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Chechnya : Tombstone of Russian Power - Anatol Lieven

Chechnya

Tombstone of Russian Power

By: Anatol Lieven

Paperback | 1 July 1999 | Edition Number 1

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The war between Russia and the Chechen separatist forces, from December 1994 to August 1996, was a key moment in Russian and even world history, shedding a stark light on the end of Russia as a great military and imperial power. Anatol Lieven, a distinguished writer and political commentator, was a correspondent for the London Times in the former Soviet Union from 1990 to 1996 and was commended for his coverage of the Chechen War by the British Press Association.
In this major new work of history and analysis, Lieven sets Russia's humiliation at the hands of a tiny group of badly organized guerrillas in a plausible framework for the first time. He offers both a riveting eyewitness account of the war itself and a sophisticated and multifaceted explanation for the Russian defeat. Highlighting the numerous ways in which Russian society and culture differ today from the simplistic stereotypes still current in much of Western analysis, he explores the reasons for the current weakness of Russian nationalism both within the country and among the Russian diaspora.
In the final part of the book Lieven examines the Chechen tradition, providing the first in-depth anthropological portrait in English of this extraordinary fighting people. In his representation of the character of the Chechen nation, Lieven contributes to the continuing debate between -constructivist- and -primordialist- theories of the origins of nationalism and examines the role of both historical experience and religion in the formation of national identity.

Industry Reviews
Russia's humiliation in the Chechen war forms the basis of a nuanced argument about the end of Russian military and imperial power. Lieven, a reporter on Eastern Europe for the Financial Times, offers a compelling view of Russia's defeat in Chechnya (based on his eyewitness account of the fighting), as well as a revisionist interpretation of Russia's role as a global power. The Chechen war, maintains Lieven, is a "key moment in Russian and perhaps world history" because it has highlighted the collapse of Russia's military might and its imperial power. Throughout his study, Lieven interweaves specifics of the situation in Chechnya (background on Grozny, Dudayev, and the course of the war itself) with a broader look at Russian society (privatization, the new capitalist elites, the Russian army, the nature of Russian nationalism) and the historical roots of the Russian-Chechen conflict. A final section discusses the striking nature of the Chechen victory and raises questions about the military and larger ramifications of clashes between organized armies and rebel fighters. Of all of Lieven's challenging interpretations, the most forceful is his suggestion that Russian society has fundamentally changed, making it impossible to follow traditional Western approaches that assume lasting continuities in Russian and Soviet history. Another of Lieven's theses that deserves consideration is that today's Russia should not be compared with earlier Russian or Soviet periods, but with models of "liberal" states in Latin America and southern Europe a century ago (both in terms of national and economic development). While Lieven falls into political science jargon in these types of discussion, the comparative nature of his analysis enlivens them with thoughtful contrasts. A serious contribution to understanding both the implications of the Chechen war and the broader debate among scholars on appropriate interpretations of Russia's role in the post-Cold War period ahead of us. (Kirkus Reviews)

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