177 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
177 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
KHRUSHCHEV
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His story is something like a fairy tale. A humble young peasant boy, born
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to a world of famine and poverty with 100 million peasants just like him, works
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and fights his way up the political ladder of Russia to one day become its most
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powerful force, simultaneously holding the offices of Premier of the U.S.S.R.
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and First Secretary of the Communist Party. It seems incredible, but it should
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be remembered that Nikita Khrushchev did not accomplish this feat without much
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sacrifice and hard work on his part. Coming from virtually nothing, he
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struggled for many years to rise among the ranks in Revolutionary Russia before
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he achieved the position of a widely-loved ruler and powerful, determining
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force in international affairs. And although, in the end, he was cast down
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from this climactic position, it was not before this loquacious and personable
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man had employed his keen and incisive mind toward making many gains for and
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improvements in twentieth-century Russia.
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To truly understand how humble and common his beginnings were, one must
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understand the situation in Russia toward the end of the nineteenth century.
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Serfdom had only recently been abolished, and, as a result, there was a severe
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shortage of land and widespread poverty and illiteracy. Only the strongest and
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cleverest were able to make a living from their new-found freedom; most just
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struggled to survive. It was among this majority, on April 17, 1894, that
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Nikita Sergeievich Khrushchev was born. As a boy, he lived in Kalinovka, a
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poor villiage in the Ukraine, in an izba, a mud hut with a thatched roof, with
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his grandfather, a large family, and the family's animals. His father, it is
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said, lived his life with the ambition to buy a horse, but he never saved
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enough money to do so. In the end, the family was forced to give up their home
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and move to Yuzovka in another part of the Ukraine.
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Throughout his childhood, Nikita was forced to work to survive. His
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education amounted to only two or three years in the village school, for he was
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forced to go to work herding cows when he was nine. Following that, he was em-
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ployed as many things, including a farm hand, a factory worker, and finally a
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miner in the coal pits. It was at this time that his determination to better
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himself was first made apparent, for, rather than letting himself be destined
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forever to work in the pits, he offered his services in all areas of the job,
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including the development of pit-heads, elevators for the mines. This was also
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the time in which the young Khrushchev's rebellious nature began to surface,
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but rather than to striking or union-organizing, it was applied toward
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politics. It all began with a visit to the mines in 1917 by a man called
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Kaganovich, who was sent to recruit miners for the Revolution. Nikita, who was
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23 and viewed this man as both a romantic figure and an opportunity to break
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from his social boundaries, joined his Bolshevik group and, by doing so, took
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his first of many steps in his forthcoming rise to political power.
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Soonafter, Khrushchev, a loyal but not very active Bolshevik member, became
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involved with the Communist party as well. Prior to this point, he had been
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exempt from military service due to his indispensibility in the local coal
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industry. Also, he had been responsible for a family, as he had married his
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wife, Galina, during his years in the coal mines, and now had two children
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(Leonid and Julia), which made him want to remain near Yuzovka. However, in
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1919, that rebellious, power-seeking inner sense of Nikita's got the best of
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him, and he went off to join the Red Army. When the war ended, Khrushchev,
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whose main objective had been to emerge as a politician until he found how
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difficult it was to compete with the "higher-born," at least had succeeded in
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proving himself to be a loyal and useful figure. Soonafter, he returned home
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with the task of organizing a local Communist party.
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When he arrived back in Yuzovka, however, he found the area, along with much
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of the Ukraine, suffering due to a great famine. Peasants were forced to eat
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bark, grass, leather and one another to survive, and many died, including
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Khrushchev's wife. It was a very sad and difficult time for Nikita, but he
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retaliated against his depression by devoting himself wholeheartedly toward the
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reorganization of Russia. At once he set about to restore local factories and
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increase coal production, steps he considered vital in order to get the economy
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going. It took much toughness and courage to get men to work under such
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conditions, but Khrushchev, gifted with a talent for organizing and motivating
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people, was able to succeed. In 1921, he sent his children to live with his
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parents and enrolled in a mining technology school, where he further developed
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himself in engineering and politics and learned how to read. A quick learner,
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Khrushchev finished school in four years, literate and with a comprehensive
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knowledge of Leninist views. He married again, this time to a schoolteacher
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named Nina Petrovna, and, at the age 31, encountered the first of a series of
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very rapid steps to the supreme position he would one day hold as Premier of
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the U.S.S.R.
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In 1925, Khrushchev was appointed to his first full-time and very important
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Party position, Party Secretary of Petrovsko, a district of about 400 square
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miles in the Ukraine. For the two years that he held that office, Nikita
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encouraged peasants to work and reopened factories, unemployment dropped and
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bands of mutinous peasants which roamed the countryside were wiped out. In
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addition, bands of wild Russian children, called besprisorni, were rounded up
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and either put to work or shot. By the end of his term there, he had grown
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enough in importance to be a non-voting member of the All Union Party
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Congress-in other words, in just seven years, Krushchev had earned his way into
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the top 1300 of over one million Party members.
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His next step was to go to Moscow, where he studied engineering and worked
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actively in the Party cell of the Moscow Industrial Academy. Working closely
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with important political figures, even including Stalin's wife, Khrushchev
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continued to rise in importance and popularity. By 1932, he had reached a
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point where he was second in command of the Party for all of Moscow. With this
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power, he attempted to more or less renovate Moscow. Its living conditions
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were deplorable and dreary. There was a severe shortage of food, families
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lived huddled two or three to a room, buildings were falling apart. As Peter
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the Great had done many years before, Nikita attempted to "drag Russia into the
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twentieth century." He made many reforms, including the construction of the
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Moscow Metro, and as a result was soon appointed to the Central Committees of
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the All-Union Communist Party and the Supreme Soviet.
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It should be noted that, having always concentrated on technical rather than
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political accomplishment, Khrushchev was able to escape the Great Purge, a
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period in the thirties in which those considered "enemies of the people"
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according to Stalin were to be arrested, deported or even executed. Rather, he
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was even rewarded for his service to the country. In 1938, Khrushchev returned
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to the Ukraine as first secretary of he Ukrainian Communist Party and focused
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his attention primarily on agriculture, in which he gained a reputation as an
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expert. When he gained full membership in the Politburo in March of 1939,
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Khrushchev became one of the most powerful men in the U.S.S.R.
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With World War II came more accomplishments and recognition for Khrushchev.
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He supervised the annexation of Polish territory, helped supervise the
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evacuation of Ukranian industry when Germany attacked, and eventually helped to
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expel the Germans from the Soviet Union. After the war, he was brought again
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to Moscow, where he served in the Secretariat and the Politburo and was again
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head of the Moscow regional committee. It was those positions, and his
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reputation as an agricultural expert, that soon propelled him to power.
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Upon Stalin's death, Khrushchev kept a place in power as "collective
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leadership" came into being, which consisted primarily of him, Beria, Bulganin,
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Malenkov, Kaganovich and Molotov. There were many problems with this concept
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at first, and leadership changed hands frequently. Finally, in 1957,
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Khrushchev himself was nominated for the top position as Premier, despite the
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others' attempts to gain the position for themselves. When problems arose due
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to this appointment, Khrushchev, who had previously kept a low profile and not
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involved himself much in the power struggle, suddenly, at the 20th Party
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Congress that year, gave his famous six-hour "secret speech" denouncing the
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"crimes of the Stalin era." By doing so, many old-time Party leaders felt that
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he had gone too far; there were two attempts on his life later that year.
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However, Khrushchev remained strong and exposed a plot by Malenkov, Molotov and
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Kaganovich to oust him from leadership; in doing so, he solidified his power,
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becoming both Premier and Party Secretary in 1958.
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It should be noted now that Khrushchev, although acting as supreme ruler of
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the Soviet Union, possessed certain personal characteristics that made him
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lesser in the eyes of the world. He was a stout, "bullet-headed" man who liked
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to joke and talk, and, though his important positions had trained him to carry
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himself as a supreme ruler would, he was still rough and a countryman at heart.
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He often dressed in simple peasant smocks or plain shirts, clothing he
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considered to be representative of what Communist stood for, and he didn't see
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any harm in getting drunk in public. By many he was nicknamed "the peasant
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ruler of backward Russia," and laughed at. An example of this was Khrushchev's
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first trip outside the boundaries of Russia, a visit to Marshal Tito of
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Yugoslavia in the late 50's that had been to make peace after the damage Stalin
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had vainly sought to inflict. The Premier, believing that he was making such a
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grand jesture of reconciliation-having great Russia bow down to insignificant
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Yugoslavia, was instead greeted by an arrogant ruler who intended to mock,
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ridicule and disgrace him. Tito began by walking out during a speech in which
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Khrushchev was apologizing for the actions of Stalin. He then proceeded to
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parade the Russian ruler, who was used to bullet-proof cars, around in a
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convertible. Finally, at what was to be an informal dinner, Tito had all his
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officials wear full evening dress when he knew that the Russians would arrive
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wearing their simple summer suitings, as an attempt to embarrass them and make
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them look foolish. Khrushchev, though, surprised everyone by overcoming this
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childishness and concentrating on the business at hand, much to Tito's dismay.
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Events like this helped to gain this grandfather-like ruler both popularity and
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great respect.
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Although for several years Khrushchev's popularity existed in Russia also,
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several crucial incidents caused it to deteriorate just as quickly. One such
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event was the "U-2 Incident" in 1960, when an American spy plane was shot down
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over the Soviet Union. President Eisenhower, who was considered by Khrushchev
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to be a trusted friend, took responsibility for the affair and, by doing so,
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greatly embarrassed the Soviet Premier. Then, just a few years later, when the
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Soviet Union was caught positioning missiles in Cuba, Khrushchev was forced to
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remove them and leave Cuba. Incidents like this began to mount, and many Party
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members sought to remove him. Finally, in October 1964, he was forced out of
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office. His remaining years were spent in "quiet retirement" in the outskirts
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of Russia. He died on September 11, 1971.
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Although those who Khrushchev had once struggled to and succeeded in
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overcoming were able to remove him from power in the end, the vast changes this
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peasant-turned-Premier had unleashed in the U.S.S.R. could not be undone, and
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his years in power have had a lasting effect on the Soviet Union ever since.
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