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Voices From the Sealed Room. Leaked Soviet Archives Documents Revealing Kremlin Decision-Making During Cold War

Par : Elias Quinn
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  • Nombre de pages221
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-3-565-45201-9
  • EAN9783565452019
  • Date de parution21/05/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Taille2 Mo
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House

Résumé

This book investigates how the partial opening of Soviet archives after 1991 fundamentally disrupted decades of Western Cold War historiography, not by confirming prevailing assumptions, but by exposing the structural opacity at the core of Kremlin governance, where even senior Soviet officials operated within deliberate information hierarchies that distorted policy formation from within. Three systemic mechanisms define the archival revelation's analytical significance.
First, the internal filtering architecture of the Soviet foreign policy apparatus, where aides controlled which dispatches reached senior leadership and drafted policy positions later presented as official doctrine, reveals that Kremlin decision-making was not monolithic but functionally fragmented. Bureaucratic gatekeepers exercised strategic influence that remained invisible to foreign observers and the historical record itself. Second, the recovery of Politburo materials through large-scale archival initiatives, including millions of pages preserved from Soviet state archives, demonstrates how archival infrastructure functioned as a governance mechanism.
Records documenting executions, military interventions, and covert directives reveal that archives were designed not merely to preserve history, but to centralize accountability into spaces that could be sealed, selectively destroyed, or indefinitely concealed. Third, the disclosure of KGB Operation RYaN documents revealed that the Soviet intelligence apparatus operated under a standing mandate to detect Western nuclear first-strike preparations.
This posture made NATO's 1983 Able Archer exercises appear genuinely threatening within the Kremlin's internal analytical framework, illustrating how closed information systems can generate autonomous threat perceptions detached from adversarial intent.