From the Collapse of the USSR to Putin's War on Ukraine
By (Author) Peter Conradi
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
29th November 2022
25th August 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Politics and government
History
International relations
327.4701821
Paperback
496
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 35mm
The collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991 appeared to usher in a remarkable new era of peace and co-operation with the West. This, we were told, was the end of history: now the entire world would embrace enlightenment values and liberal democracy. Reality has proved very different. Russia emerged from the 1990s battered and humiliated, a latter day Weimar Germany, its protests ignored as NATO expanded eastwards to take in Moscows former satellites. Vladimir Putin offered a new start when he took the place of the erratic Boris Yeltsin in the Kremlin, but, determined to restore his countrys bruised pride, he has wrong footed the West with his incursions into Georgia, Ukraine and Syria. A cold war threatens to turn hot once again. In this provocative new work, based on exclusive interviews with key players either side of the new divide, Peter Conradi addresses the failures of understanding on both sides over the past twenty-five years and outlines how we can get relations back on track before its too late.
Engrossing.
* Mail on Sunday *Authoritative and readable.
* Daily Mail *A timely account of the diplomatic history of what increasingly looks like a new Cold War Nervous Europeans might like to send Conradis book to the White House.
* The Times *Fast-paced, comprehensive, solidly researched and, most importantly, essential reading for anyone who wants to understand one of the great crises of our timesuncannily up-to-the-minutethis book couldnt be better timed.
* Owen Matthews, Literary Review *Conradi wisely examines the forests contours, avoiding the trees. He writes engagingly and enlivens his smart, balanced analysis with colorful anecdotes.
* New York Times Book Review *'Essential reading.'
* The Herald *Manages to tell a complex storywith a much-needed sense of balance. The authors skill in seamlessly linking historical events to present-day international relations makes this book an insightful and rewarding read.
* Prospect *Seamlessly writtenit is fascinating to read the authors summary of Russias actions in Syria in the context of recent events.
-- Wall Street JournalElegantly written, informedprovides many valuable insights into our times.
* Evening Standard *Skilfully constructed.
* Sunday Times *Profoundly important.
* Country Life *Peter Conradi is a cool-headed and even-handed guide to the past 25 years of Western-Russian relations...It is refreshing to read so well-written and dispassionate an account.
* New Statesman *A fine narrative of postcommunist Russia's relations with the United States and Europe.
* Library Journal *Fast-moving and utterly compelling and spans the decades revealingly.
* Irish Independent *Balanced and timelya smooth narrative that provides welcome context for Russias recent revanchist behavior and insight into prospects for ongoing U.S.-Russian relations.
* Publishers Weekly, starred review *To understand what went wrong in Russia over the last few decades and the impact it has had on the world, one cant find a better guide than this well researched and argued book a must read for anyone interested in the future of Europe and the world as a whole.
-- Serhii Plokhy, author of The Man with the Poison Gun and The Last EmpireNuanced yet fast-paced, this is the essential guide to our rocky relationship with a country we ignored at our peril. Russia is back at the top of the news: and this book couldnt be more timely.
-- Peter Pomerantsev, author of Nothing is True and Everything is Possible: Adventures in Modern RussiaClear, thought-provoking, disturbing. Anyone who wants to understand the rise of Vladimir Putin and the resurgence of Russian nationalism should read Peter Conradis impeccably researched and impressive book.
-- Victor Sebestyen, author of 1946: The Making of the Modern WorldThe West has always struggled to comprehend thebyzantine workings of Russia, not just during the Cold War but even more so in the post-communist era. This important book presents a crucial analysis of the rise of Putin and our continuing inability to read him. Few people are as well placed as Peter Conradi, whowitnessed the collapse of Communist Russia 25 years ago first hand as a Moscow correspondent, topresent such an important and revealing study as weapproachthe 100th anniversary of the Russian Revolution. This is a book to which we all need to pay attention.
-- Helen Rappaport, author of Caught in the Revolution: Petrograd 1917As NATO and the West come to terms with a Russia which, in the words of Dmitri Trenin, Director of the Moscow Carnegie Centre, believes it has been at war with the West since 2014, the risks of miscalculation and the potential for catastrophe have not been higher since the end of the Cold War. Who Lost Russia lays out, with startling clarity and precision, the steps that have led us to the present situation. Understanding is the pre-requisite for the development of strategy. This book provides that essential understanding and should be compulsory reading for our political leadership, and the policymakers who support them, together with the general reader.
-- General Sir Richard Shirreff, author of War with RussiaHow the world careened from one cold war into another with a friendly but all too brief pit stop between them is the subject of this quite wonderful book. Bringing to bear his seven years as a Moscow correspondent, and a gift for clear, sparkling prose, Peter Conradis spirited, well-informed narrative brings to life the ups and downs, colourful characters, and turning points that didnt turn along the way.
-- William Taubman, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Khrushchev: The Man and his EraPeter Conradi takesa calm, considered look atdevelopments in EastWest relationsthat threaten to divide the world. In an era of inflamedpartisan debate,heprovides the historical contextvitalfor a rational assessment ofwhere we stand and where we are headed.
-- Martin Sixsmith, author of Russia: A 1,000-Year Chronicle of the Wild EastA systematic account of Russias emergence from the wreckage of the Soviet Union with a renewed sense of authoritarian mission A cold-eyed examination of recent Russian history that seems to show that there was never a solid plan to integrate Russia into the West.
* Kirkus *Peter Conradiis the foreign editor ofTheSunday Times. During his six years as foreign correspondent in Moscow, he witnessed the USSRscollapse first-hand. His previous books includeHitlers Piano PlayerandThe Kings Speech, co-authored with Mark Logue, which inspired the Oscar-winning film. He lives in Lambeth, South London.