Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars
A right-wing perspective of the Soviet collapse, 28 Dec 2001
By A Customer
Before buying the book, it was evident that the book was a favourite of right-wingers. For example, Henry Kissinger's name appears on the cover and he describes it the book as "a chilling account of an ideology that haunted our century." Much of the book is geared towards criticising everything about the Soviets, which tends to make the book seem like a propoganda tool of the American right. Having said this, the book is at least comprehensive, though a little more work on the internal stuggles would have been appreciated. On the whole, not a bad book, but its right-wing fanaticism leaves a bad taste in the mouth.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A flawed account of the failures of Leninism, 1 Oct 2001
Having an unhealthy fascination with the fall of totaliterian regimes (Hitlers Germany, Soviet Russia,) this work intriqued me since it was an account not simply of the fall of the Soviet Union, but of the collapse of the whole of the Soviet Empire. These days it is hard to recall the amount of influence the Soviet Union weilded, and how it all came to end just over a decade ago. Mr. Crozier obviously has a feel for his subject, and intriquingly this history is written from what appears to be a right wing perspective. Mr. Crozier makes no attempt to hide his allegiances, which makes him a more honest chronical than many others who use histories to perpetrate their own perspectives. Where the book falls down however, is the lack of atmosphere that it generates. The Soviet Union was on it's deathbed for far longer than we in the West would have conceived possible. Reading this book does not give you the same 'End of Empire' feelings that does Michael Dobbs 'Down with Big Brother' for example. Mr. Crozier finds the whole Soviet edifice repugnant, and paints a particularly compelling portrait of a maniacal Lenin. Lenin emerges as the villian of the piece, clearing the way for the likes of Stalin. Mr. Crozier does not do enough to explain why the empire ended up collapsing. There is not enough, I feel on the failures of the Soviet economy or on the relationships between the centre and the periphery. Too much time is spent on marginal parts of the Soviet empire such as the Seychelles and not enough how the system was unravelling at home. An intriguing book with a wide scope, but not for those who are looking for a more general book on the collapse
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
26 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fast moving, fascinating, and thorough!, 7 Jun 2000
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire (Hardcover)
The focus of the book is on the imperial aims & actions of the Soviet Union, which is indeed a very large topic! Fortunately the book moves extremely quickly, taking the reader from Lenin's revolution to the end of the empire. This author has written detailed books about much of what he writes here, and doesn't feel compelled to "show off" with trivial details. He is detailed enough, however, to give a firm understanding of the events in question. As far as bias goes, I think everyone from (unaffiliated) Marxists, Maoists & Trotskyites (excluding Stalinists) to the moderate Right would not argue with the essence of Crozier's account of the Soviet domination of other nations, using Marxism as a convenient (and all too accepted) cover. If you aren't in denial of this fact, and want to know the details of the issue, you will be delighted by this book! It is clearly a lifetime achievement from an outstanding historian. Another reviewer compared this book unfavorably to Shirer's similarly titled (and also excellent) book on the Third Reich. Having read both, I can say that Crozier manages to remain a little more detached than Shirer did, and did a far better job at telling the important story (including the essential facts) while avoiding the digressions Shirer was prone to. Still, for their relative subject matters, each is certainly unmatched in my opinion. Additionally, I don't know that either was out of line for occasionally expressing disgust when recounting the horrific deeds committed by the respective totalitarian regimes. Crozier does do much less of this, however, probably because the subject at hand is the expansion (and fall) of the empire, not the history of the Soviet Union per se.
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Solid History of the Soviet Union on the World Scene, 29 Dec 2004
By R. Setliff - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire (Hardcover)
~The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire~ by Brian Crozier is a solid history of the Soviet empire. Crozier gives a good backdrop to the embryonic beginnings of the empire as it takes up the mantle of Russian nation. He rightly recognizes and soundly documents the Soviet Union's concerted effort to broaden its influence and power on the world scene since its impetus. The COMINTERN was aggressive to spread communism throughout the world, and particularly focused on Spain and Italy in the early twentieth century. The totalist rivalries between communism and fascism are written with remarkable clarity. Following World War II, FDR naively sold eastern Europe into communist slavery and Stalin quickly inaugurated satellization. The resistance to communist rule in Hungary and Czechoslovakia are well documented.
Crozier does not fall into the fallacies of leftist revisionists who would be guilty of excluding events and obfuscating truth. The Soviet Union actively sponsored terrorism, and used covert violence in furtherance of its political agenda to undermine the West. Some terrorists were not orthodox Marxist-Leninists, but received ample support nonetheless, such as the Irish Republican Army in Ulster, Argentina's Montoneros. The Soviets even maintained a terrorist training school dubbed the Patrice Lumumba Friendship University to train terrorists and foment revolution in the Third World. The infamous Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, better known as Carlos the Jackal, a Venezuelan born son of a Marxist lawyer was one of their products. The Jackal spread a wave of terror throughout Europe. He was culpable for bombings in Paris, numerous murders, assassinations and the kidnapping of OPEC ministers in Vienna. This stark reality is something Marxist apologists ignore.
Leftists criticize Crozier for his introspection and "bias," but I'm apt to question their "bias" considering they ignore Soviet Stalinist atrocities, repression in eastern Europe and the Third World, as well as their state-sponsored terrorist campaigns. Crozier finds no fault with the CIA for whatever hand they may have had in Augusto Pinochet's coup to overthrow the Marxist Allende. Pinochet brought stability and prosperity to Chile, and saved it the perils of economic hardship from collectivization. American interests were served in stopping the spread of communism. Crozier poignantly chronicles the turning point of the Cold War where the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan is foiled and becomes their own Vietnamese quagmire. Thereafter, Ronald Reagan stifles the Red takeover of Grenada and then comes the period of Glasnost. The waning years of Soviet hegemony are covered with amazing clarity.
The vocal criticism volleyed against this volume is mostly by embittered lefties, American college-campus Marxists, and liberals in denial about communist crimes and the inhumane nature of the Soviet system. Crozier, a London-based historian is blunt and finds no fault with West and the United States for efforts to thrawt Soviet expansion. Ronald Reagan was right in calling the Soviet Empire an "evil empire."
"The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing." -Edmund Burke
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The definitive account of an absolutist tyranny., 18 May 2002
By "tjive" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire (Hardcover)
Crozier paints quite a dismal portrait of the collectivist powers that squashed all forms of dissent and pushed forward their grandiose vision for the world. This book lays out in plain view for the world to see-the anti-Communists were right. Marxists were fomenting revolution, terror, war, and all sorts of inhumane practices all through their lifespan and through their satellites and allies. Comrades and fellow travellers at home, similarly, were not the humanitarians they pride themselves on claiming to be (the right of the self-anointed, more like); instead, they were vicious thugs with no minds of their own, instead following orders barked at them by their leaders in Moscow, despite knowledge of Communism's crimes against humanity, peace, and culture; indeed, they turned their back on all this because it is the Marxist nature. In that sense probably the best indication of this book's compelling style and content, which is backed by nigh-irrefutable evidence such as documents from the archives of Communist regimes, is that of the response it engenders from the far leftist crowd. You see, Marxism is in a most twisted sense the "intellectual" religion of modern times. People who surrender to it abandon all earthly rationality and participation in logical discourse. Instead, everything in life is placed into two categories: progressive and reactionary. "If you are not with us, you are against us." How odd, then, that these self-described nihilists should bemoan such a philosophy on the part of the free-marketers and the true democrats. This is why their best prepared and unified defense against this book is to point out that it is written by a right-winger, and that this somehow makes the book unobjective. One can only ask what they would say to a book that is similarly condemning of the Soviet system and all fellow travellers, yet written by leftists. In fact, this book (and others like it) is already written, and it is "The Black Book of Communism" (an equally, if not more so, recommended work on Communist reality). So, in the end, anyone can go through the book and find points where they disagree with the conclusions that Crozier has drawn. Such is natural; human nature. But similarly they know that he has the facts on his side. The documentation. The statistics. The reason. This is what makes them hysterical, and it is only to their utter disgrace.
|
|
|