ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI IS DEAD #ZbigniewBrzezinski #RIP #JimmyCarter #nationalsecurityadviser #TemplateNews #DistantEchoes #NayabChohanLIVEย
27 Saturday May 2017
27 Saturday May 2017
24 Wednesday Dec 2014
TEMPLATE ANALYSIS
Christmas Day is the season for good will and cheer, but not much of that was evident in 1989 when Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena were put before a firing squad. For they were the hated leaders of the Communist state that was Romania and were put to death after a hasty trial that followed mass protests – for the people of Eastern Europe no longer wished to be protected by the Soviet Union, they desired to be free. And one by one the dominoes fell as the Cold War came to an end and Communism became a failed and relegated ideology.
As we witnessed the astonishing scenes unfolding on our television screens twenty five years ago, no one asked the question – what would come next? Today, it is not uncommon to meet young Romanians for whom the era under Ceausescu was something of a golden age when compared to hardship of life in the modern capitalist west. For despite all the ills of the Communist leadership which clamped down on dissent, political or otherwise, that was paranoid about security, it did offer a social programme where everyone from the man at the top to the man who swept the street was equal in the eyes of the state. Communism believed in society and offered jobs to all – even those gypsies that are so hated in Britain and who have suffered the most from the fall of Soviet Union, and who now had no means of supporting themselves as the state was no longer there to protect them. Of course Romanians, Bulgarians and Poles before them are all part of the European Union but they have found obstacles and prejudice on the way to this brave new world that is paved with hardship and many many untold stories of cruelty and suffering. Here, in Britain it is not uncommon to notice Romanian girls selling themselves on the street, like others from the newly freed Eastern bloc. No one seems to ask or care how they got there for that is the nature of freedom, the freedom that put an elderly Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena before a firing squad, a freedom that came into being in Romania on Christmas Day 1989.
22 Thursday Dec 2011
Tags
Cold War, Distant Echoes, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Politics ๐ผ ๐ณ ๐ช, Putin, Putin and Russia, Russia and the Soviet Union, Russia ๐ท๐บ, Soviet Union, Template News, USA ๐บ๐ธ, USSR, Vladimir Putin
With the twentieth anniversary of the collapse of the Soviet Union approaching, many have been offering their thoughts as to how this superpower met her end, how was it that on Christmas Day 1991 Mikhail Gorbachev appeared on television to tell his people that he had resigned as their president.
A British ambassador for Moscow, from 1988 to 1992, charted her decline from the 1960s, she was falling behindย to her rival and had to rely on high oil prices for the next 15 years, Rodric Braithwaite observed in the Financial Times.
Many Russians from that period would tell you that things weren’t as bad as the cold war propaganda showed, that the food queues broadcast in the West could easily have been replaced byย pictures of theย dole queues and people sleeping in the streets on Washington, London and Paris.
Over the last ten years, Islamists have argued that the defeat at Afghanistan was the beginning of the end of the empire that denied the existence of God.
For an empire built on fear, admitting defeat was a disaster, however, the Soviet Union’s decision to put 150,000 troops into Kabul was perhaps the first sign that something was wrongย at the Kremlin.
Gorbachev himself has been quoted as saying that he felt that things could not continue in the way that they had before he came to power.
I have always believed that the Soviet Union never recovered from the carnage of the Second World War, for on the face of it she wasย equally matched with the United States of America, truth was her position as number one had come at a horrendous cost, millions of young men had given their lives for the protection of mother Russia.
Whilst industries and infrastructures can be replaced, human beings despite whatย Cold War propaganda said of the Soviet worker,ย are not machines, theyย are just flesh and blood, and in that they are unique.
08 Tuesday Nov 2011
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Cambodia, Chile, China ๐จ๐ณ, Distant Echoes, Henry Kissinger, Kissinger, Nayab Chohan, NayabChohan, NayabChohanLIVE, Nial Ferguson, Politics ๐ผ ๐ณ ๐ช, Soviet Union, Template News, Terrorism, Vietnam
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Analysis ๐, Asia ๐, Comment, International News, Media ๐ท, Politics ๐ผ ๐ณ ๐ช, Terrorism, USA ๐บ๐ธ
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