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...sure what the answer is, to be honest. But I do know this: the anger fueling Russia's behavior now is very real, and I know exactly where it comes from. Just a couple of months ago, in Moscow, I sat in the office of Vladimir Yakunin, whose official public role is chairman of the state-owned Russian Railroad company. That sounds like a pretty innocuous job, but it's misleading in this sense: Yakunin is an old St. Petersburg crony of Putin's and, like the Prime Minister, is widely believed to have been a career KGB field officer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cold War: The Sequel | 8/12/2008 | See Source »

...Yakunin practically leaped out of his chair. "You were right," he said emphatically, and he recounted what for him was a particularly humiliating moment in the national memory of many Russians: when then President Yeltsin had gone to Berlin to participate in a ceremony with his German counterpart, Helmut Kohl. At a lunch, Yeltsin had gotten infamously drunk, and when he went outside after the meal was over, he cheerfully began conducting a German military band on hand for the occasion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cold War: The Sequel | 8/12/2008 | See Source »

Suffice to say that Vladimir Yakunin - and no doubt his friend, the Prime Minister - didn't approve, and that disgraceful moment sticks in his craw to this day. The Russians are back - and they are not buffoons, thank you. Now, oil and gas wealth plus increasing military might are going to right what they perceive as the humiliations of the recent past. The New Cold War, as Ed Lucas writes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cold War: The Sequel | 8/12/2008 | See Source »

...international reputation. Mothers of boys at the front staged demonstrations in Moscow and Vladivostok; on Friday mothers in Yekaterinburg lay down in front of army vehicles transporting their sons to Chechnya. Russians everywhere spoke out angrily against the war. "Yeltsin has betrayed our democracy," declared former dissident Gleb Yakunin, a liberal member of parliament. Even when Chechnya's presidential palace is in Russian hands, President Boris Yeltsin will not have won the war or restored his own political prestige...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Looking for the Next Step | 1/23/1995 | See Source »

...significant that the delegates bypassed Filaret, a hard-liner who had served as acting head of the church since the death last month of Patriarch Pimen. Leader of the Kiev diocese since 1966, Filaret is more of a Ukrainian chauvinist than is Vladimir and, according to dissident priest Gleb Yakunin, is seen as "a KGB puppet." He was third in the bishops' vote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Victory for A Dark Horse | 6/18/1990 | See Source »

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