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Alexander Yakovlev

Alexander Nikolayevich Yakovlev (Russian: Алекса́ндр Никола́евич Я́ковлев; 2 December 1923 – 18 October 2005) was a Soviet and Russian politician, diplomat, and historian. A member of the Politburo and Secretariat of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union throughout the 1980s, he was termed the "godfather of glasnost",[1] and was the intellectual force behind Mikhail Gorbachev's reform programme of glasnost and perestroika.

Alexander Yakovlev
Александр Яковлев
Head of the Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
In office
5 July 1985 – March 1986
Preceded byVladimir Stepakov
Succeeded byYuri Sklyarov
Full member of the 27th Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
In office
26 June 1987 – 14 July 1990
Member of the 27th Secretariat of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
In office
6 March 1986 – 14 July 1990
Soviet Union Ambassador to Canada
In office
1 June 1973 – 29 October 1983
PremierAlexei Kosygin
Nikolai Tikhonov
Preceded byBoris Miroshnichenko [ru]
Succeeded byAleksei A. Rodionov
Personal details
Born(1923-12-02)2 December 1923
Korolyovo, Yaroslavl Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
(now Russia)
Died18 October 2005(2005-10-18) (aged 81)
Moscow, Russia
Political partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (1944–1991)
Russian Party of Social Democracy (1995–2002)
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Soviet Union
Branch/serviceSoviet Navy
Years of service1941–1943
Battles/wars

Born into a rural family, Yakovlev served as a platoon commander of a marine brigade during World War II, and became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union following the war. During the rule of Nikita Khrushchev, he became a member of the Central Committee of the CPSU, before resigning to study abroad as part of the Fulbright Programme, returning in 1960. Under Leonid Brezhnev, he became Deputy Head of Agitprop and was placed in charge of a group on creating the 1977 Constitution of the Soviet Union. He was later demoted to ambassador to Canada, in response to his public opposition to ethnic nationalism within the Soviet Union.

In the early 1980s, Yakovlev returned to the Soviet Union, and became a prominent supporter of Mikhail Gorbachev's proposed reforms. In response to his perceived importance in the reforms, he came under attack from hardliners such as Alexander Lebed and Gennady Zyuganov, eventually resigning two days prior to the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt. During the coup attempt, Yakovlev was a supporter of pro-democratic forces, and later became a supporter of Boris Yeltsin before turning against his successor, Vladimir Putin, in response to democratic backsliding which occurred during Putin's presidency.

Early life and education edit

The first child of five, Yakovlev was born to a peasant family in a small village called Korolyovo, on the Volga River, near Yaroslavl. He had four sisters, two of whom died in infancy. His father, Nikolai Alekseyevich Yakovlev, only attended school for four years, and his mother, Agafiya Mikhailovna, for three months. Yakovlev was sickly in childhood and suffered from scrofula. His father served in the Red Cavalry during the Russian Civil War and was a devoted communist; he became the first chairman of a local collective farm. Their house was set ablaze while he was seven, and the family moved to Krasnye Tkachi.

World War II service edit

Yakovlev graduated from secondary school days before Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union. He was drafted into the Soviet Navy in November 1941, with brief training, and became part of the Soviet Marine Corps [ru]. He served as a platoon commander of the 6th Marine Brigade of the Baltic Fleet [ru], on the Volkhov Front during the Siege of Leningrad.[2] On 6 August 1942, he was leading 30 Chuvash soldiers and was ordered to charge German positions in Vinyagolovo near Leningrad and was badly wounded.[3] He was hospitalised until February 1943, and was subsequently demobilised.[2] He became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1944. At this time he regarded the Communist Party as "life's truth", and affirmed he was totally loyal and faithful to Soviet Union, and he was an ardent admirer of Joseph Stalin.

Stalin and Khrushchev periods edit

In September 1945, he resumed education at the Yaroslavl Pedagogical Institute [ru] to study history. On September 8, 1945, he married Nina Ivanovna Smirnova. He graduated the same year and went to Moscow to attend the Higher Party School. In November 1946, he was appointed the instructor of the Department of Propaganda and Agitation in Yaroslavl, a post he held for a year and a half. Shortly after this, he had his first doubts about the regime, when he was shocked to see train after train carrying Soviet ex-prisoners-of-war being sent to labour camps. At the Vspolye train station, he saw weeping women and was dismayed at how they were treated. This memory troubled him deeply and never left him.

In March 1953, shortly after Stalin's death, he was assigned to the party's Central Committee as an instructor in the department of schools. On 25 February 1956, Khrushchev's Secret Speech became the most traumatic event in Yakovlev's early Moscow life; he listened to the speech from a balcony in the Grand Kremlin Palace. After the 20th Party Congress, Yakovlev lost his previous enthusiasm for communism and led a double life. He wanted to turn to the original sources on Communism—Marx, Engels, Lenin, German philosophers, French and Italian socialists and British economists. He asked to leave the Central Committee to enroll in the Academy of Social Sciences of the Central Committee. While twice refused, he was finally allowed to study there for two years and became convinced that Marxism-Leninism was hollow, impractical, and inhumane, as well as a prognostic fraud. This healed his internal political conflict following the 20th Party Congress. He began to agree with Khrushchev.[citation needed]

Studies at Columbia University edit

Beginning in 1958, he was chosen as a exchange student at Columbia University in the United States for one year, as part of the Fulbright Programme.[4] Of the seventeen Soviet students, fourteen were selected by the KGB. Yakovlev and three others, including Oleg Kalugin, went to Columbia. All other students besides Yakovlev were members of the KGB. He intensively studied the English language, Roosevelt and the New Deal, drawing connections between the United States at that time and the Soviet Union. At the end, in May 1959, the Soviet visitors were taken on a thirty-day tour of the United States, during which he stayed with families from Vermont, Chicago and Iowa. However, his year in America did little to assuage his anti-Americanism because of the greed, racism, and other things that he witnessed. Yakovlev returned to the Central Committee to work on ideology and propaganda, and published several anti-American books. He defended a dissertation dealing with the historiography of US foreign policy, and received the degree of kandidat nauk, the equivalent of a doctorate, in July 1960.

Early political career and exile edit

In July 1965, he was appointed the first deputy head of the Propaganda Department of the Central Committee of the CPSU by Leonid Brezhnev. In August 1968, Yakovlev was sent to Prague as the representative of Central Committee, and witnessed the entry of tanks into the city. He later spoke out against removing Alexander Dubček. That same year, he was placed in command of a group charged with drafting a new constitution.[5] Yakovlev served as editor of several party publications and rose to the key position of head of the CPSU's Department of Ideology and Propaganda from 1969 to 1973. In January 1970, he visited the United States again, meeting then-Governor of California Ronald Reagan, diplomat Henry Kissinger, and actress Jane Fonda, who warned him that Moscow "did not appreciate the full danger of American militarism". This trip, again, failed to change his unfavourable impression of the United States.

Exile to Canada edit

In 1972, he took a bold stand by publishing the article entitled "Against Antihistoricism"[6] in Literaturnaya Gazeta, critical of Russian nationalism, and nationalism in the Soviet Union in general. As a result, he was removed from his position. Given the choice of a diplomatic post as a form of exile, he chose to be the ambassador to Canada, remaining at that post for a decade.[4] He arrived in Canada in July 1973. During this time, he and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau became close friends. Trudeau's second son, Alexandre Trudeau, was named after Yakovlev.[7]

From 16 to 23 May 1983, Yakovlev accompanied Mikhail Gorbachev, who at the time was the Soviet official in charge of agriculture, on his tour of Canada. The purpose of the visit was to tour Canadian farms and agricultural institutions, in the hopes of taking lessons that could be applied in the Soviet Union. However, the two also renewed their earlier friendship and, tentatively at first, began to discuss the prospect of liberalisation in the Soviet Union.

In an interview years later, Yakovlev recalled:

At first we kind of sniffed around each other and our conversations didn't touch on serious issues. And then, verily, history plays tricks on one, we had a lot of time together as guests of then Liberal Minister of Agriculture Eugene Whelan in Canada who, himself, was too late for the reception because he was stuck with some striking farmers somewhere. So we took a long walk on that Minister's farm and, as it often happens, both of us suddenly were just kind of flooded and let go. I somehow, for some reason, threw caution to the wind and started telling him about what I considered to be utter stupidities in the area of foreign affairs, especially about those SS-20 missiles that were being stationed in Europe and a lot of other things. And he did the same thing. We were completely frank. He frankly talked about the problems in the internal situation in Russia. He was saying that under these conditions, the conditions of dictatorship and absence of freedom, the country would simply perish. So it was at that time, during our three-hour conversation, almost as if our heads were knocked together, that we poured it all out and during that three-hour conversation we actually came to agreement on all our main points.[8]

Return to the Soviet Union edit

Two weeks after the visit, as a result of Gorbachev's interventions, Yakovlev was recalled from Canada by Yuri Andropov and became Director of the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union in Moscow on 16 August 1983; he was succeeded by his friend Yevgeny Primakov (himself later Prime Minister of Russia) in 1985. Although he was impressed with Canada's free, competitive economy—especially in agriculture, a weak part of the Soviet economy—and the benefits of rule of law, Yakovlev published a booklet called Poor Santa Claus, or the Police Eye of Democracy allegedly exposing Canadian totalitarian practices under the pseudonym N. Agashin. It claimed, among other things, that capitalism created "its sanitary serve - a system of repression, intimidation and terror", that the Canadian government "brainwashed its citizens", that the United States "tyrannised its neighbour", and that Canada was a totalitarian police state.

Perestroika edit

 
Mikhail Gorbachev and Yakovlev opposite United States President George H. W. Bush on board the SS Maxim Gorkiy at the 1989 Malta Summit.

When Gorbachev became General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1985, Yakovlev became a senior advisor, helping to shape Soviet foreign policy by advocating Soviet non-intervention in Eastern Europe, and accompanying Gorbachev on his five summit meetings with President of the United States Ronald Reagan. In the summer of 1985, Yakovlev became head of the propaganda department of the CPSU Central Committee. Domestically, he argued in favour of the reform programmes that became known as glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring) and played a key role in executing those policies.

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.[9]

— Yakovlev, in the introduction to "Black Book of Communism"

In 1987, the Russian neo-Nazi organization Pamyat sent a letter entitled "Stop Yakovlev!" to the plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, labelling Yakovlev as a Jew and the main instigator of a course of action that would lead to the 'capitulation before the imperialists'.[10]

For decades, it was the official policy of the Soviet Union to deny the existence of the secret protocol to the Nazi–Soviet Pact. At the behest of Mikhail Gorbachev, Yakovlev headed a commission investigating the existence of such a protocol. In December 1989 Yakovlev concluded that the protocol had existed and revealed his findings to the Soviet Parliament. As a result, the first multi-party elected Congress of Soviets since 1918 "passed the declaration admitting the existence of the secret protocols, condemning and denouncing them".[11]

Downfall and later life edit

He was promoted to the Politburo in 1987, but by 1990 he had become the focus of attacks by hardliner communists in the party opposed to liberalisation. At the 28th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in July 1990, a cynical Alexander Lebed caused uproar when he asked Yakovlev: "Alexander Nikolayevich... How many faces have you got?" An embarrassed Yakovlev consulted his colleagues and continued on with the proceedings, but resigned from the Politburo the day after the congress concluded.[12][13] As the communists opposed to liberalisation gained strength, his position became more tenuous; fiercely attacked by his former protégé Gennady Zyuganov in May 1991, he resigned from the CPSU two days before the August Coup in 1991. During the coup, Yakovlev joined the democratic opposition against it. Following the failed coup attempt, Yakovlev blamed Gorbachev for having been naïve in bringing the plotters into his inner circle, saying Gorbachev was "guilty of forming a team of traitors. Why did he surround himself with people capable of treason?"[14]

In his book Inside the Stalin Archives (2008), Jonathan Brent relates that in 1991, when there were Lithuanian crowds demonstrating for independence from the Soviet Union, Gorbachev consulted Yakovlev about the wisdom of an armed repression against them. Gorbachev asked, "Should we shoot?" Yakovlev answered that, "if a single Soviet soldier fired a single bullet on the unarmed crowds, Soviet power would be over." Despite Yakovlev's warnings, the Soviet Union proceeded to invade Lithuania following its declaration of independence, and the Soviet Union collapsed seven months later.[3]

 
Yakovlev, as the head of the Commission on the Rehabilitation of Soviet Repression Victims, meets President Vladimir Putin

Yakovlev led Boris Yeltsin's commission for the rehabilitation of victims of Soviet political repression.[15] In the years following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Yakovlev wrote and lectured extensively on history, politics and economics. He acted as the leader of the Russian Party of Social Democracy, which in the mid-1990s fused into the United Democrats, a pro-reform alliance that was later reorganised into the Union of Right Forces. In 2002, acting as head of the Presidential Committee for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Political Repression, he was present at the announcement of the release of a CD detailing names and short biographies of the victims of Soviet purges. In his later life, he founded and led the International Democracy Foundation. He advocated taking responsibility for the past crimes of communism and was critical of President Vladimir Putin's restrictions on democracy.[16]

In 2000, he publicly alleged that Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, who became famous for his role in saving thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Holocaust, was shot and killed in Soviet secret police headquarters in 1947.[17] He was called "God's commie" in a 2002 article for investigating crimes of the Soviet state.[18]

Honours and awards edit

Publications edit

  • Alexander N. Yakovlev and Abel G. Aganbegyan, Perestroika, 1989, Scribner (1989), trade paperback, ISBN 0-684-19117-2
  • Alexander Yakovlev, USSR the Decisive Years, First Glance Books (1991), hardcover, ISBN 1-55013-410-8
  • Alexander Yakovlev, translated by Catherine A. Fitzpatrick, The Fate of Marxism in Russia, Yale University Press (1993), hardcover, ISBN 0-300-05365-7; trade paperback, Lightning Source, UK, Ltd. (17 November 2004) ISBN 0-300-10540-1
  • Alexander N. Yakovlev, foreword by Paul Hollander, translated by Anthony Austin, Century of Violence in Soviet Russia, Yale University Press (2002), hardcover, 254 pages, ISBN 0-300-08760-8; trade paperback, Yale University Press (2002), 272 pages, ISBN 0-300-10322-0
  • A. N. Yakovlev, Горькая чаша (Bitter Cup), Yaroslavl, 1994.
  • A. N. Yakovlev, Сумерки (Time of Darkness - lit. "Dusk"), Moscow, 2003, 688 pages, ISBN 5-85646-097-9
  • Alexander N. Yakovlev, Digging Out: How Russia Liberated Itself from the Soviet Union, Encounter Books (December 1, 2004), hardcover, 375 pages, ISBN 1-59403-055-3

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Archived from the original on 20 October 2005. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b Yakovlev, Aleksandr (1990). Кто есть кто в мировой политике [Who's Who in World Politics] (in Russian). Politizdat. p. 550. ISBN 5250005136.
  3. ^ a b Walker, Martin (23 January 2003). "Paper Trail". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  4. ^ a b Keller, Bill. "Moscow's other Mastermind: Aleksandr Yakovlev", New York Times Magazine, February 19, 1989, pp.30-33, 40-43. ISSN 0362-4331.
  5. ^ "Конституция (Основной Закон) Союза Советских Социалистических Республик 1977 г." [Constitution (Basic Law) of the Union of Soviet Socialists Republics, 1977]. P. A. Stolypin Museum of the Russian History of Reforms (in Russian). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  6. ^ Александр Яковлев Против антиисторизма 2015-12-05 at the Wayback Machine - Литературная газета», 15 ноября 1972 г
  7. ^ Taber, Jane (4 January 2007). "Le nouveau Trudeau: Little PET weighs in at 7 pounds 4 ounces". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  8. ^ "Shaping Russia's Transformation: A Leader of Perestroika Looks Back - Interview with Aleksandr Yakovlev". Institute of International Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. 21 November 1996. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
  9. ^ . agitclub.ru. Archived from the original on 4 November 2020.
  10. ^ «Остановите Яковлева!» Листовка—обращение Координационного Совета Патриотического Движения «Память» к Пленуму Центрального Комитета Коммунистической Партии Советского Союза
  11. ^ Jerzy W. Borejsza, Klaus Ziemer, Magdalena Hułas. Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes in Europe, p. 521. Berghahn Books, 2006.
  12. ^ Times Wire Services. "Six Quitting the Politburo: Exits Laid to Lessening of Party's Role". 3 July 1990.
  13. ^ Tom Carver (16 November 1996). "General in Exile". Assignment. 45 minutes in. BBC2.
  14. ^ globeandmail.com by Vladimir Isachenkov. Retrieved 2005-10-18
  15. ^ "Obituary: A. Yakovlev, champion of Soviet change, 81". The New York Times. October 18, 2005. ISSN 0362-4331.
  16. ^ Feifer, Gregory (7 November 2002). . Center for Defense Information. Archived from the original on 15 October 2004. Retrieved 12 October 2004.
  17. ^ Calamur, Krishnadev (28 May 2012). "Russia Denies It's Hiding Details Of Holocaust Hero Raoul Wallenberg's Fate". National Public Radio. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  18. ^ Pryce-Jones, David (2002). "God's Commie: The ongoing achievement of Alexander Yakovlev". National Review. 54 (24): 24–26.
  19. ^ "Joseph Nye Testifies Before Congress on U.S. Security Strategy Post-9/11". John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. 6 November 2007. from the original on 5 July 2008.

Further reading edit

  • Christopher Shulgan, The Soviet Ambassador: The Making of the Radical Behind Perestroika, McClelland and Stewart (June 10, 2008), Hardcover, ISBN 978-0-7710-7996-2 (0-7710-7996-6), 288 pages.
  • Richard Pipes, Alexander Yakovlev: The Man Whose Ideas Delivered Russia from Communism, NIU Press, 2017, ISBN 978-0-87580-748-5 151 pages.
  • Alexander Ostrovsky, Кто поставил Горбачёва? (Who put Gorbachev?) 7 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine — М.: Алгоритм-Эксмо, 2010. — 544 с. ISBN 978-5-699-40627-2.
  • Alexander Ostrovsky, Глупость или измена? Расследование гибели СССР. (Stupidity or treason? Investigation of the death of the USSR) 30 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine М.: Форум, Крымский мост-9Д, 2011. — 864 с. ISBN 978-5-89747-068-6.

External links edit

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For other individuals with the same name see Alexander Yakovlev disambiguation In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Nikolayevich and the family name is Yakovlev This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander Yakovlev news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexander Nikolayevich Yakovlev Russian Aleksa ndr Nikola evich Ya kovlev 2 December 1923 18 October 2005 was a Soviet and Russian politician diplomat and historian A member of the Politburo and Secretariat of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union throughout the 1980s he was termed the godfather of glasnost 1 and was the intellectual force behind Mikhail Gorbachev s reform programme of glasnost and perestroika Alexander YakovlevAleksandr YakovlevHead of the Propaganda Department of the Communist Party of the Soviet UnionIn office 5 July 1985 March 1986Preceded byVladimir StepakovSucceeded byYuri SklyarovFull member of the 27th Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet UnionIn office 26 June 1987 14 July 1990Member of the 27th Secretariat of the Communist Party of the Soviet UnionIn office 6 March 1986 14 July 1990Soviet Union Ambassador to CanadaIn office 1 June 1973 29 October 1983PremierAlexei KosyginNikolai TikhonovPreceded byBoris Miroshnichenko ru Succeeded byAleksei A RodionovPersonal detailsBorn 1923 12 02 2 December 1923Korolyovo Yaroslavl Oblast Russian SFSR Soviet Union now Russia Died18 October 2005 2005 10 18 aged 81 Moscow RussiaPolitical partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union 1944 1991 Russian Party of Social Democracy 1995 2002 SignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance Soviet UnionBranch serviceSoviet NavyYears of service1941 1943Battles warsWorld War II Eastern Front Siege of LeningradBorn into a rural family Yakovlev served as a platoon commander of a marine brigade during World War II and became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union following the war During the rule of Nikita Khrushchev he became a member of the Central Committee of the CPSU before resigning to study abroad as part of the Fulbright Programme returning in 1960 Under Leonid Brezhnev he became Deputy Head of Agitprop and was placed in charge of a group on creating the 1977 Constitution of the Soviet Union He was later demoted to ambassador to Canada in response to his public opposition to ethnic nationalism within the Soviet Union In the early 1980s Yakovlev returned to the Soviet Union and became a prominent supporter of Mikhail Gorbachev s proposed reforms In response to his perceived importance in the reforms he came under attack from hardliners such as Alexander Lebed and Gennady Zyuganov eventually resigning two days prior to the 1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt During the coup attempt Yakovlev was a supporter of pro democratic forces and later became a supporter of Boris Yeltsin before turning against his successor Vladimir Putin in response to democratic backsliding which occurred during Putin s presidency Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 World War II service 1 2 Stalin and Khrushchev periods 1 3 Studies at Columbia University 2 Early political career and exile 2 1 Exile to Canada 2 2 Return to the Soviet Union 3 Perestroika 4 Downfall and later life 5 Honours and awards 6 Publications 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and education editThe first child of five Yakovlev was born to a peasant family in a small village called Korolyovo on the Volga River near Yaroslavl He had four sisters two of whom died in infancy His father Nikolai Alekseyevich Yakovlev only attended school for four years and his mother Agafiya Mikhailovna for three months Yakovlev was sickly in childhood and suffered from scrofula His father served in the Red Cavalry during the Russian Civil War and was a devoted communist he became the first chairman of a local collective farm Their house was set ablaze while he was seven and the family moved to Krasnye Tkachi World War II service edit Yakovlev graduated from secondary school days before Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union He was drafted into the Soviet Navy in November 1941 with brief training and became part of the Soviet Marine Corps ru He served as a platoon commander of the 6th Marine Brigade of the Baltic Fleet ru on the Volkhov Front during the Siege of Leningrad 2 On 6 August 1942 he was leading 30 Chuvash soldiers and was ordered to charge German positions in Vinyagolovo near Leningrad and was badly wounded 3 He was hospitalised until February 1943 and was subsequently demobilised 2 He became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1944 At this time he regarded the Communist Party as life s truth and affirmed he was totally loyal and faithful to Soviet Union and he was an ardent admirer of Joseph Stalin Stalin and Khrushchev periods edit In September 1945 he resumed education at the Yaroslavl Pedagogical Institute ru to study history On September 8 1945 he married Nina Ivanovna Smirnova He graduated the same year and went to Moscow to attend the Higher Party School In November 1946 he was appointed the instructor of the Department of Propaganda and Agitation in Yaroslavl a post he held for a year and a half Shortly after this he had his first doubts about the regime when he was shocked to see train after train carrying Soviet ex prisoners of war being sent to labour camps At the Vspolye train station he saw weeping women and was dismayed at how they were treated This memory troubled him deeply and never left him In March 1953 shortly after Stalin s death he was assigned to the party s Central Committee as an instructor in the department of schools On 25 February 1956 Khrushchev s Secret Speech became the most traumatic event in Yakovlev s early Moscow life he listened to the speech from a balcony in the Grand Kremlin Palace After the 20th Party Congress Yakovlev lost his previous enthusiasm for communism and led a double life He wanted to turn to the original sources on Communism Marx Engels Lenin German philosophers French and Italian socialists and British economists He asked to leave the Central Committee to enroll in the Academy of Social Sciences of the Central Committee While twice refused he was finally allowed to study there for two years and became convinced that Marxism Leninism was hollow impractical and inhumane as well as a prognostic fraud This healed his internal political conflict following the 20th Party Congress He began to agree with Khrushchev citation needed Studies at Columbia University edit Beginning in 1958 he was chosen as a exchange student at Columbia University in the United States for one year as part of the Fulbright Programme 4 Of the seventeen Soviet students fourteen were selected by the KGB Yakovlev and three others including Oleg Kalugin went to Columbia All other students besides Yakovlev were members of the KGB He intensively studied the English language Roosevelt and the New Deal drawing connections between the United States at that time and the Soviet Union At the end in May 1959 the Soviet visitors were taken on a thirty day tour of the United States during which he stayed with families from Vermont Chicago and Iowa However his year in America did little to assuage his anti Americanism because of the greed racism and other things that he witnessed Yakovlev returned to the Central Committee to work on ideology and propaganda and published several anti American books He defended a dissertation dealing with the historiography of US foreign policy and received the degree of kandidat nauk the equivalent of a doctorate in July 1960 Early political career and exile editIn July 1965 he was appointed the first deputy head of the Propaganda Department of the Central Committee of the CPSU by Leonid Brezhnev In August 1968 Yakovlev was sent to Prague as the representative of Central Committee and witnessed the entry of tanks into the city He later spoke out against removing Alexander Dubcek That same year he was placed in command of a group charged with drafting a new constitution 5 Yakovlev served as editor of several party publications and rose to the key position of head of the CPSU s Department of Ideology and Propaganda from 1969 to 1973 In January 1970 he visited the United States again meeting then Governor of California Ronald Reagan diplomat Henry Kissinger and actress Jane Fonda who warned him that Moscow did not appreciate the full danger of American militarism This trip again failed to change his unfavourable impression of the United States Exile to Canada edit In 1972 he took a bold stand by publishing the article entitled Against Antihistoricism 6 in Literaturnaya Gazeta critical of Russian nationalism and nationalism in the Soviet Union in general As a result he was removed from his position Given the choice of a diplomatic post as a form of exile he chose to be the ambassador to Canada remaining at that post for a decade 4 He arrived in Canada in July 1973 During this time he and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau became close friends Trudeau s second son Alexandre Trudeau was named after Yakovlev 7 From 16 to 23 May 1983 Yakovlev accompanied Mikhail Gorbachev who at the time was the Soviet official in charge of agriculture on his tour of Canada The purpose of the visit was to tour Canadian farms and agricultural institutions in the hopes of taking lessons that could be applied in the Soviet Union However the two also renewed their earlier friendship and tentatively at first began to discuss the prospect of liberalisation in the Soviet Union In an interview years later Yakovlev recalled At first we kind of sniffed around each other and our conversations didn t touch on serious issues And then verily history plays tricks on one we had a lot of time together as guests of then Liberal Minister of Agriculture Eugene Whelan in Canada who himself was too late for the reception because he was stuck with some striking farmers somewhere So we took a long walk on that Minister s farm and as it often happens both of us suddenly were just kind of flooded and let go I somehow for some reason threw caution to the wind and started telling him about what I considered to be utter stupidities in the area of foreign affairs especially about those SS 20 missiles that were being stationed in Europe and a lot of other things And he did the same thing We were completely frank He frankly talked about the problems in the internal situation in Russia He was saying that under these conditions the conditions of dictatorship and absence of freedom the country would simply perish So it was at that time during our three hour conversation almost as if our heads were knocked together that we poured it all out and during that three hour conversation we actually came to agreement on all our main points 8 Return to the Soviet Union edit Two weeks after the visit as a result of Gorbachev s interventions Yakovlev was recalled from Canada by Yuri Andropov and became Director of the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union in Moscow on 16 August 1983 he was succeeded by his friend Yevgeny Primakov himself later Prime Minister of Russia in 1985 Although he was impressed with Canada s free competitive economy especially in agriculture a weak part of the Soviet economy and the benefits of rule of law Yakovlev published a booklet called Poor Santa Claus or the Police Eye of Democracy allegedly exposing Canadian totalitarian practices under the pseudonym N Agashin It claimed among other things that capitalism created its sanitary serve a system of repression intimidation and terror that the Canadian government brainwashed its citizens that the United States tyrannised its neighbour and that Canada was a totalitarian police state Perestroika edit nbsp Mikhail Gorbachev and Yakovlev opposite United States President George H W Bush on board the SS Maxim Gorkiy at the 1989 Malta Summit When Gorbachev became General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1985 Yakovlev became a senior advisor helping to shape Soviet foreign policy by advocating Soviet non intervention in Eastern Europe and accompanying Gorbachev on his five summit meetings with President of the United States Ronald Reagan In the summer of 1985 Yakovlev became head of the propaganda department of the CPSU Central Committee Domestically he argued in favour of the reform programmes that became known as glasnost openness and perestroika restructuring and played a key role in executing those policies 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 9 Yakovlev in the introduction to Black Book of Communism In 1987 the Russian neo Nazi organization Pamyat sent a letter entitled Stop Yakovlev to the plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union labelling Yakovlev as a Jew and the main instigator of a course of action that would lead to the capitulation before the imperialists 10 For decades it was the official policy of the Soviet Union to deny the existence of the secret protocol to the Nazi Soviet Pact At the behest of Mikhail Gorbachev Yakovlev headed a commission investigating the existence of such a protocol In December 1989 Yakovlev concluded that the protocol had existed and revealed his findings to the Soviet Parliament As a result the first multi party elected Congress of Soviets since 1918 passed the declaration admitting the existence of the secret protocols condemning and denouncing them 11 Downfall and later life editHe was promoted to the Politburo in 1987 but by 1990 he had become the focus of attacks by hardliner communists in the party opposed to liberalisation At the 28th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in July 1990 a cynical Alexander Lebed caused uproar when he asked Yakovlev Alexander Nikolayevich How many faces have you got An embarrassed Yakovlev consulted his colleagues and continued on with the proceedings but resigned from the Politburo the day after the congress concluded 12 13 As the communists opposed to liberalisation gained strength his position became more tenuous fiercely attacked by his former protege Gennady Zyuganov in May 1991 he resigned from the CPSU two days before the August Coup in 1991 During the coup Yakovlev joined the democratic opposition against it Following the failed coup attempt Yakovlev blamed Gorbachev for having been naive in bringing the plotters into his inner circle saying Gorbachev was guilty of forming a team of traitors Why did he surround himself with people capable of treason 14 In his book Inside the Stalin Archives 2008 Jonathan Brent relates that in 1991 when there were Lithuanian crowds demonstrating for independence from the Soviet Union Gorbachev consulted Yakovlev about the wisdom of an armed repression against them Gorbachev asked Should we shoot Yakovlev answered that if a single Soviet soldier fired a single bullet on the unarmed crowds Soviet power would be over Despite Yakovlev s warnings the Soviet Union proceeded to invade Lithuania following its declaration of independence and the Soviet Union collapsed seven months later 3 nbsp Yakovlev as the head of the Commission on the Rehabilitation of Soviet Repression Victims meets President Vladimir PutinYakovlev led Boris Yeltsin s commission for the rehabilitation of victims of Soviet political repression 15 In the years following the dissolution of the Soviet Union Yakovlev wrote and lectured extensively on history politics and economics He acted as the leader of the Russian Party of Social Democracy which in the mid 1990s fused into the United Democrats a pro reform alliance that was later reorganised into the Union of Right Forces In 2002 acting as head of the Presidential Committee for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Political Repression he was present at the announcement of the release of a CD detailing names and short biographies of the victims of Soviet purges In his later life he founded and led the International Democracy Foundation He advocated taking responsibility for the past crimes of communism and was critical of President Vladimir Putin s restrictions on democracy 16 In 2000 he publicly alleged that Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg who became famous for his role in saving thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Holocaust was shot and killed in Soviet secret police headquarters in 1947 17 He was called God s commie in a 2002 article for investigating crimes of the Soviet state 18 Honours and awards editOrder of Merit for the Fatherland 2nd class Order of the October Revolution Order of the Red Banner Order of the Patriotic War 1st class Order of the Red Banner of Labour three times Order of Friendship of Peoples Order of the Red Star Order of Venerable Sergius of Radonezh ru 3rd class Russian Orthodox Church 1997 Great Officers Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany Commander of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland Commander of the Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas Lithuania Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Three Stars Latvia Grand Cross of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana Estonia Collar of the Order of the Liberator Venezuela Publications editAlexander N Yakovlev and Abel G Aganbegyan Perestroika 1989 Scribner 1989 trade paperback ISBN 0 684 19117 2 Alexander Yakovlev USSR the Decisive Years First Glance Books 1991 hardcover ISBN 1 55013 410 8 Alexander Yakovlev translated by Catherine A Fitzpatrick The Fate of Marxism in Russia Yale University Press 1993 hardcover ISBN 0 300 05365 7 trade paperback Lightning Source UK Ltd 17 November 2004 ISBN 0 300 10540 1 Alexander N Yakovlev foreword by Paul Hollander translated by Anthony Austin Century of Violence in Soviet Russia Yale University Press 2002 hardcover 254 pages ISBN 0 300 08760 8 trade paperback Yale University Press 2002 272 pages ISBN 0 300 10322 0 A N Yakovlev Gorkaya chasha Bitter Cup Yaroslavl 1994 A N Yakovlev Sumerki Time of Darkness lit Dusk Moscow 2003 688 pages ISBN 5 85646 097 9 Alexander N Yakovlev Digging Out How Russia Liberated Itself from the Soviet Union Encounter Books December 1 2004 hardcover 375 pages ISBN 1 59403 055 3See also editJoseph S Nye Jr former dean of Harvard Kennedy School considers Yakovlev s story a prime example of the importance of soft power in resolving international conflicts such as in Yakovlev s case the Cold War 19 References edit Alexander Yakovlev 81 The Globe and Mail Toronto Archived from the original on 20 October 2005 Retrieved 24 May 2013 a b Yakovlev Aleksandr 1990 Kto est kto v mirovoj politike Who s Who in World Politics in Russian Politizdat p 550 ISBN 5250005136 a b Walker Martin 23 January 2003 Paper Trail The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 a b Keller Bill Moscow s other Mastermind Aleksandr Yakovlev New York Times Magazine February 19 1989 pp 30 33 40 43 ISSN 0362 4331 Konstituciya Osnovnoj Zakon Soyuza Sovetskih Socialisticheskih Respublik 1977 g Constitution Basic Law of the Union of Soviet Socialists Republics 1977 P A Stolypin Museum of the Russian History of Reforms in Russian Retrieved 21 July 2022 Aleksandr Yakovlev Protiv antiistorizma Archived 2015 12 05 at the Wayback Machine Literaturnaya gazeta 15 noyabrya 1972 g Taber Jane 4 January 2007 Le nouveau Trudeau Little PET weighs in at 7 pounds 4 ounces The Globe and Mail Retrieved 21 July 2022 Shaping Russia s Transformation A Leader of Perestroika Looks Back Interview with Aleksandr Yakovlev Institute of International Studies at the University of California Berkeley 21 November 1996 Retrieved 21 February 2013 ChERNAYa KNIGA KOMMUNIZMA agitclub ru Archived from the original on 4 November 2020 Ostanovite Yakovleva Listovka obrashenie Koordinacionnogo Soveta Patrioticheskogo Dvizheniya Pamyat k Plenumu Centralnogo Komiteta Kommunisticheskoj Partii Sovetskogo Soyuza Jerzy W Borejsza Klaus Ziemer Magdalena Hulas Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes in Europe p 521 Berghahn Books 2006 Times Wire Services Six Quitting the Politburo Exits Laid to Lessening of Party s Role 3 July 1990 Tom Carver 16 November 1996 General in Exile Assignment 45 minutes in BBC2 globeandmail com by Vladimir Isachenkov Retrieved 2005 10 18 Obituary A Yakovlev champion of Soviet change 81 The New York Times October 18 2005 ISSN 0362 4331 Feifer Gregory 7 November 2002 Russia Rights Group Marks Bolshevik Anniversary With Catalog Of Soviet Repressions Center for Defense Information Archived from the original on 15 October 2004 Retrieved 12 October 2004 Calamur Krishnadev 28 May 2012 Russia Denies It s Hiding Details Of Holocaust Hero Raoul Wallenberg s Fate National Public Radio Retrieved 21 July 2022 Pryce Jones David 2002 God s Commie The ongoing achievement of Alexander Yakovlev National Review 54 24 24 26 Joseph Nye Testifies Before Congress on U S Security Strategy Post 9 11 John F Kennedy School of Government Harvard University 6 November 2007 Archived from the original on 5 July 2008 Further reading editChristopher Shulgan The Soviet Ambassador The Making of the Radical Behind Perestroika McClelland and Stewart June 10 2008 Hardcover ISBN 978 0 7710 7996 2 0 7710 7996 6 288 pages Richard Pipes Alexander Yakovlev The Man Whose Ideas Delivered Russia from Communism NIU Press 2017 ISBN 978 0 87580 748 5 151 pages Alexander Ostrovsky Kto postavil Gorbachyova Who put Gorbachev Archived 7 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine M Algoritm Eksmo 2010 544 s ISBN 978 5 699 40627 2 Alexander Ostrovsky Glupost ili izmena Rassledovanie gibeli SSSR Stupidity or treason Investigation of the death of the USSR Archived 30 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine M Forum Krymskij most 9D 2011 864 s ISBN 978 5 89747 068 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev http www alexanderyakovlev org Alexander Yakovlev foundation website http globetrotter berkeley edu Elberg Yakovlev yak con0 html Archived 26 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Interview with Alexander Yakovlev http globetrotter berkeley edu Elberg Yakovlev yak elb1 html Archived 10 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Full text of a 1993 lecture by Yakovlev http www nytimes com 2005 10 19 international europe 19yakovlev html Obituary in The New York Times http news bbc co uk 2 hi europe 4353766 stm BBC Perestroika architect dies at 81 https www theguardian com russia article 0 2763 1595945 00 html Alexander Yakovlev Interview with Christopher Shulgan author of The Soviet Ambassador June 29 2008 http www thecommentary ca ontheline 20080630a html Audio interview with Christopher Shulgan re The Soviet Ambassador June 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Yakovlev amp oldid 1182702790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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