Αρχική / Ανθρωπιστικές Επιστήμες / Ιστορία / Παγκόσμια Ιστορία / From Red Terror To Terrorist State: Russia's Secret Service's and Their Fight for World Domination from Lenin to Putin: Russia's Intelligence Services ... From Felix Dzerzhinsky to Vladimir Putin

From Red Terror To Terrorist State: Russia's Secret Service's and Their Fight for World Domination from Lenin to Putin: Russia's Intelligence Services ... From Felix Dzerzhinsky to Vladimir Putin

ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΙΣ
Τιμή
23,90 €
26,60 € -10%
Διαθέσιμο κατόπιν παραγγελίας
Αποστέλλεται σε 15 - 25 ημέρες.

Προσθήκη στα αγαπημένα

The history of Russia after 1917 is traditionally written as the rise of the Communist Party from Lenin to Stalin to Gorbachev. Is that still the correct approach?

Based on a trove of new historical sources from inside the Russian secret services, this exceptional book retells the story in the light of modern Russia and starts with the pivotal role of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the leader of the Communist Secret Service, the Cheka. He is relatively unknown, but was even more important in the overthrow of the Tsarist regime and submission of its people than Lenin. The leaders of the various guises of the Cheka fought tooth and nail to wrest state control from the Communist party. With the presidency of Vladimir Putin in 1999, Dzerzhinsky’s ultimate goal finally came to fruition. It explains why modern Russia is a state without ideology, the world’s only mafia-state programmed to forever extort, pillage and loot.

Συγγραφείς: Felshtinsky Yuri, Popov Vladimir
Εκδότης: GIBSON SQUARE
Σελίδες: 400
ISBN: 9781783342440
Εξώφυλλο: Μαλακό Εξώφυλλο
Αριθμός Έκδοσης: 1
Έτος έκδοσης: 2023

Yuri Felshtinsky was born in Moscow in 1956. In 1974, he began studying history at the Moscow Pedagogical Institute. In 1978, he immigrated to the United States and continued studying history, first at Brandeis University, then at Rutgers, where he received a Ph.D. in history. In 1993, he defended a doctoral dissertation at the History Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, becoming the first foreign citizen to receive a doctoral degree in Russia. Felshtinsky has compiled, edited, and annotated several dozen volumes of archival documents in Russian history. His first books, published in Russian, include The Bolsheviks and the Left SRs (Paris, 1985), Towards a History of Our Isolation (London, 1988; Moscow, 1991); The Failure of the World Revolution (London, 1991; Moscow, 1992).

In 1998, he traveled to Moscow in order to study the political problems of contemporary Russia. At that time, he became acquainted with Alexander Litnvinenko, a Lieutenant Colonel of the FSB who had cut his ties with the establishment for which he had worked for over twenty years. In 2000, Felshtinsky and Litvinenko began working on Blowing Up Russia, a book that describes the gradual appropriation of power in the Russia by the security apparatus and details the FSB’s involvement in a series of terrorist atrocities that took place between 1994-1999. In August 2001, several chapters from the Blowing Up Russia were published in a special edition of the Novaya Gazeta newspaper. In 2002, the book became the basis for a documentary film, Blowing up Russia (also known as Assassination of Russia). Both the book and the documentary were banned in Russia. Up to 2006, Felshtinsky continued working with Litvinenko on gathering additional materials documenting the FSB’s involvement in the apartment-house bombings of September 1999. In November of 2006 Alexander Litvinenko was killed in London.

In 2007, Alexander Litvinenko’s and Yuri Felshtinsky’s book Blowing Up Russia was published in twenty different countries.

Felshtinsky’s latest publications include The Corporation: Russia and the KGB in the Age of President Putin (Encounter Books, New York, 2008, with Vladimir Pribylovsky); The KGB Plays Chess (Russell Enterprises, Milford, CT, 2010, with Vladimir Popov & Boris Gulko); Lenin and His Comrades (Enigma Books, New York, 2010).

Colonel Vladimir Popov was a high-ranking officer in the secret Fifth Directorate of the KGB, where he worked from 1972-1991 and kept copies of case files in his personal archives. He left the KGB a month after the August 1991 coup against USSR leader Mikhail Gorbachev and emigrated to Canada

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