『Brezhnev's Trap to Gorbachev's Gamble: Why Reform Became Revolution』のカバーアート

Brezhnev's Trap to Gorbachev's Gamble: Why Reform Became Revolution

Brezhnev's Trap to Gorbachev's Gamble: Why Reform Became Revolution

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(00:00:00) Brezhnev's Trap to Gorbachev's Gamble: Why Reform Became Revolution
(00:00:51) Brezhnev's Stability Trap
(00:02:33) The Weight of the Gun
(00:04:02) Chernobyl and the Breaking of the Spell
(00:05:29) Gorbachev's Gamble
(00:07:11) Eastern Europe Walks Out
(00:08:20) The Baltic Chain
(00:09:49) The August Coup and Its Backfire
(00:11:49) The Prequel to What Comes Next

The Soviet Union didn't collapse because one man made a mistake. It collapsed because decades of structural rot had left the system with almost no capacity for self-correction — and when Mikhail Gorbachev finally tried to fix it, the repairs triggered the collapse he was trying to prevent.

This episode maps the arc from Brezhnev's stagnation to Gorbachev's reform gamble. Leonid Brezhnev ruled for eighteen years on a single principle: don't rock anything. The result was a party apparatus packed with mediocrities, an economy designed for 1930s industrialisation trying to manage millions of consumer goods across eleven time zones, and annual growth rates that fell from six percent to near stall speed by 1985. Managers falsified data. Factories produced goods nobody wanted. Queues swallowed hours that the economy could never recover.

Then came the compounding shocks. Afghanistan consumed nine years, tens of thousands of lives, and — critically — proved the Red Army wasn't invincible. The afgantsy, veterans who came home traumatised and disillusioned, organised outside party control for the first time in decades. Chernobyl then shattered the Soviet state's last credibility claim: we may not be free, but we are competent. The lies around the reactor meltdown were too visible to survive glasnost.

Gorbachev inherited all of it. Perestroika and glasnost were designed as controlled tools — calculated pressure valves. What he got instead was an explosion. This episode explains why the system had left him almost no room to succeed, and sets up everything that follows: the nationalities crisis, the Baltic chain, and the final unravelling of 1991.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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