Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
Vladimir Gel'man
Journal of Cold War Studies, Volume 14, Number 4, Fall 2012, pp. 253-255
(Review)
Access provided by Australian National University (11 Aug 2018 11:46 GMT)
Book Reviews
Russian guerrillas of 1812 with the Spanish guerrillas and Wellington’s Army of the
Peninsular Campaign even though they have much more in common—the French
army. History may not repeat itself, but it provides some great models. All models, of
course, require modiªcation to ªt the country, history, customs, economy, and ideol-
ogy of the model to the current event.
Kalinovsky takes his comparison one step further. He attempts to tie Gorbachev
and Barack Obama together as like-minded campaigners for change who see Afghani-
stan as a stumbling block to political gain, fail to control the main actors of their own
Afghanistan policy, and see themselves as hostage to the consequences of failure
should the incumbent Afghan government fail to survive. I am skeptical of this com-
parison, but I leave the ªnal decision to the reader. History is history, analysis is analy-
sis, but do the two cases offer enough symmetry of variables and time? Probably not.
Gorbachev was not in power when the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan col-
lapsed in April 1992. Following the attempted coup in Moscow in August 1991,
Gorbachev lost all leverage over Soviet policy in Afghanistan. It was Boris Yeltsin, the
elected president of the Russian Federation, who pushed for the termination of all
military and other assistance to Kabul in September 1991. Why was Yeltsin so op-
posed to Gorbachev’s Afghanistan policy, and what did he think he would gain by sell-
ing out Najibullah? Frank Snepp, the former Central Intelligence Agency station chief
in South Vietnam, wrote that U.S. policy in Vietnam was designed to gain “a decent
interval” before the collapse of Saigon. Judged by that criterion, Gorbachev’s policy
delivered an appropriate interval in Kabul for the Soviet Union, one that the new gov-
ernment of Russia did not consider of any merit.
Both of these are excellent books that add much to the scholarship of the Soviet-
Afghan War. Both are primarily political and diplomatic histories. Braithwaite’s also
has a good bit of military history included plus personal vignettes that add much to
the understanding of this conºict and a people caught in war.
✣ ✣ ✣
253
Book Reviews
254
Book Reviews
tions of troubles with curricula, the extent to which the “Grand Theater” of gover-
nance in the 1930s affected the contents and results of school education in the Kirov
region and elsewhere in the Soviet Union remains unclear. Second and probably more
important, Holmes does not discuss whether the educational governance practices in
Stalin’s Russia were speciªc and context dependent (or were similar to other policy ar-
eas) or, conversely, whether they represented typical instances of how the Soviet Union
was governed in the 1930s and early 1940s. The microanalysis presented in the book
does not lead Holmes to macro-conclusions about the nature of Soviet governance in
general and its educational system in particular.
Of course, one should not blame Holmes, who consciously opts for the narrow
focus of his research and strictly follows the documentary evidence without pretend-
ing to draw a broader picture. But readers might learn from this study much more
than just facts and ªgures from life stories of ordinary school ofªcials and ªnd a useful
way of placing provincial observations into a more coherent and comprehensive
framework for understanding Soviet governance largely along the lines of Saltykov-
Shchedrin’s satirical sketches of Vyatka a century-and-a-half ago.
✣ ✣ ✣
Jan Plamper, The Stalin Cult: A Study in the Alchemy of Power. New Haven: Yale Uni-
versity Press, 2012. 310 pp.
Jan Plamper’s The Stalin Cult is a thorough, well-researched monograph about the
cult’s production, from Iosif Stalin’s ofªcial 50th birthday celebration in December
1929 through his death in 1953. Plamper focuses on the creation and dissemination
of visual materials, including representations of the dictator in Pravda, socialist realist
painting, and ªlm. Although some of Plamper’s attempts to “add value” to the book,
most prominently his claim to be elucidating the cult’s “alchemy of power,” do not
succeed, The Stalin Cult is well worth reading for any student of Stalinism or of mod-
ern personality cults throughout the world.
Chapter 1, “Paths to the Stalin Cult,” traces the development of modern person-
ality cults from Napoleon III through the interwar period, as well as the tendency of
the prerevolutionary radical Russian intelligentsia to organize around charismatic
leaders. In the chapter’s conclusion, Plamper brieºy outlines the emergence of a cult
of Vladimir Lenin following the Bolshevik leader’s death. The material in this chapter
is fascinating, but Plamper does not connect the development of the Lenin and Stalin
cults directly to the international context he limns earlier. He does not discuss Bol-
shevik leaders’ knowledge or views of personality cults in other societies, nor does he
ask whether the Lenin cult emerged out of a series of ad hoc decisions or a deliberate
process of construction by party leaders. This last point seems especially important to
explore, given Plamper’s claim that the Stalin cult was deliberately constructed, above
all by the dictator himself.
255