Saturday, July 20, 2019
cold war :: essays research papers
   1991 Gorbachev resigns as president of the USSR    Mikhail Gorbachev announces that he is resigning as president  of the Soviet Union. In truth, there was not much of a Soviet  Union from which to resign--just four days earlier, 11 of the  former Soviet republics had established the Commonwealth of  Independent States (CIS), effectively dismembering the USSR.  The Soviet Union, for all intents and purposes, had already  ceased to exist.    In his farewell speech to the nation, Gorbachev indicated that  the recent establishment of the CIS was the primary motive for  his resignation, claiming he was "concerned about the fact that  the people in this country are ceasing to become citizens of a  great power and the consequences may be very difficult for all of  us to deal with." In words that were sometimes prideful,  sometimes resentful, Gorbachev stated that he stood on his  record of achievement. He had, he claimed, overseen the Soviet  Union's trip down the "road of democracy." His reforms  "steered" the communist economy "toward the market  economy." He declared that the Russian people were "living in a  new world" in which an "end has been put to the Cold War and  to the arms race." Admitting "there were mistakes made,"  Gorbachev remained adamant that he "never had any regrets"  about the policies he pursued.    In reality, Gorbachev had lost much of his power and prestige in  the Soviet Union even before the establishment of the CIS. The  economy was unstable. No one seemed pleased by  Gorbachev-some opponents demanded even more political  freedom while hard-liners in his government opposed any  movement toward reform. In August 1991, he survived a coup  attempt only through the assistance of Russian Federation    					    
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