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Paperback Godfather of the Kremlin: The Decline of Russia in the Age of Gangster Capitalism Book

ISBN: 0156013304

ISBN13: 9780156013307

Godfather of the Kremlin: The Decline of Russia in the Age of Gangster Capitalism

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Book Overview

From nuclear superpower to impoverished nation, post-communist Russia has become one of the most corrupt regimes in the world. Paul Klebnikov pieces together the previous decade in Russian history, showing that a major piece of "the decline of Russia' puzzle lies in the meteoric business career of Boris Berezovsky.
Transforming himself from a research scientist to Russia's most successful dealmaker, Berezovsky managed to seize control of Russia's...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Telling The Truth Will Get You Murdered!

I am halfway through this incredible book and it deeply disturbs me that American Paul Klebnikov died because of this book and other articles he wrote while working in Russia for Forbes Magazine. Of late, all one reads is how someone incredibly powerful managed to get off the hook in one way or another. I am just weary of all the lies in the press and the deceitful 'spin' that the US media gives to people they find useful. No, we don't kill our reporters, but we ruin them in other ways. I hope I live long enough to see this change, but I fear it won't happen in my lifetime. I have learned from personal experiences in my life that 99 percent of what I have read and believed to be true was a lie. It starts with Santa Claus and moves on from there. This book has made me want to read more about Russia, the people, and the various governments. How sad I spent half of my life living in fear of the Russians, and they us. I tried to find 'Conversations With A Barbarian', also by Mr. Klebnikov, but it is no longer available. I feel so awful for his family and friends.

a brave journalist

Paul Klebnikov was a brave Russian-American journalist who took on the Oligarchs (Godfather of the Kremlin), the Mafia (in Russian Forbe's), and the Chechnyan terrorists (Interviews with the Barbarians), and died because of it. He was gunned down by a Checnyan hitman, probaly paid for by one of the Oligarch gangsters he exposed. Godfather of the Kremlin is not an easy book to read, but I gave it five stars because of the bravery it took for Paul to write it. The main villain is Boris Berozovsky, but Yeltsin was also to blame for thieving and privatization that made him, his daughter, and a handful of Oligarchs extreemly rich. Whiole destroying the life-savings of the average Russian citizens and the economy. If you think Enron is a huge crook, it has nothing on Berezovsky and the Oligarchs. They were ruthless, and deserved to be put in jail or exiled. It was only too bad a journalist as brave, excellent and trustable as Paul Klebnikov had to lose his life by exposing their crimes!

He paid with his life

Paul Klebnikov died yesterday (7/10/04) in Moscow because he had the courage to print the truth as he uncovered it through relentless investigative journalism. Anyone--such as some of the reviewers at this site--who dismisses this book because of some trivial libel suit brought by Berezovsky in London is making a mistake. Klebnikov was no small-time journalist with an axe to grind. He had a PhD in Russian history from the London School of Economics and was a senior editor for Forbes magazine. He was an American of Russian heritage who spoke Russian fluently and who used his abilities to investigate the looting of Russia that took place in the early 1990's. He loved Russia and wrote what he learned about the looting that was going on.Everything Klebnikov says in this book can also be found in The Oligarchs by Hoffman (Washington Post), Putin's Russia by Shevtsova (Carnegie Endowment) and The Tragedy of Russia's Reforms by Reddaway (George Washington University). They all cite and/or quote Klebnikov with approval.I can't recommend this book highly enough to anyone who wants an introduction to the murky world of Russian privatization during the '90's.Incidentally, Berezovsky actually took out a full-page ad in the New York Times to tell the world he is not a crook. However, like some of the other oligarchs, he is wanted in Russia for tax evasion, fraud, etc. Read the book and find out all about him.

The Rape of Russia

I remember my first visit to the Soviet Union in 1986. Gorbachev hadrecently come into power and one could sense that dramatic eventswould soon take place. The "Evil Empire" was showing cracksand strains of trying to keep up with capatilists. The Russian peoplefor over 70 years were asked to sacrifice for the glories ofCommunism. Five short years later Yeltsin was standing on a tank andAmerica's hero, Gorbachev saw his power come to an end. Hope sprangeternal. Glasnost and perestroika. Then came the Yeltsin years whichwere witness to the wholesale rape and pillaging of of a greatcountry with an educated public and vast resources. How did ithappen? Mr. Klebnikov's important book meticulously outlines how inless than a decade tens of billions of dollars were stolen by a bunchof unscrupulous men who could care less about the effects their actswould have in devastating the country they lived in. By concentratingon the most successful of these "oligarchs", to use a politeterm, the brazen rise of Boris Berezovsky is detailed courageously byMr. Klebnikov. He describes the murders, the methodology (steal low,sell high), the willing and unwilling accomplices, and the total lackof morality. What a tragedy. One thinks of the some 700,000 orphansnow in Russia mainly as a result of mothers being unable to feed theirinfants. And where is the money? Sitting in European banks andelsewhere outside of Russia. At least the robber barons of the 19thCentury rechannelled their millions back into the U. S. economy andleft us with Carnegie Hall, the University of Chicago and the FrickMuseum.. It may be some consolation if Putin is able to arrest a fewof these criminals. Or is he too, bought and paid for? Read thisbook.

Even with the Author?s warning

Mr. Paul Klebnikov makes a rather unusual declaration at the beginning of his book by stating that what is about to be read may be difficult to believe. As this work is non-fiction the comment would seem misplaced. However once the reading has begun it not only proves to have been appropriate, but is a fact you will keep reminding yourself of.The Author relates what is arguably the greatest theft in History, and if he had decided to change some detail, he could have had an outstanding novel. That the events he relates actually took place makes for a reading experience no novel can compete with. I have been following Mr. Klebnikov's stories in Forbes, since December of 1996 when he introduced Mr. Boris Berezovsky as Russia's Godfather. That first article in Forbes brought the wrath of Mr. Berezovsky to bear on Forbes and the Author, but he continued with his research and lived to write this book. Whatever his personal motivation was, and continues to be, is remarkable. This man worked for years on the home field of a variety of people who were capable of removing him from the living, with a glance, and without any fear of consequence to themselves.The dysfunctional, amoral, nothing is out of bounds world, that was Boris Yeltsin's Russia, truly is difficult to get your mind around. Some minor details that will prepare you for the real story; when Gorbachev was still in power the government budget received 25% of its revenues from where, from the Government monopoly on Vodka! The ruble of Gorbachev was worth approximately one U.S. dollar. At the close of 1992 one dollar would cost 415 rubles, and when Yeltsin finally left office in an alcoholic haze, if you wanted a dollar you needed 28,000 rubles!The "Voucher Auctions" that took place in 1993 and 1994 would not have been condoned much less implemented by a student with a semester or two of Economic study. Gazprom, which owns one third of the planet's Natural Gas, was "auctioned" for $250 million dollars, the truer value, if valued as a Western Company, would have had its gas reserves alone valued at between $300 and $700 BILLION. These numbers do not take into account that the company was basically a monopoly supplier to the entire former Soviet Union, and much of Western Europe as well.To put a more familiar face on these numbers, at the very lowest estimate, you could have bought Exxon and had $12 billion left over, at the high end you could have bought General Electric, the most valuable company as I write, and since you might be thirsty after the effort, you could pick up Coca Cola with the change left from the GE purchase.You will learn how Mr. Berezovsky privatized the cash flows of companies like Aeroflot, companies he did not own, and by using little money, if any at all, and if he needed any the seller, The Government would supply it. He was not the only man to take advantage of Yeltsin and his hand picked group of incompetents but he surely was the
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