Dwarkesh Podcast - Sarah Paine – Why Russia Lost the Cold War
Episode Date: December 19, 2025Sarah gives a “tour of the arguments” on what ultimately led to the Soviet Union’s collapse, diving into the role of the US, the Sino-Soviet border conflict, the oil bust, ethnic rebellions and ...even the Roman Catholic Church. As she points out, this is all particularly interesting as we find ourselves potentially at the beginning of another Cold War.As we wrap up this lecture series, I want to take a moment to thank Sarah for doing this with me. It has been such a pleasure.If you want more of her scholarship, I highly recommend checking out the books she’s written. You can find them here.Watch on YouTube; read the transcript.Sponsors* Labelbox can get you the training data you need, no matter the domain. Their Alignerr network includes the STEM PhDs and coding experts you’d expect, but it also has experienced cinematographers and talented voice actors to help train frontier video and audio models. Learn more at labelbox.com/dwarkesh.* Sardine doesn’t just assess customer risk for banking & retail. Their AI risk management platform is also extremely good at detecting fraudulent job applications, which I’ve found useful for my own hiring process. If you need help with hiring risk—or any other type of fraud prevention—go to sardine.ai/dwarkesh.* Gemini’s Nano Banana Pro helped us make many of the visuals in this episode. For example, we used it to turn dense tables into clear charts so that’d it be easier to quickly understand the trends that Sarah discusses. You can try Nano Banana Pro now in the Gemini app. Go to gemini.google.com.Timestamps(00:00:00) – Did Reagan single-handedly win the Cold War?(00:15:53) – Eastern Bloc uprisings & oil crisis(00:30:37) – Gorbachev’s mistakes(00:37:33) – German unification and NATO expansion(00:48:31) – The Gulf War and the Cold War endgame(00:56:10) – How central planning survived so long(01:14:46) – Sarah’s life in the USSR in 1988 Get full access to Dwarkesh Podcast at www.dwarkesh.com/subscribe
Transcript
Discussion (0)
thank you for coming it is it's a treat to be with you and sharing all this stuff um since we seem
to be in a second cold war maybe it's a good time to revisit the last one to see why it turned
out the way it did and why the participants in it thought it turned out the way it did so i'm going to
pose the question why russia lost the cold war and people have loads of different answers to
that question. So this is going to be a tour of the counterarguments. I'm going to start with an answer
that many Americans have, very simple one that's like Ronald Reagan single-handedly defeated the Soviet Union.
So that's one possible answer. But then I'm going to give you all kinds of counter arguments to that.
And some of them are going to be other external explanations of what others did to the Soviet Union.
Others are internal ones of what the Soviet Union, the cards that didn't play particularly well.
and then I've got some umbrella explanations.
So that's my plan for this evening.
The story that Ronald Reagan did it,
well, here's a picture at the Reagan ranch.
After the Cold War is over,
you see the Gorbachev's,
and you see the Regens,
and they seem to be having a grand old time,
which suggests there's something
maybe off of that explanation.
But anyway, the way the Ronald Reagan did at school
is Ronald Reagan did a massive military build-up,
and that some would argue
it bankrupted the Soviet Union.
He was a man of words and deeds.
He made really good speeches who were memorable.
Here's one before Parliament,
where he says the regimes planted by totalitarianism
have had more than 30 years to establish their legitimacy,
but none, not one regime,
has yet been able to risk free elections.
Regimes planted by bayonets do not take root.
And then here he is before the Brandenburg gate,
this is in Berlin, long a symbol of German,
greatness, but then it was a locked gate on the Berlin wall. And here's Ronald Reagan. General Secretary
Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe,
if you seek liberalization, come to this gate. Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate, tear down this wall.
And who can forget the evil empire speech, which he gave to the National Association of Evangelicals
in Orlando, Florida, and they skipped Disneyland.
to hear it. All right. Reagan did a very significant military buildup that actually had started under
Carter when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan. Big mistake, as we discovered. And he also invested,
deployed missiles in Europe. He was busy funding anti-communist insurgencies and also others who
didn't like the Soviet Union all over the world, starts doing more aggressive military
patrolling and by the time he's out of office he's like half a dozen ships short of this 600 ship
navy or whatever it is he was planning to make and uh he also was trying to build a missile shield
his strategic defense initiative and the problem is the Soviets tried to match him on this
and if you add up the gnps of the united states nato allies in japan well that would be seven
times larger than the Soviet GNP. And you've got to be aware of symmetric strategy. So the CIA
thought during the Cold War that perhaps Russia was spending up to a 20% part of its GNP on defense.
After the Cold War ended, when you're getting more accurate statistics, it turns out it was
at least 40 or 50%. And some people say it was up to a truly economy-busting 70% if you take
into account all the infrastructure investments that were associated with military things.
If you look during the Cold War, the United States was spending less than 8%, Germany less than 6%, Japan less than 2%,
and Nazi Germany, which is no Piker, 55%.
So you look at all this, and it was difficult.
So I am going to be quoting lots of Russians today because they have thought deeply about the fate of their country,
how life as they knew it, disappeared, the Soviet Union gone, the empire gone.
They thought a lot about it.
And here is a former Soviet ambassador to West Germany, Valentin Fowlin, and here's his take.
Following the American strategy of our exhaustion in the arms race, our crisis in public health
and all the things have to do with standard of living reached a new dimension of crisis.
And then if you add to the arms race of the United States, the arms race that was going on with China on that border,
the arms race plunged the Soviet economy.
into a permanent crisis.
And here you have Georgi Arbatov,
who is the Soviet Union's,
late Soviet Union's,
finest expert on the United States,
or at least his most famous one.
He's looking at the Soviet war in Afghanistan.
He said,
it is quite clear that the Afghan war
was most advantageous for the United States,
and we got our Vietnam
because the United States is busy funding the other side,
and it's costly.
And Gorbachev,
is looking at this, as he's telling the Politburo a year after he came into power,
he said, look, the Americans are betting precisely on the fact that the Soviet Union is
scared of this SDI missile, the strategic defense initiatives, a missile defense.
That's why they're putting pressure on us to exhaust us.
Correct.
So some would argue that the U.S. victory in the arms race guaranteed victory in the Cold War.
and be, go Ronnie. That's one explanation. But I'm going to give you a tour of the counterarguments
and some other explanations, starting with President's Ford, Carter, and the Helsinki Declaration.
So after World War II, the Soviets had wanted to convene a conference of European states
to confirm its expanded World War II borders. And for a long time, nobody was interested.
And then the Western Europeans are sick of all the drama. The United States still doesn't want to show
but we go along where they're allies.
And our allies insist on including human rights provisions.
And we think this is crazy land
because we know the Soviets are never going to enforce those things.
But you get the Helsinki agreements,
accords that have all sorts of human rights provisions.
Well, lo and behold, unbeknownst to anybody,
dissidents across the Eastern Bloc
and human rights activists across the West
start holding the communists to account for the agreements that they have signed
and start contrasting the liberation that communism promises
versus the dictatorship actually delivered.
And this human rights movement took on within the Soviet bloc and abroad.
It took on a life of its own.
So here you have the former director of the CIA
and former head of the Department of Defense, Robert Gates,
saying, the Soviets desperately wanted this big conference,
and it laid the foundations for the end of their empire.
We resisted it for years, only discovered years later
that this conference had yielded benefits
beyond our wildest imagination.
Go figure.
And here is Jimmy Carter with his human rights initiative,
and it was Gorbachev's English language translator
who said that actually Carter's emphasis
on precisely the human rights that were
denied to Soviets, really resonated, and it made people think that they wanted a more
democratic, open, liberal society. So here's Carter giving an address, graduation address at
Notre Dame. He said, we have reaffirmed America's commitment to human rights as a fundamental
tenet of our foreign policy. What draws us Americans together is a belief in human freedom.
We want the world to know that our nation stands for more than just financial prosperity. We're
bigger than that. And here is Edward Chevronazza, Gorbachev's foreign minister, echoing some
of these sentiments. He said, look, the belief that we are a great country's deeply ingrained
in me, but great in what? Territory, population quantity of arms, people's troubles, the individual's
lack of rights, and what do we who have virtually the highest infant mortality rate in the world
take pride. It's not easy answering the question. Who are you? Who do you wish to be? A country which is feared
or a country which is respected, a country of power or a country of kindness. And others agreed
that communism was essential to the survival of the Soviet Union, but it's an undemocratic
ideology that fundamentally it's a foundation that can't endure forever. And that's the take of
Vitele Ignatienko, is a Russian journalist.
And Aliyanevsky, as a Soviet career diplomat, is saying, look, communist ideology is
associated above all with the Soviet Union.
Its rejection created a vacuum, and it determined its ultimate fate.
And then Boris Yeltsin, who is Gorbachev's successor, said, look, no one wants a new Soviet Union.
So some would argue, this counterargument, that human rights clauses of the Helsinki Accords
and Carter's subsequent human rights campaign
destroyed communist belief in communism.
Okay, another president, another counterargument.
Those who are fans of Richard Nixon would say,
no, no, no, no.
It was Richard Nixon who played the China card
so the United States and China could gang up on the Soviet Union
and overextended financially to wreck it militarily.
I think the Chinese would beg to differ and say,
no, no, no, no, no.
It was Mao who played the America card.
because what's going on in 1969, there's a border war between China and the Soviet Union.
China's gotten its nuclear bomb in 64.
It no longer has to defer to the Soviet Union and starts playing more tough on their border disagreements.
And so the Soviets are really upset.
And they come to the United States and ask us whether it would be okay to nuke these people
because they think Americans don't like the Chinese.
Well, we didn't.
But we said, no, it's not okay.
to nuke those people. And so the Chinese figure it out. The one that wants to nuke you is your
primary adversary, right? Up until then, you think about it, China and Russia, for them,
the United States was the primary adversary. Now they're primary adversaries with each other
freeing up the United States to decide which one it's going to cozy up to, and the United States
decides it's going to cozy up to China. Why? Well, Chinese belligerency forces the Soviets,
It's not only, they've already got a big militarized border with Europe.
Now they're going to do the same thing on a very long border with China,
and this is nuclear-arm mechanized forces, very expensive.
Imagine if this country had to have such borders with Canada and Mexico.
It would be bankrupting, and we are far richer than the Soviet Union was then whenever.
It was bankrupting.
So some would argue that U.S. cooperation with China fatally overextended the Soviet Union.
One could take all of these arguments, starting with President Nixon all the way through
Reagan, to make an overarching argument that says, look, each president opened up opportunities
for the others who then leveraged them. So Nixon plays the China card, which others play
with increasing dexterity. Ford comes in and begins dabbling in human rights. Carter then
comes in and really goes for human rights and starts doing a military buildup, which then
and Ronald Reagan really does.
So that by the time you get to Reagan,
he is dealing in a position of both ideological
and military strength vis-a-vis the Soviet Union.
And for those who think that U.S. following policy
was not consistent during the Cold War,
you're not looking at it at the strategic level.
There were certain different strategies going on
and how best to achieve it,
but both parties agreed the goals were free trade,
democracy, containment of communism.
Those were staples of U.S. foreign policy, both parties for its duration.
So, some would argue that President Nixon through Reagan produced a cumulative presidential
effects to defeat the Soviet Union.
Okay, others would say, forget this great man theory of history business, that's really
passe.
What really accounted for the outcome of the Cold War was this military platform, that's
Pentagonese for large military systems.
But anyway, it's a nuclear-powered nuclear-armed submarine.
They say that this is the item.
The way deterrence theory worked during the Cold War, I believe, now as well, is in order
to deter the other side, you have to have a reliable second-strike capability.
So if they thought of lobbing a nuke at you, they would be guaranteed that you would have
the second strike to lob a nuke back.
Therefore, they're never going to log the first nuke.
When Jimmy Carter became president, he was a graduate of Annapolis and also a submariner,
the United States began a much more aggressive deployment of its fleet,
and that's continued even more so under Reagan,
where we're taking our submarines and we're targeting Soviet submarines in their homewater bastions.
So the Soviets are thinking that we're going to be able to destroy their strike-and-strike capability on our first strike,
and they're having a heart attack.
So here you have Valeri Bolden, a long-time aid to Gorbachev,
saying, look, the most powerful strength of the United States is the naval fleet.
And we aren't going to get one, or our geography actually isn't set up to use one the way the United States can.
And then you have Marshall Yazov saying, for the Americans, the main means of atomic attack is the fleet.
So when you get Marshall Ahremaev, who is visiting the United States in 1987, at the end of the Cold War, he will kill him.
himself, but he's still around at 87. And he's telling his American hosts, you know where our submarines are,
but we don't know where yours are. It's destabilizing you. You, the United States, Navy, are the problem.
Go Navy. And here's this host, Admiral Trost, who's going, yeah, the inability of the Soviet Union
to maintain a strong defensive capability led to the demise of the Soviet Union and to the removal of the
Soviets as a major threat to us. So you can make a perfectly good argument to say the Soviet Union
could not counter technologically or financially the U.S. submarine threat to its retaliatory
nuclear forces. So war termination was the only thing it could do. All right. So all of these
preceding explanations are naval explanations, spelled with an E, as in staring at one's own.
They're all about what the United States did or didn't do.
So let's get beyond the half-court tennis of Team America,
and you need to look at the other side of the net.
And this is where the Western guru for things military,
Karl von Klausowitz, emphasizes reciprocity in war
and the interaction of both sides,
that you're not going to do well unless you consider what the other side is doing.
So I have given you some external explanations, and I'm going to do the internal ones.
And here is Arnold Toynbee, is one of the finest historians of the 20th century.
He wrote a big multi, multi-volume history of the West, which he argues that civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.
So I discussed the murder, what the United States tried to do the Soviet Union.
Now I'm going to talk about the suicide, what the Soviets did to themselves.
And here is counterargument number one, which the argument is the Soviet Union was an empire,
and when that collapsed, that meant they lost the Cold War.
During the Cold War, the Korean War and the Vietnam War, there was much fear in the west of the domino theory,
and the idea is one country fell to communism, and then the next and next and next and next would fall to communism.
Turns out the domino theory did not apply to capitalism. It applied to communism.
because once the Democratic contagion hit one Warsaw block country in Eastern Europe,
it spread to the others until it was a seething mess, and they fell like dominoes.
So in 1988, 88, 89, there were all kinds of demonstrations in the Eastern Bloc, the Soviet Union.
In the Soviet Union, there for political freedoms.
In the Eastern Bloc, there for freedom from the Soviet Union.
And Gorbachev may have not gotten that detail.
But they're all about not only wanting political freedoms, but also they're about crumbling economies of how to fix their miserable standards of living.
And very uncharacteristically, the Russians didn't send tanks.
In fact, Gorbachev welcomed and encouraged reforms in the Eastern bloc, both political and economic, just as he was doing in the Soviet Union.
So his idea of glossness, openness, and perestroika rebuilding, they resonated at home and abroad.
And these reforms began in Poland.
Poland had been a scene of much worker unrest many times
in 1956, 1970, 1976, and 1980 and 81.
In 1881, this is when solidarity,
the workers' movement, gets going
and it gets a national and international reputation.
The next set of strikes are happening in 1988,
because in the preceding several years,
the Polish standard of living had shrunk by over 3%.
And the government was out of cash
and wanted to raise basic food prices
and polls hit the streets.
And the government was in a panic
because it was worried the economy would go into free fall.
So the government cut a deal with solidarity.
He said, you call off the strikes
and then we'll let you into political talks.
and Solidary agreed.
And there was a complicating factor on all of this.
It's called the Roman Catholic Church,
which is an institution of enormous credibility
and legitimacy in Poland,
which had a partiality for solidarity,
and it had a Polish pope.
And so the round-cable discussions
were these political talks.
They occurred a year later in February 1989,
and the Soviets encouraged them.
In fact, here's one Soviet.
person there advising the polls, look, you've got to find some quick solutions out of your economic
and political mess. You're an itty-bitty country, so when you make mistakes, there'll be
itty-bitty mistakes. But if we make them, they'll be big. They got that one right. The Polish
Communist Party thought they had this one covered by the way they jiggered the election rules,
not quite. The day they held elections is exactly the same day that Deng Xiaoping turned the
tanks on demonstrators in Beijing and you have the Tiananman massacre, two solutions for the
problem. So the way the elections worked out in Poland is solidarity won every single seat for which
it could compete but won. And then only three people in the communist designated seats actually
won, so who won all the rest of them? The box on the ballot called None of the Above.
Yes, the Roman Catholic Church had helped instruct people that that's the box you want.
And with that, the legitimacy of the Communist Party to rule had just been wrecked, and we're
on to democracy in Poland. And this democratic contagion spread into East Germany four months later.
this is about the 40th anniversary of the founding of East Germany
and 70,000 people demonstrated Leipzig
and within the week around, oh, like 1.4 million Germans
are demonstrating in over 200 demonstrators.
Typically, the East Germans would have sent tanks.
That was what they would have done in the past,
but would-wee tank man, Eric Hanuker, was already out of a job.
His ruinous policies of living off debt
since he came to power in 1971
had just about wrecked East Germany.
So he was out.
And then less than two weeks later,
the Council of Ministers resigns.
And then November 8th,
the Pahlv Bureau resigns.
And then on the 9th,
whatever was left of that government
is issuing new travel regulations.
And you might wonder
what's travel got to do with it.
I'll get there.
So, in response to a question at a news conference,
this guy, Gunter Shabowski,
who was one of the
remaining communist helping run the show, he gets asked a question, he doesn't know the answer,
and so he wings it, and the question is, when do these travel regulations go into effect?
And he goes, immediately.
Well, crowds immediately started gathering at the six gates to the Berlin wall.
And at one of them, the border guards decided that discretion was a better part of valor,
and they opened the gate.
And East Germans poured into West Berlin.
And within the first week alone, over half of East Germany's population visited the West.
And within the month, 1% of the population emigrated to the West.
And like the Polish elections, this opening the gate, was a pivotal decision.
A pivotal decision, whatever it is, there's no going back to the way it was.
And here's good old Gunter going, gosh, we hadn't a clue that opening the wall was the beginning of the end of East Germany.
Okay.
better luck next time
and the Russians
were shocked
by how unpopular
they were. They were thinking they were going to get credit
Gorbachev for East Europe's liberation
rather than blame for Eastern Europe's enshrment
and here you have Yuri Ruzov, a scientist and parliamentarian,
going all of our former satellites by compulsion
cast off from us as fast and as far as possible.
And Anatoly Kovalyov, who is a deputy foreign minister,
so look, and we had no confidence whatsoever concerning
whom the East German Army is going to shoot.
The demonstrators, or us.
And the same thing for the Polish and Hungarian armies.
Great, with allies like this, who needs enemies.
The Allies got to cover it.
So this argument, under this argument, unrest in the emerald.
Empire forced the Soviet Union to forfeit the Cold War.
Okay, I got another counterargument.
It says nonsense.
The real problem was the satellites were unhealthy.
That's why the whole thing fell apart.
So this map is 1960, and you see all those tempting green places?
They're about to become independent, and they are really sick of their Western European colonizers.
Enter the Soviet Union with a program to put the West out of business.
There were many takers.
Okay. Fast forward to the late 1980s. Soviet Union is on a roll, small hitch. In the late 1970s, there was a big recession, and it continued into the 80s, and it tanked commodity prices. So for some of the newfound pals like Angola, South Yemen, Ethiopia, Nicaragua, it wrecked their export earnings because they're exporting commodities, these commodity prices are down.
in many cases, it halved them.
The Soviet Union was really dependent on oil exports, still is.
Oil prices tanked.
And oil accounted for up to 55% of the Soviet budget.
So here, Brezhnev has got a deep bench of non-performing pals
at a time when he doesn't have the money to support all of them.
And worse yet, from the Soviet point of view,
so it's dumped all this money in these third world friends.
meanwhile it's got its own nationalities who are deeply unhappy and they want out of the empire
and most problematically they all revolt at exactly the same time and one of the rules for continental
empire is no two front wars while russia has so many fronts at this point it can't even keep
count and the unrest in the internal empire of nationalities started as soon as gorbachev got in
And there were student movements in Kazakhstan and Yakudia opposite ends of things.
By the time you get to 1990, they're like 76 seething ethnic rebellions in different parts of this.
There was too much for the Soviet government to handle.
So you could argue that the Soviet Union bankrupted itself on the third world
while ignoring its own internal third world of nationalities whose simultaneous revolts brought down the Soviet Union.
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I've got a completely different argument for you.
If you don't like all of those, I got another one for you.
It's the economy stupid, right?
That line.
One could argue that communism failed as an economic system.
if you look at growth statistics for the Soviet Union, they're pretty good post-World War II
when they're rebuilding. But they really stagnate from the mid-70s onwards. So for the decade preceding
Gorbachev's coming to power, Soviet growth stats were one to two percent lower than those of the
United States and the compounding effects of that were enormous. What's going on? Everyone's lying to
each other. So the data that Soviets are using is garbage. So if you're working for like a subunit
of an enterprise, you have to lie about the inventories you have, saying you have less than you do.
And then you have to lie about what you need, saying you need more than you do, because you're
worried about getting enough things. It's not a market system where you just, the price dictates it.
This is all about the plan.
You've got to enter the right numbers
and then you get whatever inputs you get
from the centralized plan.
So everyone's lying.
They're aggregating all the lies.
The higher up the food chain,
you aggregate these things,
the worse the data is,
so that the Soviet government
has no idea what the actual value
of capital or labor are,
no idea what actual productivity is,
and no one has any idea
what consumer preferences are.
You're not using markets and prices.
So that the misallocations,
allocation of capital and labor goes unnoticed until it metastasized. It's already metastasized
into a catastrophe. And to give you a sense of these misallocations, the Soviet Union was rotting
from 20 to 40 percent of its crops. Well, it's using scarce, hard currency for agricultural imports
to make up for those crops, total mess. And so you can look at what happens to the economy with
oil prices down, we're into a spiraling mess, so that from when Gorbachev comes in at 85 to when it
hits a trough in Russia in 1998, you see this crashing share of world GDP of the Eastern Block
as a result of all this. If you look at Soviet statistics on deficits, trade balances, debt,
they're just soaring, and then GDP growth goes double-digit negative. That's called shrinkage.
It's not the normal thing.
So, Marshal Yazov, here's his take.
We simply lacked the power of all these wealthy NATO nations.
We had to find an alternative to the arms race.
So, and here's a Foreign Service officer, Anatoly, Atamishin.
He said, look, our problems began with the departure from isolation.
There are main reasons for collapse.
We're internal, not external reasons.
The Soviet economy was literally,
exhausted from this monstrous arms race, militarism, enemies with half the world.
That's his take. And Gorbachev told the Central Committee, he said, look, we're encircled not
by invincible armies, but by superior economies. And he often told people, living this way any longer
is impossible. So you can make a powerful argument. It's the Soviet economy that lost the
whole war.
This gentleman, Alexis de Tocqueville, is very famous for writing a book about the last days of
the French monarchy before the French Revolution overturned it.
You also wrote something about Democracy, America, both excellent books.
But this one has come from the one about France, which Tocqueville observes the most dangerous
moment for a bad government is when it begins to reform.
Russians of all political persuasions, they agree on at least one.
thing. And that is that Gorbachev's role and how the Cold War turned out was pivotal, that he
played in a very essential part. And Gorbachev made his decisions based on certain false
assumptions. One of them was the irreversible direction of history. Gorbachev thought of history
going always forward towards communism, never backwards to capitalism. Of course, Eastern Europe
took a U-turn, who went straight back to capitalism. And here is Leonid Shibarshan, who is
a senior person in the KGB, their intelligence office, he said,
the thought never occurred to the government that it's possible to withdraw from socialism.
And if you think about both communist theory and how imperialism works in practice,
usually the mother country is more developed than whatever all the colonies are, right?
Well, the Soviet Union was an inverted empire.
People in Eastern Europe as a group were more well educated and they were.
richer than Russians. It was like a donut empire, so that when the empire went to Eastern Europe,
Russians could no longer siphon off the wealth of these insurf populations in Eastern Europe,
which explains why they wanted to leave. It also suggests why Putin wants them back.
Another false assumption has to do with the sentiments of the neighbors. Gorbachev was convinced
he was going to get credit for liberating Eastern Europe rather than blame.
as a Russian for having insurfed them in the first place.
For Gorbachev, the clock began on his watch for other people.
No, no, Stalin's when it began when he started shooting a lot of people.
So here you have Anatoli Chernayev, foreign policy advisor to Gorbachev, saying that Gorbachev thought
that bringing freedom to our eastern European satellites would have them adopt socialism
with human face.
He made an enormous mistake because these countries brutally turned their back on.
on us. Really? If that's brutal, then what pre-tale was Stalin? And then it gets better. The politics
in connection with our former friends were totally unexpected to us. Really? You occupy people,
you never leave, you shoot a lot of people in their government, you put in a new government,
you siphon off a lot of their wealth, and you impose a non-performing economic system,
and you wonder why they don't like you. Think about the United States. Intervenes all around the
world and other people's troubles, dumps billions in economic aid, and even leaves, and people
don't like us. I don't know why the Russians think they're so special. Another false assumption,
Gorbachev believed that if the Warsaw Pact disappeared, the military alliance of the Eastern
bloc, if that disappeared, then NATO would disappear. And that if the Comicon, which is their
trading organization, if that goes away, then it's a European community in those days. It becomes
the European Union later. Anyway, that would disappear. Not quite, because it turns out that
organizations that are coercive versus those that are voluntary, they dissolve for different
reasons. And then Gorbachev also assumed that the United States would share a continental
outlook of not wanting strong powers, and that the United States, therefore, would not want
a unified Germany, let alone a strong unified Germany. So when all the unrest is happening in
Germany, Gorbachev is off taking a vacation. Poor life choice, because at that moment,
President George Bush, Sr. and Chancellor Cole of Germany are working on fast-tracking
German unification of a fully sovereign, unified Germany, both halves in NATO.
All right. So, many of Gorbachev's closest supporters at the end of it all blamed him.
They said, look, his foreign policy mistakes were a function of his domestic policy mistakes,
and it destroyed the Soviet Union.
And back to this America expert, Vladimir Luka, Gorbachev, was no Deng Xiaoping.
Okay.
And Arbatov, who's their premier America expert, the stupidity of our leaders caused the disintegration of the Soviet Union.
So the big bozo was playing with plastic bags, stuck one on his head.
committed suicide. It was by mistake.
All right, Lucan continued. In the West, they love Gorbachev, because everything took place so easily
and cheaply, basically like that, but only for you. For us, it was expensive. But you could argue
the time to reassess all the Stalinist stuff was long overdue. All right, here's a completely
different way of looking at it. I've been giving you sins of
commission. And now I'm going to do sins of omission. It's a good framework. It's useful for other
things. So the sins of commission are all the things Gorbachev did. Now what I'm going to do is what the
army didn't do. Some would argue that the Red Army should have done exactly what Deng Xiaoping
ordered his army to do. You just send the send tanks against civilian demonstrators and they will
truly crush them. And it'll be over. Communist Party is still in power in China 30 years later.
So there are some people who believe that this was a terrible mistake.
So this argument would be that timely tank deployments, TTD,
my contribution to military acronyms,
would have changed the outcome of the Cold War.
All right.
Others would be back to the great men of history and sins of commission,
and they wouldn't be picking on Gorbachev,
but his successor, Boris Yeltsin,
who, and there are two big pieces of evidence we look.
He removed Article 6 from the Soviet Constitution,
which basically guaranteed that the Communist Party would always be the, it would monopolize
power. And then in addition, the following years, so Yeltsin's the head of Russia, he gets together
with the heads of Ukraine and Belarusia, and they signed the Bail of Jaya Accords, which then
formally dissolved the Soviet Union. So, according to this way of thinking, it's his fault,
it's suicide on purpose, and what it does is it opens the door for multiple parties.
parties and for the nationalities within the Soviet Empire to become independent.
All right.
So I've given you internal explanations.
I've given you external explanations.
Now I'm going to give you some umbrella explanations.
And they're based on all the preceding evidence, and they come to opposite conclusions.
The first one was, well, any of the above, it's inevitable.
And the opposite conclusion from the same evidence is, no, no, no, it took all of the
all of the above, the West barely one.
So I'm going to start with any of the above.
You could argue with this many serious problems,
it was a matter of time before the Soviet Union collapsed.
And it was an objectionable system
for precisely the reasons the West didn't like it.
It had a brutally inefficient economic system.
And Russians who invented the thing at the end of the day
didn't want it either.
So by this way of looking at it, you have people like Yuri Rijskov, a genuine rocket scientist, who says, look, the main reason for the collapse of the Soviet Union is the rottenness of its system.
And then here's a journalist Timura Stepanov who said, look, I think from the beginning, the genes of disintegration were contained in the genetics of this governmental political formation.
Don't you love the products of the Soviet educational system?
don't ever use wording like that all right so you could argue that the soviet union was destined to
fail with this many problems others would come to the opposite conclusion they would say no it took
every single one of them for the cold war to end on western terms and here's back to anatoly kovalyov
the deputy foreign minister he said look all these factors merge internal ideological economic
military. It took all of them. You remove any one of them and you get a different outcome. Maybe the
Cold War ends, but it might end completely differently. So by this line of reasoning, the best barely
won should feel very fortunate that it did. One can take this last argument and say it was more
than that. It also took the confluence and office of two very talented leaders. Helmut Cole
of Germany and George Bush, senior of the United States, not the son who got
got into those Forever Wars, but the dad who didn't.
George Bush, Sr., had one of the most amazing resumes
of any president ever to, any person to become president
in the United States.
Just look at him.
When he's really young, he's a war hero in World War II.
He's a Navy pilot, a dangerous thing to do.
He did it.
And then he comes back and he gets his BA at Yale
and graduates with honors.
And then he becomes a representative for a district in Texas
after he's already made himself a millionaire
by the oil business that he started.
And then he becomes ambassador to the UN,
followed by U.S. representative to the PRC.
It's before we had formal diplomatic relations.
So he's the guy who's setting that off,
becomes director of the CIA,
and then he is Ronald Reagan's understudy for eight years
as vice president.
He is incredibly fit for the job.
And Helmut Kohl is equally fit for the job.
He is the longest-serving chancellor
in German history since his illustrious predecessor, Otto von Bismarck.
He starts out getting a PhD in history and political science.
He also starts out in business, but then he works for state government initially as a representative,
then as a governor, and he becomes chairman of his political party, the Christian Democratic Union
for a quarter of a century.
Once he gets in, he decides he's going to buy up East Germany one tour.
at a time. How does that work? East Germans turned out really like to travel. West Germans had always
been able to travel to East Germany, or they long had been able to travel to East Germany,
but East Germans definitely could not easily travel to West Germany. Why? Because they have a habit of
staying. But all of a sudden, East Germany eases up on the travel regulations, and you might ask why.
And the answer would be money. Just like the polls.
the East Germans were deep in an economic mess of their own making.
Would be Tankman, Eric Hanuker, who got the boot at the very end.
Well, his staying in power paradigm that he implements in 1971
is going to be easily going to live off debt.
He needs to make certain social benefits available
and consumer benefits available for labor stability,
not having labor unrest.
and the way he's going to do that is he's not going to do many domestic investments
and he's going to do a lot of borrowing particularly from West Germany.
Well, that's unsustainable long term.
So by the time you get to the end of the Cold War, if he's going to fix that and even out the accounts,
it would be a 30% decline in East German standard of living.
So he really needs the pocket change from the tourists.
So what Cole does is a brisk business of tourists and things.
What he does, in return for the easing of travel restrictions,
he pays East Germany several hundred million Deutschmark's extra to allow that to happen.
And then he gets the Hungarians to go along.
He gets the Hungarians to open up their Austrian border to let East Germans out that way,
and he gives them a half a billion Deutschmark.
for that little favor. And then
Cole introduces
his 10-point unification program
because now he's thinking he's going to get both Germany's
together. This is when
he starts doling out big bucks to the
Soviet Union whose economy
is unraveling. And Gorbachev is going to be
desperate for this cash as
that's happening. So
West Germany provides
$100 million in food, especially in
meat for the Soviet Union that doesn't
have these things. Nevertheless,
less, the unrest just keeps on going. The Berlin Wall, as I've told you, is breached,
and then you wind up with a West German caretaker government, and the financial situation
in Russia itself is unraveling. And by the time you get to January 1990, Bush and Cole get
together, and they've decided they want to really fast-track German reunification. Why? Because
they've got to get it done before this unraveling crisis that Gorbachev falls from
power as a result of it. So they have got a game going, the two of them. And it's complicated.
And here's why. Gorbachev was dead against Germany, a united Germany in NATO. He's not keen about
really a united Germany, let alone one in NATO. The U.S. State Department experts, the guys who
know everything are saying, no, no, no, you want to go slow on this unification business.
And then Cole is running a coalition government. There are people in that government. He cannot
fire, because they're from different political parties. One of them is his foreign minister,
this guy, Genscher, who is very skeptical about Germany being part of NATO. And then it turns out,
although Britain had talked a good peace during the Cold War, it didn't actually want a unified
Germany, nor did France. Why? Because that unified Germany would eclipse theirs economically. They
didn't want that to happen. So, Cole and Bush divide up the tasks. Coal is going to reassure the
Union, that Germany's not going to be belligerent or do horrible things, and Cole's going to
work on the financial unification, because the Soviets are thinking in terms of military
unification, you know, where you deploy your troops, that determines things. Uh-uh. Wrong instrument
of national power. Precisely because the Soviets didn't understand finance, that's why they're
in such a mess. Whereas the Germans do, what they're going to do is get East Germany on the
West German Deutschemark, and at that point, they will control all the money, and they will control
decisions, but the Russians aren't going to see that coming. Meanwhile, Bush is supposed to work
the alliances with particularly Britain in France in the West. There are all sorts of meetings
that were coming up, and Bush's job is to delay those meetings for as long as possible,
so German unification can proceed as far as possible. And the two of them are doing a tag team
diplomacy with Gorbachev that he just can't keep up with given that his own home economy
has got this double-digit shrinkage rates. So here's how they go. As the trades get bigger,
the amount of money you pay Gorbachev gets bigger. So first of all, it's just to get a unified
Germany. Then it's to get a unified Germany with West Germany still in NATO. Then it's to get
unified Germany with all of Germany and NATO. So here's how the money goes. Gorbachev agrees to
German unification. We are no longer paying hundreds of millions of Deutschmark. We're paying
billions of Deutsche Mark, five billion Deutsche Mark for that one. Then Gorbachev agrees that states can
choose their own alliances, i.e. whether or not to join NATO. And then he gets, the U.S. offers
nine assurance, but it's also a trade agreement that Gorbachev really wants. And then the economic
Union goes into effect. So we've now done the financial reunification of Germany. And this is
when London, there's a London Declaration that's inviting Eastern European countries to coordinate
more closely with NATO. And then in return, Gorbachev has got a promise of a G7 summit meeting
that's going to fast-track aid to him, which it will do. And then Gorbachev agrees to German NATO
membership. And at this point, even bigger things are happening. Germany's going to agree to its
border with Poland. I'll get there and explain. And Germany provides $15 billion in Deutschemark,
including building all kinds of new apartment buildings for repatriated Soviet soldiers who are going
home. Why are you doing that? Because you want those soldiers focused on buying furniture,
not running a military coup. That's what they're doing. So the unification happens in mid-September
in 1990. And here's the Polish borders. At the end of World War II, Stalin moved Poland
200 kilometers to the west,
and it winds up taking a third of German territory
by the time that's all over.
And so the Germans don't really want to sign all that away.
And in addition, as part of that,
there were 12 million German refugees
who were thrown out of where they were living
to send them back to Germany,
of whom 2 million died.
So this is a big deal, and it's in living memory.
Germany agrees to this,
that the borders are done,
German-Polish borders are.
set. Complicating factor, a month and a half before this unification treaty is signed,
Saddam Hussein decides he's going to invade Kuwait, because he's broke because he's had a long war
with Iran, huge debts, many owed to Kuwait, which you don't want to pay back, so if you invade
them, that solves that problem. And also, he would take over Kuwait's very rich oil fields,
and together that would make Iraq, probably the swing producer of oil.
So he thinks that's a great idea, except the Cold War's over, actually,
and the Russians are more than willing to cooperate with the United States.
Gorbachev really needs more money.
And he is willing to go along with Iraq out of Kuwait,
but not with regime change in Iraq.
Because think about Iraq is a very important creditor state to the Soviet Union.
It owed them between $10 and $13 billion.
That's a lot of money for a broke creditor.
But Gorbachev is being extraordinarily cooperative with Bush Sr.
He sends Evgeny Prima Kov on multiple missions to Baghdad.
The first one, Primakov gets all Russian hostages out of Iraq.
And then on the second trip, he gets all Westerners out, Americans included.
Third trip, not so lucky.
He's there for the coalition force bombing.
I don't think he liked that very much.
But imagine that bombing going on if they were Western human,
shields going down with every target. Russia took that card right off the table. And here's
some of the reasoning. Sergei Tarcenko was an aide to Foreign Minister Shevarnoza. And they understood
that the United States was going to do something about this invasion of Kuwait. And so the Russians
thought it'll be better if we force all of this to go through the UN, where Russia has a veto power.
And he said, look, there was a division of roles.
It extends to China, the help that Russia provided.
When the Americans asked us to work with the Chinese, we told the Chinese, think about it.
You're one of the big five with veto player.
Doesn't it suit your interest to funnel everything through the UN where you can put your foot down?
And the Chinese came around to that idea.
However, the Russians had red lines.
And here's Anatoly Kovaldojov, again, the Deputy Foreign Ministry.
The red line is, American troops stay out of Iraq.
No regime change in Iraq.
You do that and you will tank termination of the Cold War, and that would be the goal.
The goal.
Here's Kovov saying, I advance the basic principle that we must support the territorial integrity of Iraq.
This was our sacred position.
But we must not permit a division of Iraq.
So if you wonder why the ground war ended.
after a hundred hours, this is it.
That the big thing out there is war termination of the Cold War.
That's the big thing.
Saddam Hussein is a minor event over there.
Sorry, but he was.
Anyway.
So, and if it had tanked Cold War termination or upset the reunification of Germany,
France and Britain might have been very happy.
Because Francois Mitterrand, who is the problem,
President of France, and Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister of Britain, were against German
unification. They knew it would marginalize their own country. Germany is going to be a bigger
economy, which it is. Frosomi Duran eventually found solace in expanding the European
community to the European Union when you're incorporating all these eastern bloc countries
into it. And he plays a really important role in concluding the Maastricht Treaty that forms
the European Union. But Margaret Thatcher, just plain lost. She was just upset about the whole thing.
She said, Germany will be the Japan of Europe and worse than Japan. I guess she hadn't been to Japan lately.
She said, the Germans will get in peace, what Hitler couldn't get in war. And she wanted to leave
Red Army troops in Germany for the duration. Imagine if that had been the case and now dealing
with Putin. If he had troops in Germany.
would be in trouble. But Bush and Cole worked around all of them. And Bush said to Cole at the end of it,
he said, look, I'm not going to beat my chest and dance on the Berlin Wall. Both of them were very careful
never to humiliate Gorbachev about the Soviet loss of the Cold War. Why? Because they didn't want,
they knew that if they did that, he might fall from power sooner rather than later. Also, they were
afraid that if they did that, the hardliners would come to power much more rapidly than they
actually did. It was 20 years before Putin started consolidating his power. And the newly independent
countries of Eastern Europe needed those 20 years to integrate militarily, politically,
economically with the West so that the cement could set before you got the Russians trying
to destabilize them. So they bought them 20 years to do this. But there's a cost to all this.
Bush never got credit for his essential role in ending the Cold War on Western terms. So he was
not re-elected for a second term. But anyway, when it came time for Nobel Prizes and why the
Cold War ended, Anatoly Ademisha and this Soviet Foreign Service officer said, look, it's difficult to die
the Soviet Union was the one that ended the Cold War. And Edwin Meese, who was a counselor to Reagan,
also his attorney general, said, look, the Cold War began because of the Soviet policies and it ended
in a sense because of Soviet policies. And the Nobel Prize Committee agreed. They awarded the
prize to Gorbachev, not to Bush, for his role in liberating Eastern Europe. So when you're
thinking about this question of why Russia lost the Cold War, I hope you will come up with a more
complicated answer than, well, Ronnie did it.
There are probably other causes at work as well.
Anyway, thank you for your attention.
That's what I have for you this evening.
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All right, back to Sarah. Sarah, thank you so much for doing these.
Thank you for having me. That would be the more important thing.
There's an interesting question of why the Soviet Union collapsed when it did.
I think the even more interesting question is why a system that was so centrally planned, monstrously inefficient, brutal, a colonial land empire, how such a country could survive for so long into the 28th century.
So I feel like that's the thing that actually needs explanation.
How did this regime last for 74 years?
But there are loads of dysfunctional places all over the planet that have been dysfunctional forever.
and you look, well, why are they dysfunctional?
And you look at, to me, the answer to that one, in a way, is the example of North Korea,
you go, of all countries that should fall, a place that has ongoing famines in the 21st century,
and it used to be the richest part of the Korean Peninsula.
So these authoritarian regimes are really good at maintaining the coercive powers.
But think about it, in order to educate someone,
It takes years as a parent to bring up a little person, and then you get them educated, and maybe they're an A-list politician, it takes seconds to assassinate them.
It's the asymmetry between construction and destruction. Destruction is so easy that these guys are dictators tend to be, dictatorships are all over the world.
It's a sad part of the human condition.
they clearly know what they're up to.
In the case of the Soviet Union,
there were multiple intelligence organizations.
That's what Stalin was using
to keep track on everyone.
So you want to monopolize information
so that you know more information than other people.
And then they have a whole bunch of people
who are the winners, the nomenclature,
are the elites there.
You make sure you pay all them off.
And, I mean, think about it.
Human society, slaves, serfs.
I mean, we humans have been doing these things.
to each other for a long time.
So dictatorships can certainly sustain themselves for a long time, but the Soviet Union
was special in that by the 60s and 70s, they have a GNP that's 60% of America, is this
incredibly dynamic economy.
In the 40s and 50s, they have much higher growth rates, so much so that prominent economists
like Paul Samuelson are saying that by the 90s, based on what they're seeing at the time,
the Soviet Union will have a bigger economy than America.
And this is just quite surprising
that they would have such high growth rates.
If you just think about how central planning works,
people are going to tell you how much steel you can make
and which company gets to use the cotton fabric and cement and et cetera.
And you have hundreds of millions of people living under the system.
And it's just actually quite shocking
that they actually had notable growth rates after World War II
for decades on end.
Well, first of all, it's a war economy, essentially.
You're putting all your money, so you have a big military
and Russians define greatness.
This is part of it
of being a big power
and it's military power with territory.
So, and most countries in wartime
have, they mobilized for the military, right?
This country did it in World War II.
All kinds of rationing, right?
We're not using market prices.
You're setting different prices,
giving people ration cards and things.
The thing is about the Soviets
is they kept it forever.
They never got rid of it.
So that's one piece.
Another problem with the Soviet Union
is all of the decades.
data. So I don't know what data you've seen, and I know the data I've seen, is it's hard to know
because because rubles a non-convertible currency and a lot of things they measure in weight
and other things, like they're the greatest TV producer in the world. They said, why? Because
they made the heaviest TVs in the world. Right? I'm serious. When I was there, this was it,
and they would spontaneously combust, which is not the normal thing a TV should do for you,
burn down the apartment building.
So they're going to measure their heavy TVs as a positive,
and the ruble is non-convertible.
So there was a guy named Mari Feshbach,
and I can't remember which part of the U.S. government he was,
but he was really good at looking at their statistics
and then adjusting them.
But people didn't know, and I gave you the CIA ones,
where the CIA, they're not stupid people.
They've got the best data they could find,
and they're coming up with 20% of the Soviet budget
is probably devoted to the military.
Then after the Cold War is over, they're going, whoops, we missed.
It's at least double that and maybe triple.
So it's really hard to know, even with the statistics you're getting,
certainly what Paul Samuelson had wouldn't be accurate.
It's just a guess.
But my favorite example of this is,
so there were top-down commands that you had to produce a certain amount of steel,
and a steel factory would then be incentivized to make thicker bars of steel
rather than thinner bars because that would counter as greater production,
except a lot of inputs actually do require the thinner sheets.
So then the other factories have to thin down the steel.
But that also counts towards GDP.
So producing the inefficient steel and then cutting it down to size
is both being double-counted towards GDP.
Oh, and just the whole waste of it.
You're like the heavy TVs.
They probably have four times the inputs that they need to make them
that would be good for other things.
Yeah, it's this notion that you can actually plan an economy,
prices are a miracle. It's good old Adam Smith, the magic hand, right? Or the invisible hand, that was what it was.
That prices are the way to go and markets. It's more efficient. I wonder if one thing that's going on is in the early and mid-20th century, you have economies which are much simpler, at least compared to today. So even then, obviously, command and control is less workable than capitalism. But if you just have heavy industry, you need a certain amount of cement, steel, concrete, fabrics, coal.
That's much more workable than, like, we've got to centrally command what SaaS tools your enterprise is allowed to use.
Oh, yeah.
Well, it's interesting on the development thing.
So the communists have insisted on heavy industry.
That's the thing that they want.
Forget about the consumer goods.
If you look at the countries that really have made it, like Japan and the Meiji restoration, they're doing a lot of light industry and consumer goods.
And then they move into heavy.
But they've already got people on bicycles and they've got textiles and other things up and running.
And that would also apply to Taiwan and Korea.
And they do, by all means, they do get heavy industry.
But that's not the starter program.
The starter program is basic standard of living.
And it turns out, and I don't know economists,
but it turns out if you just look at who's rich and who's not,
that that seems to me the more workable thing.
Yeah.
There's also the fact that the centralized regime
is building things according to the 30s plan.
And even after post-war could reconstruction,
they're still calling back on these plants from the 30s
that call for heavy industry for a bygone era.
And in the 70s, 80s, we have our rust belt collapse of manufacturing.
And people complain about this as, look, the U.S. has this hollowed-out manufacturing base.
But it's much better to have industries which are left behind
so that the whole economy as a whole can be more dynamic and move on
than the Soviet Union where the entire thing became a rust belt, right?
Because they couldn't move on.
It's more exciting than that.
And again, I'm not an economist.
But apparently they missed the plastics revolution.
where, I mean, think about our own laws.
Now we're finding me out too many plastics,
but plastic's an incredible material,
and they're just missing that.
I remember in Russia,
trying to figure out where to get sour cream
and was being laughed at by Russians
because I was so stupid in the store
that I couldn't find it.
Well, we have little plastic tubs with the sour cream.
Back in the late 80s, and I was there,
you had to bring your glass jar with you,
so you could hand it over the counter
so someone could take a filthy ladle and fill up your jar.
I mean, this is part of not having plastics.
And then they totally missed the computer revolution.
And that is, this plays into Ronald Reagan winning the military race
is we're putting these chips and things into our ballistic missiles.
And they can't do that.
And that's a problem.
Speaking of plastics, I didn't realize before preparing for this lecture,
the overwhelming role that oil played in first explaining why the Soviet Union was able to sustain itself for so long and then why it collapsed. So by the late 50s, Soviet growth rates are already starting to go down, especially compared to the post-war boom that America is experiencing. And in 59, they discovered these massive oil fields in Siberia. And then from 73 to 85, I think, 80% of Soviet Union's hard currency earnings are just from oil. And they use this.
because essential planning can't produce even gray,
and let alone advanced technology
they use this to import a bunch of stuff
to sustain the Red Army,
to sustain the population,
and to subsidize Eastern Europe.
And then, of course,
prices collapsed in 1985.
Do you think that if the Siberian reserves
aren't found in the late 50s,
that it's possible that the Soviet Union
would have collapsed 30 years prior?
I don't know, but they would have had,
they wouldn't have been able to do
all the Africa program and things.
just would be too expensive. So certainly it would have been a reduced thing. It's also,
it is also the gas reserves. They got up, it's sort of like North Central Soviet Union.
I can't remember the places, but this is the gas that gets, used to get pumped to Europe,
because that's the better place. And they make those big investments, and it takes a while for them
to pay off. And that was a big deal because they needed help from Western oil companies or whatever.
whoever does the gas pipelines, compressors,
whatever it is you need.
And there was a big to-do about that,
about whether we should sell the stuff
or whether we shouldn't sell the stuff.
Europeans wanted to sell.
We were trying not to.
This is going under Reagan as well.
But anyway, they had built a lot of it,
and it was essential to their pocket change.
But then, when they got all the pocket change,
they never saved any of it.
They just, whatever the oil wealth was,
they spent up to the max.
Doesn't it sound familiar, right?
Governments, you have money, you spend it,
forget about rainy days.
So after the Soviet Union collapses,
there was a period when Putin was still winning
somewhat free elections between.
And so if you look at the why Russia's economy recovers
and why Putin is so popular in the 2000s,
from 2000 to 2008, oil goes from $10 a barrel
to $140 a barrel.
And this goes to your point about we give credit
or blame to political leaders for often
what are just long-run macro trends.
Well, what I didn't cover is when the Soviet Union collapses,
Soviet living standards, just Russian living standards implode.
And it's a mess for 20 years.
It is just unbelievably difficult.
Oh, and another piece of the brilliant Soviet management,
in order to maintain control over the empire,
instead of building things all in a place,
you'd build some plain parts here, some plain parts there,
some plain parts all over the empire.
empire. So when the empire goes, great, I've got a quarter of a plane. And then, you know, where do I
get the other parts? So all of that fell apart. So on Putin suddenly has a lot of money. And then
he starts spending it on people, because initially there's plenty of money. Russian standard
livings do go up. And so, of course, they like him. And they give it, give him credit for all of that.
But then that runs its course, right? And then it's less good. And then he's more excited about, well,
it's his mindset anyway
when you get more money
you want to get the empire back
and then Russians also like that
right?
Speaking of the empire
you know
the Russian's economy
just has this terrible period
after the colossus of the Soviet Union
a lot of the
Eastern European satellites
seem to recover
in this gangbusters way
obviously East Germany
but even Poland today
is such a big success story
what's going wrong
with the mainland
itself, that these other countries are able to recover from communism much better.
Well, they had been always much more connected to Western Europe.
Czechoslovakia before the war is a full-up, highly developed country, absolutely tied to the West.
Poland, I believe Copernicus is from a place like Poland, right?
It's a center of the Enlightenment.
But when I was using the George Bush Senior Archives, it's fascinating.
So it's 88, 89, when the Soviet Union's imploding.
And then there's a lot of correspondence between Eastern Europe, particularly Polish leaders,
coming to the Bush administration saying, hey, our banking system, we know it's a mess, our financial system's a mess.
We know we need expertise to help us figure out what our legal system is going to look like.
And Bush is all over that.
And I'm sure he farmed them out to the private sector, who would also be all over that,
like giving them free consulting.
And so as a result, you do have them really taking advantage of this 20 years.
At the same time, when Bush would have loved to have given some of the same advice,
and there were people like Jeffrey Sachs and others who went to the Soviet Union,
but it was not remotely the same thing.
This is a people throughout Polish society requesting this advice,
not like one guy with an office in Moscow.
And basically, the Russians thought they knew it all.
And they thought they understood.
This is all the unknown unknowns,
the things you don't understand your blind spots.
Truly economics is a blind spot for the Soviets.
Because think about it, when the czars ran the show,
it's like a riff off the Mongol Empire of you take cuts
from people's businesses, of trade that comes through.
And then it's also about selling basic commodities.
You're not thinking of under the czars,
Russia doing high-end manufacturers.
I mean, I guess Fabrije and some jewelry,
if you want to do that.
But really, that's not it.
And so it doesn't have this commercial being tied into
of this commercial tradition of Western Europe
and all the sea routes for trade.
And so then when you get the communists,
they aren't about that at all.
So there's really a dearth of knowledge.
Or think about in this country
with all the little kids selling lemonade, right?
You see them on the streets.
They're already learned,
or the kids who are doing newspaper routes,
They're already learning about buying things, selling things, at a very – and we just take this knowledge for granted.
It's just absent or was absent in the Soviet Union, and not as much absent in Eastern Europe that have been more connected in.
Okay, so I should ask, before we get to the period of Russian collapse, let's go back to the end of the Soviet period.
Gorbachev starts instituting these economic reforms along with Glasnoss and Parastroka.
But what I find mysterious is those economic reforms not only fail to prevent the stagnation that the Soviet Union is experiencing, but they, in fact, make things worse.
So you would think that reform, even if it's handled badly, would have some sort of positive impact.
And if you do it badly, then it'll have a smaller positive impact.
But here it just causes its huge hyperinflation, causes all these big problems.
So why did reform have this backwards impact?
Well, A, there's so much that needs reforming there.
But part of it, I think, because he wanted to do political reforms, that's what he understands.
As a human being, that would be the thing that he's very familiar with.
Think about it.
He's like an A-list member of the Communist Party to be the guy when they do generational change.
He's the one.
So he's obviously very astute at that level.
But the problem is economics.
So he's giving away political power before he's fixed the economic problems.
And so China's conclusion is, there is no way you're going to touch political power.
They're going to hang on to that and then deal with whatever, as much of the economics as they're going to deal with.
But that's part of it.
But part of it is there's no tradition for all of these things.
And then you go, well, how did Russia get this way?
Well, it's a very difficult address.
Prior to the Industrial Revolution, it's flat.
neighbors all invade
and so you needed a big army
in order to defeat them
okay a big army is going to want a war economy
historically you're going to want to
support a big land force
and that's going to
I mean this is my take
and others who are actually experts
in these various periods of Russian history
can come up with something else
but I think it's you're funneling
you're channeling your economics into that
whereas you're looking at Europe
and particularly Britain
it's merchant
I got a big aristocracy who are not going to dirty themselves with buying and selling stuff.
But there are a tremendous number of very rich merchants in Britain that are going to influence government laws and things, which is not going to take place.
And then what's nice about the Navy for Britain is you send them away.
They're not going to run a coup in the capital because they're off on the ship somewhere.
And there aren't that many of them compared to a standing army.
So I suspect, I can't prove this, that this leads to different outcomes.
or contributes to.
One theory I heard of that is complementary to your theory is that Gorbachev is instituting
forums because he thinks there should be decentralized Eastern democratization,
but he doesn't fundamentally believe in the market system.
So he's delegating power to these quasi-firm.
At the same time, he thinks the price system is immoral, private property is immoral.
So they can't intermediate between themselves using real prices.
So then how do these firms intermediate?
well, there's corruption, right?
If you can't use actual prices and property
to figure out who gets what allocation of scarce resources,
you just back from dealing,
which makes the problem worse.
Well, there's no legal system,
and you need a legal system.
And legal systems take a long time to develop.
So you're telling the Soviet Union,
okay, communism is down,
and now you need a, like chop, chop,
we need a fast-up.
We need a new legal system.
It's not going to happen.
Okay, so you were mentioning the problem
that Eastern European countries especially had, which is that they're going more and more into
debt because they're not able to produce globally competitive exports. And in order to, so did they
have this last-dish effort that we're going to, we're going to solve our problems with some
technological miracle. We need to get even more over leverage. We'll get some Western machinery
or technology and then we'll be able to finally produce something that the world wants.
I'm curious
up to what point
this was a plausible hope
you know
through the 80s
and even till the end of the 80s
they still believe
that you know
Czechoslovakia or East Germany
or something could catch off
with West Europe
in terms of an infection
Right it's think about it
if you're a communist leader
how many other cards are there to play
you're looking okay
this is the only card I got
and they're doing other things
because of the social unrest
they want to import food and consumer products
because they've been so neglected these things.
And then there's another piece, which is VCRs, you know, the videos.
All of a sudden those things came around.
I remember this, so we're in Soviet Union,
the academic year of 1988-88-89,
and had one of my classmates had been an English-language tutor
of this person in Moscow
set me up because that was the only way
to get a good meal once a week.
I would do, for a meal,
I would do talk English for an hour.
And, yeah, that
what that family wanted
more than anything else
was a VCR player.
And they had a diplomatic,
you could have hard currency
and buy it, the diplomatic, whatever it was.
So I basically got them a VCR
by going to the diplomatic thing
with my very limited foreign currency.
They bought an overpriced VCR for them,
and they got all kinds of meals for the rest of the year.
But it meant that they could all of a sudden get Western movies.
And there are things like in movies where, oh, like there'll be a picture of, I don't know,
a fugitive running by, I don't know, the fruit section of the Berkeley Ball.
And the Russians would be, you know, it's unbelievable.
I think that Raiza Gorbachev, Gorbachev's wife, when she came and visited,
she must have realized that a welfare mother on food stamps had better buying power than she did
by just being able to have access to Walmart.
I think the elites, as they're traveling.
I have no statistical data on this, but as you travel, it's like I'm comparing me getting sour cream in a jar,
and oh yeah, that was the other thing, counting up all the things in the...
a Soviet
supermarket.
And the total
was something like
77 items
total in this
supermarket.
I don't think that
compares favorably
to a candy rack
as you leave.
I don't know.
It's 7-Eleven,
right?
And oh yeah,
when you went
by the meat
section,
the smell
just about
knocked you out
of rotten meat.
It was really
disgusting.
Yeah, I got to make,
I got really good
at making borsh,
go to the peasant market,
pay hard currency
for bone,
because it couldn't afford any meat, but I could afford the bones.
And then would buy, the Russians produce really good sugar beets.
Got beets.
And then you're starting to get rotten apples over the winter,
but they at least come from Hungary.
Russians don't even produce apples in those days, but Hungarians did.
And the Romanians provided the canned tomatoes,
and I could do a credible bors.
But you're talking about, this is Moscow, the center of everything.
And we're dealing, oh, I remember buying potatoes at the market.
And the rotten spots felt gelatinous.
So you'd have to cut those out.
And then you're wondering how many nutrients
are in the rest of that potato.
It was a really gross year.
And then, yeah, I remember going to the candy store.
And I mean, I would buy caramel from Poland or somewhere.
It was like a food item because it was actually edible.
At this point, I bet you were wondering
why you didn't write a biography of Napoleon
and so you could just visit Paris instead.
Yeah, well, my brother's comment is you're studying Russian.
China, two countries in the breakdown lane.
By the way, the point about the
grocery stores having 74 items,
it's interesting in two ways. One,
central control works much
better if you have a much smaller amount of items
to optimize over. So if you have things are standardized,
it can work much better.
And second, to your point about GDP
being hard to compare between the Soviets and the United States,
how do you compare a rotten tomato
or a rotten potato to
the Idaho ones that you can get.
Oh, they would have compared it by pound.
Exactly, right?
Oh, so you said you were there in 88 and 89.
So this is before the Berlin Wall has fallen.
I was watching Tiananmen fall,
the Tiananmen demonstrations on Soviet TV.
And the only reason you got that TV coverage
is because Gorbachev was in Beijing.
So all the press was there.
That's why you have the coverage.
And they stayed on because the students were demonstrating
and the Chinese closed society
weren't aware of power of television,
of guys, they're going to film you doing all of this stuff
and they will get the film out.
Okay, in 88, was the mood, obviously things are going terribly,
but did people realize that they're only two years away
or three years away from the complete dissolution of the Soviet Union?
Well, maybe the end of the Soviet Union,
but there was such optimism of thinking,
we're finally going to be a full-up democratic country.
It's to be wonderful with no sense of the work schedules
that go into a capitalist economy.
That to create the wealth in this country,
a lot of people are working far more than 40 hours a week,
right?
And particularly as they're getting started,
working enormous hours.
And that was not something that was in most people's mind.
I mean, sure, the kids who became the ballerinas and the bullshoy,
are working long hours to do that.
But as an economy as a whole,
they didn't understand the source of wealth
and had any inkling of all the things that are missing,
not least of which is no one's got the right education.
Great, you got Marx memorized.
That does you zero good.
So around this time is when people are finally learning
about what actually happened during the Stalinist period.
Oh, yeah.
So people are optimistic that, well,
well, we can sort of have a changing of the guard
and maybe things will improve. But at the same time, they're learning
about how terrible their history actually was.
So between these two things
and also at some point
they must realize through the 90s that
things actually aren't improving. In fact, they're getting worse.
Oh, it's fell apart. Yeah. So
what is the inflection point at which the mood is
just... I don't know because I wasn't
living there. I was thinking
that there would be impending
problems as a, I don't
know, chicken little American.
The sky is falling. The sky is
falling, right? Americans always think disaster's coming. I sort of fit in that
crowd. But I think there was a lot of optimism and exuberance thinking, we have the
freedom to really understand our history and what's happening. This is in, of educated
people, people with college degrees in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Now, what's going on in
the rest of the country is undoubtedly a different story because they had, as bad as living in
Moscow was, living in the country side was going back in time far further. So those people
weren't living well at all. And it's going to get really bad for them. Okay. So people are
learning about these things for the first time. Is the sense that they kind of suspected,
I mean, people have family. They must have known my uncle was, he was off in this little
mining town that he was forced to go to for a decade right there.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But, so were they totally shocked,
or was there some sense that things were pretty bad
and now we're just learning the extent to it?
Oh, I think there was an understanding
it was terrible, but I think there's this exuberance
of thinking, it's going to get mad,
it's going to get much better.
And then the disappointment is equally extreme.
And then there was this feeling that,
well, the West owes us because how, I mean,
that you're all really rich
and you now owe us to fix everything.
And the counterargument to that is,
you are enormous migraine,
you set back all of these countries
across the globe back in time
with this non-functioning communist model
that you peddled around there,
and now you want extra aid.
And the problem was,
I think we wanted to do some of the aid,
but they're not going to be receptive to it.
I think that was another conclusion
with the Bush administration
is that if we dumped a lot of money
and it would just go straight into corruption,
that you need a legal structure
and in order to place money,
and they just plain didn't have it.
That was another thing
that was worrying the Bush administration.
There's nowhere to put the money.
Okay, speaking of these different countries
that the Soviets and the United States
were competing for during the Cold War,
you had this presentation where you say,
look, Reagan alone didn't do this.
But I wonder if the broader lesson is just like
nothing any U.S. president did
in terms of foreign policy.
That was all a side show.
This a Tet-a-Tat competition
for, you know, different third world countries.
We're going to get Brazil.
We're going to get Vietnam.
We're going to get Algeria, et cetera.
That just seems much less significant
than the fact that liberal capitalism
was more appealing and outproduced communism.
So even if some country, even if Brazil goes communist,
this is not going to change the fundamental playing board here.
If you do not protect the liberal economies of Europe,
you're not going to have anywhere to play the liberal economic game.
and also Japan, and one of the reasons you feel that liberal economies work is you've got
economic miracles going on in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong back in the day.
So if you abandon those places, also in the Cold War, there was a tremendous amount of
economic growth across the world, and particularly in the third world. Why? Because in past,
if there's a civil war, whoever's losing either comes to us or comes to the Russians,
and says, help us.
So whoever it is helps,
and then the other side feels obliged to help,
and then you're just destroying wealth ever more rapidly.
And that was going, the Cold War was anything but cold in the third world.
Tens of millions of people died in these conflicts.
So when you end that, all of a sudden they can start compounding growth.
So there's a problem with allowing someone,
not countering someone who's going to impose communist systems
all over the place.
And communist systems are really good
at putting dictators into power
in a civil war situation.
It's very effective.
That's how Mao gets into power.
And the problem is, okay,
then they win the civil war,
they're in power,
they annihilate the opposition,
but then it produces compounding poverty thereafter.
So there is this conundrum,
and I generally don't know the answer to this,
but in order to beat off
these communist factions and guerrillas,
we often, through the Cold War,
had to support
other dictators. And I think probably in many cases they were better than the communist
alternative. It's just very hard to beat Pol Pot and Mao in terms of how terrible you can be.
But obviously, this was in its own way problematic. And even if we didn't have to support
dictators, we had to alienate. You had this previous lecture that you gave on the Indo-Pakistani
chapter in history where we had to alienate India in order to fend off against the Soviet Union
in this little episode.
So, I mean, I don't know
what the solution to this is,
I mean, if you think
that this theater mattered
less than you could say,
well, we should have just
kept her hands clean
of these different
third world countries.
But to your point,
well, if you want to be able
to show that these countries
can experience growth
under capitalism,
then you want them to not be
under the subjugation of communists,
but then you have to support
sometimes objectionable regimes.
Well, I think you had a more optimistic
generation,
ironically optimistic.
The people who had survived
World War II. There was a real generosity. I mean, American servicemen and women, but
when I said servicemen, they were welcomed all over Europe, and they were adored in Europe, right?
And they came back. They were a very generous group of people. They were, others felt generous to
them. That's when the GI Bill just passed and saying, okay, you've saved everyone. So they
Therefore, we're going to give you college educations, extend home loans to you, not to African Americans.
They were excluded from this, which is a problem, but others, white Americans weren't.
And it led to massive economic growth where people who never had a college education, their family, they did.
And they all of a sudden, instead of having really hard manual labor, this real optimism.
And then it extended to foreign countries.
when this country was tremendously generous to others, and it worked very well for us.
And think about the Marshall Plan. It looks really generous, putting all this money into Europe.
We made a fortune off of it, as did Europe. It's, you're looking, if you're smart, you're looking
for win-wins of things where you both benefit because that'll incentivize the other side to join in.
This is basic strategy, and this is one of the reasons I've got problems with the United States
is turned to zero-sum approaches
where I'm going to get everything, you get nothing,
and then I look so smart
when we do the clickbait on this moment
where I get everything and you get nothing.
It's much smarter.
And then the other piece is that a lot of things
don't pay off immediately.
So George Bush is not re-elected president.
He absolutely deserved to be
because what he did,
the payoff was huge,
ending the Cold War on Western terms.
But it doesn't pay.
off in time for the next election. I think this is where Americans miss it, is you're looking at
what someone does on a given day when the real implications are what's going to happen in a decade.
Like on tax policy, if we keep racking up our debt, it may get us out of the corner today,
but is it going to really back us into a corner later on? And this is where Americans need to
think a little harder about long-term implications of things.
I thought when you pointed out that it would cost 60 billion Deutsche Marx for West Germany to pay Gorbachev to basically let him, or not let him, but let East Germany join West Germany.
That's a lot of money.
But if you think about decades and decades of future growth, it's just like, it's a huge bargain, right?
So it's a mistake to think about how expensive things seem at the moment.
It's just like another huge country that you've turned.
Well, there's a statement that politicians think of the next election, statesmen think of the next generation.
George Bush and Helmut Cold are statesmen.
They're thinking of the next generation.
And the group that fought World War II, also many of U.S. and also allied leaders, were statespeople.
They're thinking of the next generation.
Or if you're thinking of them where I've got Mitterrand, who's negotiating the Maastricht Treaty,
about the European Union.
That is statesperson's work
of what's the next generation.
So it's important.
And we haven't held our political...
It's been...
We need more statesmen, statespeople,
for our political leaders.
To try out a different thesis on you.
Through this period,
the Soviet Union is also trying
to buy off other countries,
especially when it thinks this economy can grow,
And especially when oil suffered the 73 oil crisis, oil prices just skyrocket.
And this is why some Soviet citizens remember the Brezhnev era favorably, just that oil made it possible for the Soviets to not only import stuff, but also through the version of free, it actually there's a net export of resources to Eastern European satellites rather than the other way around.
That's probably their data.
You know, I get it.
their oil really subsidized, but everything in the Soviet Union that was worth having came from
somewhere else. The problem is how do you measure it, right? And they're just going to measure it
by weight or something else that doesn't really capture what they're getting. But the larger
question being that it's not like the Soviet Union didn't think of doing things like the Marshall
Land, obviously nothing to that extent, but this idea that you can win people's favors by
providing the military aid, providing them foreign aid. It's just that they didn't have the resources
and to do it to the extent of the U.S. could.
That's true, but there's a real coercive piece, too,
is if you mess with them, it'll be really ugly.
Economics is such a big part of the story
of why the Soviet Union fell apart
that if you don't look at the numbers,
you really can't understand this lecture.
There's this one slide that Sarah has
that shows the yearly budget deficits
and declines in GDP
that you saw in the late 80s in the Soviet Union.
And the numbers show just how massive the oil bust actually was.
But you can't tell this just from a glance at a table.
So we wanted a way to visualize the data to make the trends super clear when we released the episode.
Google's image generation tool, Nanobonana Pro, has been extremely useful for this.
In this case, we just took a screenshot of this slide from Sarah and asked Nanobanana to make line graphs for it.
And it did it perfectly.
Of course, oil wasn't the only reason the Soviet Union fell apart.
Another big reason was the sign of Soviet split.
The border between China and Russia is enormous.
and it took a massive percentage of the Soviet Union's GDP to defend it.
We found this helpful map of the 69 border conflict on Wikipedia,
but it's dense and hard to read if it's just on screen for a few seconds.
So again, we just had nanobanana clean it up.
And now it's much easier to see the border itself
and also where some of the fighting took place.
You can try nanobanana pro now in the Gemini app.
Go to gemini.com to get started.
All right, back to Sarah.
Okay, here's what I don't understand about the arms build-up during the Cold War.
So the Soviet Union is spending, I think, 2% of their GDP just on nuclear weapons alone at its peak.
And arms control advocates will make this quip, which is that, look, we've already got enough weapons to destroy the world many times over.
Why do we need more?
But that is sort of an interesting question.
What was the point of spending so much of GDP on the marginal nuclear weapon or marginal weapon system?
I don't know the answer, but I've read the plans about these things, and you wonder what people are thinking.
Like, we were trying to develop tactical nukes.
There was only a little trick with that, that whoever deployed it would be within the blast range of the tactical nuke.
And you're going, oh, who develops a weapon like that?
Apparently we did.
Luckily, we didn't deploy it.
I don't know the answer of why we had such massive redundancy in these nuclear weapons,
why the arsenals were so massive.
I don't know the story on how you maintain these things and how long they last.
And it doesn't make much more sense to me than it does to you.
Okay, another question.
So, Sino-Soviet split, this huge diplomatic coup,
where the Soviets have to put a million soldiers on the Siberian front against China
and they have to spend 2% of GDP just stationing and garrisoning this area,
which is obviously a lot.
That's often what many countries spend on defense as a whole,
let alone just along one front.
At the same time, 2% GDP,
well, if they just had one or two more years of extra economic growth or faster growth,
that could make up for this huge diplomatic coup.
So again, this goes back to the question of,
you know, if some domestic policy
just cost slightly higher economic growth rates,
that would make up for the biggest diplomatic coup
of the entire Cold War,
which goes back to the economy first, diplomacy second.
Well, A, I have real problems with the statistics,
and I can only, this is, I got a, what is it,
sample size of one, wah.
So I remember,
living in Moscow, it was so backwards. It's just breathtakingly backwards in just about every way
imaginable from just, yeah, they got a big fancy subway system, looks remarkably retro, and yeah,
at least it works. But the consumer goods were so awful. The quality was so bad. You look at the
buildings themselves. I get it. They make nuclear weapons. Do they make anything else? Their cars were a joke,
their lottas or whatever they were.
You just thing after thing.
And so you're looking at all their stats,
because that's what they are telling you
that we're so great.
And it really is an emperor-wheres-no-clothes moment.
Finally, the little kids goes,
oh, you're actually naked.
Or I can give you an example.
These acquaintances in Moscow
we're talking about hospitals outside of Moscow
that some of them didn't have running water.
How do you have a hospital without running water?
I don't even know how that's the thing.
inconceivable. Or when their kid had put her hand through, I don't know, glass door or something,
and they wanted to get her stitched up because she's bleeding, not going to die, but she's
probably bleeding all over the place. And they bring her to one place and, oh, they got no thread
to do the stitches. So then they have to go to another place. Who runs a country like this?
All right, you convinced me. BART is acceptable. I'll stick here. The subway is not a big deal.
I don't want to move to Moscow.
Okay. So while the Eastern European satellites are trying to leave the Soviet Union, this has happened many times through the 20th century, right? So Hungary in 1956, Czechoslovakia in 68, Poland through solidarity. And every previous time, there's a many million person strong Red Army stationed in Eastern Europe left over from World War II, which rose in the tanks and prevents these.
revolutions from taking place.
So what happens
in the late 80s and early 90s
that the Red Army
is still there. There's still millions of Red Army soldiers.
They just don't shoot.
Yeah, generational change. A, the leaders don't have
the stomach for it anymore. I don't know
how you'd feel about sending tanks
and going, oh, we're going to splatter
all these people. I think
for many Americans, that would not be
the choice that they would make.
And so this ruthless
generation is gone. Another
piece is Gorbachev had traveled and I think he had some Czech friends and I can't remember
all his list of friends but they've been horrified by Czechoslovakia in 1968 as young people watching
as Russian young people watching it and thinking it's just wrong we shouldn't be doing this
if communism is what it should be this is not what should be happening and so this is of their
youth, Gorbachev and his, it's not just him, he reflects a whole generation of
communists. And so they're thinking, there's got to be another way. This is just not right.
And so then he thinks he's got his other way. And so it's this exuberance of the reforms and
things are happening in Russia. There's a tremendous feeling of energy. And so he's telling
the polls, you get at it too. We're all going to do this thing. But it's all the expertise
and things that he's missing, that he's unaware that he's missing, as are.
all these other people, because how could they have it? They've been living in a command
economy. Okay, this is what I want to ask you about. So you had the Toquo quote about how
revolutions happen when governments start to institute some kind of reform. Gorbachev is doing
perestroika, Glasnost, and there's the conservative reactionary part to the Communist Party,
which, by the way, is a phrase I wouldn't expect to have said, but they're trying to resist this.
And so Gorbachev goes about dismantling the party secretariat and instead devolving power down to the individual republics.
And we know what happens later is that these republics are saying, look, we want our own country now.
But this race is a question of, okay, if you do inherit a brutal regime and now you say, I want to do reforms.
And you know this dynamic that de Tocque will pointed out, which is as soon as you start reforms, actually what it tends to happen is that you lose
power, not that people consolidated under you. What actually should you do, right? Because you're
like, I want to improve you his lives, but as soon as you try to do that, the whole thing's
going to fall apart. This is so far above my pay grades. I'm a professor. I have trouble
justifying a B plus on a paper. I'm a believer in gradual reforms doing incrementally. And for the Soviet
Union, it would be gradual legal reforms, work it through their Duma slowly, and do it that
way, but seek out help from the European Union that has many, many experts that will be
overjoyed if Putin and friends would cease doing their number on Ukraine. And now the problem is
you're going to get into reparations
for what the horrors they've inflicted.
So that ship has sailed, sadly, for this generation.
There's no nice ending for Russians.
It's too late.
But you can look at Europe itself
is improving its institutions
and Ukraine's improving its institutions.
If you think about what forces you to change,
isn't the existential threat on Ukraine
And if they survive all this, this is forcing them really to clean up their institutions.
So it's happening rapidly there.
But we don't know the end of that story, how it ends.
I do think these are an interesting lesson here of whenever we look at a country from the outside,
we have this thing of like, well, just reform everything and just fix your economy.
And whenever we understand a system better, for example, in the United States, health care is 20% of GDP.
And this idea that Trump or Obama or Biden, whoever could do,
just come in and be like, well, I'll just fix health care. We recognize that this is a wildly
implausible thing to happen. But then we have this expectation that in Russia, Gorbachev or Yeltsin
could have just been like, this is 100% of my economy is messed up. And I'm just going to fix it.
American hubris in action. Think about our country. We have one of the most crazy tax codes on
the planet. And neither party can touch it. Because you touch any part of it. Someone negotiated that
wording exactly. And yet, think of how much of our economy is taken up by the overhead of all the
tax accountants, all the misdirected cash in order to take advantage of something that's simply
an invention of the tax system. There was years ago when there was talk of doing a flat tax,
wouldn't that be much more efficient? And you can imagine what accountants thought about that one,
and that idea has totally died. Talk about inefficient.
I mean, and then we realize we have budgetary problems in this country.
And this would seem to be something that ought to be on people's radar as clean-up tax code.
But isn't it precisely that many people don't want the radar on the tax code?
And that's why we're wondering who can get in and out of girls or boys' bathrooms, right?
Instead of looking at the tax code, which would be the real thing.
I think there should be big deductions for podcasts.
which accounts are research and development
well to our cash you're almost to that stage
you need to add a lobbyist in dc
we'll work on it
so there's a very interesting book about north
i forget the title where the author is pointing out
that north korea could not do
uh you couldn't even start doing reforms today
because as soon as there was some
sort of information that from the outside world that North Koreans could see, which would be
part of any reform, they would immediately realize that everything the government has told them
is false, that South Korea is enormously wealthier. They have this terrible standard of living.
And obviously, this is the same experience that Eastern Europeans had. We're literally,
in many cases, a country that is, you know, this is the exact same country. It was just bisected
in half, and the other half is living so much richer. And in those situations, I guess this
goes back to the question of, well, can you, today in North Korea, how would it even kick
off, if Kim Jong-un just had a change of heart or somebody else came into power, they're just
probably trapped in this, to the extent that they want to keep power. There's nothing to do.
Oh, he's trapped, because he's a dead boy if he tries to take a gone retirement. What is it?
In Asia, there's an, I don't know, exactly all of the parts of Asia where this applies to,
so it's some parts. There's a thought that things last for three generations, and then it's
over. So he's the third generation. And whether this is true or not, doesn't matter. If you believe
it's true, it will become a self-suffilling prophecy. So I'll be interested. Well, I won't
probably live to see it. You and the room will of what happens to the Kim family, whether it makes
it to Generation 4 or not. But by their own belief system, in theory, they shouldn't. So who knows?
one more question about oil
yeah
um
based my big
expertise on oil
zero yeah okay
um
during this period
between 73 and in 85
when they have these huge
oil revenues
um
presumably there was some amount
exuberance but
did the government
recognize and realize
that
um
you know
they're super fragile
to the price of oil
and if that collapses
then
They need some sort of contingency plan, some rainy day fund.
Or you must notice that, like, oh, this is half my budget, and all of my foreign currency is coming from oil, and this is a very volatile commodity.
Nobody noticed that?
Yeah, well, it was interesting.
I was reading this long chronology that it was put together sort of early Putin.
So before they really shut down all the information, it was just a chronology of the Cold War, big, fat book.
Just like someone like me to read a book like that.
So I'm going, date after date after date after date.
And it's written by people who are really angry
about how the Cold War turned out.
And one of the takeaways from the compilers of this thing
is they kept criticizing,
they showed how much, for every year,
how much Russia was making in oil revenues,
it was huge.
But in their analysis, it was,
and they saved none of it, right?
There was no sense of invested in something.
There's something called consumption, that there's another thing called investment.
Going around and buying a bunch of, I think, Western grain is consumption.
There's none of this being put in anything that's going to yield anything.
And so that was a big criticism of the authors of this book, is that the question you're asking is, no, they just milked it while they were there.
Final question, this is not so much a question as an observation.
I don't know if you have a reaction to this.
If you just look at Russia's history through the 20th century,
SARS-to-communism, to collectivization, to more than 10% of our population dying from World War II,
then back to Stalin, and then more communism, and then the economy collapses again,
and then Putin, especially if you look at the satellite states, well, they had all of this happen to them and were.
and now they're getting invaded.
Whereas you have other countries like, you know,
Japan and Germany also had tragic histories,
but then they recovered.
The tragedy of Russia is...
Yeah, you're lucky, you're not Russia.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, no, it is tragic.
It is tragic.
And it started out as a difficult address
in pre-industrial revolution
that required certain things to survive.
And they were more ruthless than their neighbors.
That's how they did.
survive. I mean, they just, in a previous lecture, I discussed how they wiped out entire
princely states and conates and things, just wipe them out. And then you're using their elites
because it's a rough neighborhood. And the problem is if you aren't on the winning side,
you're going to be on the losing side, right? But since the Industrial Revolution,
where you can do compounded economic growth that comes from commerce and trade and industry
thing so that's the real way to get powerful because you get power that becomes a function of
your wealth that involves having legal systems institutions stability and uh russia has found it very
difficult getting with that program and it has to do with i think this very difficult historical
legacy uh who rises to power and also all the missing things there they weren't they they didn't
have the renaissance they didn't have the reformation these fundamental movements that were a very
influential in the west and so there's a lot of negative space of things that didn't happen there's all
the awful stuff that you saw that did happen but then they're missing things so it's very
difficult and then people like Putin can set the clock way back because he's killed so many
Ukrainians, what he's done, will take a generation minimum to get to anywhere where people
are going to be thinking about, people will be talking about reparations from Russia for quite
a while, and they're poor. They're not going to want to do that.
I should have thought to end on a more optimistic note, but...
Well, history's ended, okay?
Well, you've outlined the ways in which countries can chart a better course for themselves, and that's where the optimism can come from.
Well, actually, I've told a story about the last Cold War that stayed cold in the industrialized world, which was a good thing because it would have been nuclear.
It was tragic in many other parts of the world, but at least it stayed cold in the industrialized part.
And there was a strategy that a very thoughtful generation of people, not just in the United States,
but all over the West that put it together
to allow for a non-nuclear landing
for the Soviet Union when it fell apart.
And I've laid out some of the...
From this, you can derive some of the strategies
that worked for ending it that way.
And these are the kind of strategies
that we're going to have to use
in order to navigate the second Cold War.
And so the other piece about the Cold War,
war is okay the Soviet Union's living they're living miserable lives of their own making but
Americans were actually having a good time they paid taxes they'd pay for all the nuclear weapons
but as I recall people are running around at Disneyland they're doing their European trips
they're buying houses and so actually Americans people in western Europe were actually living
fulfilling lives while they're waiting out for others to get with the program and that would be
the if we're going to make it through this second one uh we're going to need to
to start cooperating with our allies, building institutions, improving laws, don't just burn down
the house, and we will get through this one too, and we will live fulfilling lives while we're
waiting out. Putin had come up with something different, or Xi Jinping for coming up with
something different. But if we blow through our good hand of cars, which involves having,
so you interview all kinds of people
at the cutting edge of technology.
If we get rid of all of our university funding,
so we aren't going to have the intellectual capital
on which those businesses are base,
if we're going to dump all our allies for unknown reasons
and just alienate them so they organize without us,
if we're going to just throw away entire institutions
without thinking very carefully about what we're doing,
it's called we become a cooperative adversary.
we will be the bozo putting a plastic bag on our own head.
And I look at the rhymes here.
The Soviets had this ancient leadership
who just couldn't get their act together
and they're living off of debt
instead of thinking creatively.
Oh, the rhymes are awful.
But we don't have to do it that way.
So it is more optimistic.
But we need to get our house in order.
And that's why I'm doing these lectures.
They're lectures and strategy
to give you tools on how to come to your own decisions.
That's your business, not mine.
Okay, that is an excellent note to close on.
Sarah, I want to thank you so much for doing this lecture series with us.
It has been a true education across D6 from everything from individual wars
to the strategic and tactical decisions, which explain them to the broader lessons
for today's world.
I do interview lots of different kinds of people, but from a sort of viewer-minute,
average-adjusted basis, I host a Sarah Payne podcast.
If you just sword by popular, Sarah Payne comes up a lot.
But you've got it backwards.
I was an unknown academic.
And then you cold call me about doing an interview, and I said, sure.
And Dwar Cash, as a result of all this, I'm getting emails from all over the place.
So let's talk about who's grateful to whom.
Anyway, I'm devoted to your generation.
And anyway, thank you for having me.
Thank you for coming and being such a warm audience.
Really appreciated.
Hey, everybody.
I hope you enjoyed that episode.
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