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  • Russia Declares Sovereignty: The War of Laws That Broke the Union
    2026/07/09
    (00:00:00) Russia Declares Sovereignty: The War of Laws That Broke the Union
    (00:01:06) What 1989 Left Behind
    (00:02:20) Lithuania Moves First
    (00:03:17) Russia Declares Sovereignty
    (00:04:46) The Economy Accelerates the Crisis
    (00:06:47) The Nationalities Trap Opens Wide
    (00:08:46) Gorbachev's Shrinking Room
    (00:10:39) The Shape of the Collapse

    By 1990, the Soviet Union wasn't just under pressure — it was losing control. This episode follows the mechanism that made collapse inevitable: the war of laws, the extraordinary cascade in which republic after republic passed legislation asserting that their own laws took precedence over Moscow's. No armies, no barricades. Just votes. And each one was a small earthquake in the foundations of a seventy-year state.

    Lithuania moved first, in March 1990, declaring not autonomy but the restoration of independence — treating Soviet rule as an illegal occupation and announcing it was over. Gorbachev responded with an economic blockade. Lithuania held. The blockade hurt the republic, but it hurt Gorbachev more: it told the other republics that the reformer still intended to coerce, and it told Lithuania it had been right to move when it did.

    Then came the moment that changed everything. In June 1990, Russia — the largest republic, the one that contained Moscow, the one most people considered synonymous with the Soviet Union itself — declared sovereignty over its own territory. Boris Yeltsin drove it, having read the landscape correctly: the future of power lay with the republics, not the centre. Within months, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, and Uzbekistan followed. The war of laws became a general condition.

    All of this unfolded against a darkening economic backdrop. Perestroika had disrupted the command economy without replacing it with anything functional. Shortages deepened. The ruble was losing credibility. Regional governments were beginning to hoard resources. The Soviet Union was not just politically fracturing — it was economically fragmenting in real time.

    This is Episode 12 of The Fall of the Soviet Union.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    13 分
  • The Domino the Soviets Couldn't Stop: 1989 and the End of Empire
    2026/07/08
    (00:00:00) The Domino the Soviets Couldn't Stop: 1989 and the End of Empire
    (00:00:48) The Satellite Empire and What Held It
    (00:01:49) Gorbachev's Retreat from the Brezhnev Doctrine
    (00:03:01) Poland First
    (00:04:03) Hungary Opens the Door
    (00:05:02) The Wall Comes Down
    (00:06:09) Czechoslovakia, Romania, and the Pattern
    (00:07:07) What Moscow Understood, and What It Didn't
    (00:08:08) The Baltic Chain
    (00:09:24) The System That Couldn't Bend
    (00:11:20) What 1989 Set in Motion

    By the end of 1989, the entire Soviet bloc in Eastern Europe had slipped Moscow's grip. Poland voted the communists out. Hungary tore down its border fence. East Germans flooded west. The Wall fell. And through all of it, the Red Army stayed in its barracks. Episode 11 asks the question that rarely gets asked: why didn't Moscow intervene — and what does the answer reveal about how hollow the Soviet system had already become?

    At the heart of this episode is Gorbachev's quiet abandonment of the Brezhnev Doctrine — the standing Soviet claim to intervene militarily in any bloc country that drifted too far from socialism. In 1956 and 1968, Soviet tanks had enforced that doctrine in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. By the mid-1980s, Gorbachev had concluded the empire was a liability the USSR could no longer afford. The economy was stagnant, Afghanistan was bleeding the military, and another Hungary-style intervention was simply not viable. So he signalled, carefully and then unmistakably, that Moscow would stand aside.

    That signal travelled fast. Poland's Round Table Agreement produced free elections Solidarity swept in June 1989. Hungary opened its Austrian border in September, and East Germans poured through. By November, the Berlin Wall had fallen — not by force, but by a bureaucratic misstatement at a press conference.

    This episode traces the cascade: how each collapse fed the next, why the dominos fell in the order they did, and why Gorbachev's strategic gamble — let Eastern Europe go, save the Soviet Union — contained a fatal flaw he didn't see in time.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分
  • Eastern Europe Walks Out: 1989 and the Empire's Point of No Return
    2026/07/07
    (00:00:00) Eastern Europe Walks Out: 1989 and the Empire's Point of No Return
    (00:00:36) The Stagnation That Set the Stage
    (00:02:42) Afghanistan and the Mortal Army
    (00:04:18) Chernobyl Breaks the Spell
    (00:05:47) Gorbachev's Gamble
    (00:07:08) The Nationalities Question Lenin Never Solved
    (00:08:36) The Chain Itself
    (00:10:00) Eastern Europe and the Edge of Empire
    (00:11:03) August 1991 and a Man on a Tank
    (00:13:15) The Through-Line to Now

    On 23 August 1989, two million people joined hands across 600 kilometres of Baltic coastline in a silent declaration that Soviet power was finished. But the Baltic Chain didn't come from nowhere — it was the visible crest of a wave that had been building for decades.

    This episode traces the structural collapse underneath the Soviet Union's surface. Brezhnev's 'stability trap' turned economic dysfunction into a system that couldn't diagnose itself: growth rates falling from eight percent to near zero, grain imports from the West, defective goods piling up on shelves, and a party elite that punished anyone who told the truth. By the time Brezhnev died in 1982, the USSR had burned through two more dying general secretaries and exhausted its own capacity for self-correction.

    Afghanistan added the military dimension. A war designed to last months consumed a decade, shattered the myth of Red Army invincibility, and sent home a generation of veterans — the Afgantsy — who organised outside party control and refused to stay silent. Then Chernobyl broke something deeper still: the state's ability to lie. Radiation crossed borders. Foreign governments measured it. The cover-up collapsed in plain sight, and Gorbachev later said the disaster forced his hand on glasnost.

    By 1989, the outer empire was walking. Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany — one by one, the satellite states slipped the leash, and Moscow didn't move to stop them. The episode asks why — and what that restraint revealed about how little of the old certainty remained.

    The prequel to Putin's Russia, told from the inside out.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    15 分
  • The Map That Lied: How Lenin's Federal Bargain Planted a Time Bomb
    2026/07/06
    (00:00:00) The Map That Lied: How Lenin's Federal Bargain Planted a Time Bomb
    (00:01:02) The Bargain Lenin Made
    (00:02:46) The Force That Held It Together
    (00:03:56) What the Republics Actually Felt
    (00:05:53) The System's Blind Spot
    (00:07:13) Afghanistan and the Signal It Sent
    (00:08:27) Gorbachev Inherits the Time Bomb
    (00:10:14) The Declaration Cascade
    (00:11:23) Why Lenin's Framework Failed
    (00:12:33) The Unfinished Question

    A Georgian schoolteacher points to a map. Fifteen republics, each named, each nominally sovereign. Every child in the room knows it's a lie. That lie — baked into the USSR's constitutional architecture since 1922 — is the subject of this chapter.

    When the Bolsheviks seized power, they inherited a multiethnic empire. Lenin's answer was the federal model: give each major nationality a republic, a flag, an official language, and a theoretical right to secede. What he didn't give them was real power. The Communist Party ran everything from Moscow. The republics were decorative. The federation was an empire with better branding.

    Lenin died before he could revisit the arrangement. Stalin inherited it and had no interest in revision — he simply centralised harder, deported entire ethnic groups, and ran the Gulag at industrial scale. It held, brutally. But when the terror softened under Khrushchev and Brezhnev, the frozen resentments began to thaw.

    This episode traces those resentments republic by republic: the Holodomor wound in Ukraine, the occupied Baltic states whose annexation was never recognised by the West, Georgia's fierce resistance to Russification, the disrupted traditional societies of Central Asia. None of these grievances were resolved. They were suppressed — and suppression, it turns out, is not the same as settlement.

    The Soviet multinational state was held together by coercion. The moment that coercion lost its credibility, the entire structure was exposed. This is the story of how Lenin's unfinished federation became the most dangerous structural flaw in the Soviet system — and why Gorbachev's reforms didn't create the nationalities crisis. They just defrosted it.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    15 分
  • Brezhnev's Trap to Gorbachev's Gamble: Why Reform Became Revolution
    2026/07/05
    (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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    14 分
  • Glasnost Meets the Reactor: How Chernobyl Broke the Soviet Information State
    2026/07/04
    (00:00:00) Glasnost Meets the Reactor: How Chernobyl Broke the Soviet Information State
    (00:01:13) What Happened at Reactor Number Four
    (00:02:57) The Coverup and Its Collapse
    (00:04:45) Glasnost Meets the Reactor
    (00:06:29) The Credibility That Couldn't Be Rebuilt
    (00:07:56) The Broader Context Chernobyl Accelerated
    (00:09:44) Gorbachev's Impossible Position
    (00:11:08) What Chernobyl Left Behind

    On the 26th of April 1986, a reactor at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded — and the Soviet state's first instinct was to call it a fire. Not a reactor explosion. A fire. That single act of minimisation, rational inside a bureaucratic culture that punished bad news, set in motion something the party could not control.

    This episode traces the full arc of the Chernobyl disaster as a political event: the design flaw that was a state secret, the safety culture that prioritised targets over truth, the thirty-six-hour delay before Pripyat was evacuated, and the moment Sweden's nuclear monitors told the world what Moscow wouldn't. Fourteen seconds on Soviet state television described a minor accident under control. It was not under control.

    But the deeper story is what happened when Gorbachev's glasnost — his policy of controlled openness — collided head-on with the scale of the catastrophe. Soviet journalists began reporting honestly for the first time. Doctors described the real medical situation. The liquidators, sent in with minimal protection, became a visible human cost the state could no longer hide. Every honest report about Chernobyl was simultaneously a report about the Soviet system's structural inability to protect its own citizens.

    Chernobyl didn't just break the nuclear safety myth. It broke the information state. The fiction that the party knew best, that official truth was trustworthy truth, had survived decades of private doubt. After Chernobyl, the doubt went public — and it never went back. This is the chapter where the ceiling comes down.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    13 分
  • The Soldiers Who Wouldn't Stay Silent: How the Afgantsy Cracked the System
    2026/07/03
    (00:00:00) The Soldiers Who Wouldn't Stay Silent: How the Afgantsy Cracked the System
    (00:01:10) The Architecture of Controlled Truth
    (00:02:53) The War That Couldn't Be Explained
    (00:04:24) The First Cracks in the Monopoly
    (00:06:03) An Economy That Couldn't Feed Itself
    (00:07:46) Gorbachev's Miscalculation
    (00:09:15) The Republics Watching Carefully
    (00:10:51) The System Begins to Come Apart
    (00:12:12) August 1991 and the End of the Party
    (00:13:48) What the Veterans Left Behind

    A million Soviet soldiers served in Afghanistan. They came home to a country that had spent a decade insisting the war was going well — and some of them decided they were done keeping the secret.

    This episode is the story of the Afgantsy: the veterans of a war the Soviet state refused to name as a war. Fifteen thousand dead. Tens of thousands more wounded, addicted, or permanently changed. Coffins delivered at night. Families told their sons had died in accidents. And a system that depended, above all else, on the gap between what citizens privately knew and what they were willing to say in public.

    Afghanistan began closing that gap. The veterans who organised — not as dissidents, but as men who had served and been betrayed — cracked the Communist Party's monopoly on collective life simply by existing outside it. They gathered. They shared information. They made demands without party permission. And because they had served, they had a moral standing that made them nearly impossible to suppress.

    When Gorbachev's glasnost began opening space for public speech from 1986, the Afgantsy stepped into it. They named the casualties. They contradicted the official version. They asked why so many had died for a war now quietly being abandoned. Their testimony landed in a country where growth had collapsed to 1.6 percent, queues were endemic, and up to 40 percent of factory goods arrived defective.

    The system had always survived in the space between private doubt and public challenge. The Afgantsy — ordinary young men, not intellectuals or ideologues — began to close it for good.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    16 分
  • The Red Army's Unwinnable War: How Afghanistan Broke the Soviet Myth
    2026/07/02
    (00:00:00) The Red Army's Unwinnable War: How Afghanistan Broke the Soviet Myth
    (00:00:49) The Decision No One Owned
    (00:02:10) The Red Army Meets Its Limits
    (00:03:45) The Cost That Didn't Appear in Official Figures
    (00:05:27) The Myth That Died in the Mountains
    (00:07:01) Gorbachev Inherits the Trap
    (00:08:42) The Connection to Everything Else
    (00:10:47) The Graveyard Does What It Always Does

    When the Politburo authorized the invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, aging men around a declining Brezhnev expected a quick stabilization — another Hungary, another Czechoslovakia. What they got was a decade of grinding attrition that the Soviet state could neither win nor honestly admit was happening.

    This episode follows the full arc of the Afghan disaster: the mismatch between a military built for European tank warfare and a tribal, mountainous insurgency it could never pacify; the coffins arriving home under orders of silence; the economic drain on an already stagnating command economy; and the generation of Afgantsy veterans who came back traumatized, organized outside Party control, and quietly fractured one of the Soviet system's most important monopolies — the monopoly on organized social life.

    But the deepest damage wasn't measured in rubles or body counts. The Soviet empire was held together not by consent but by the credible threat of force. When Afghanistan showed the non-Russian republics inside the USSR that Red Army power had real limits, the logic underpinning the whole imperial structure began to shift. Slowly, silently — and irreversibly.

    This is chapter five in the story of how the Soviet Union came apart from the inside. Understanding the Afghan wound is essential to understanding everything that follows: Gorbachev's impossible reform gamble, the nationalities crisis, and the final unraveling of 1991.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    14 分