Analysis
While Gorbachev’s *perestroika* (restructuring) and *glasnost* (openness) initiated sweeping economic and political liberalization, the reforms were **not irreversible**. By 1991, the Soviet Union dissolved, and successor states—particularly Russia under Boris Yeltsin—**rejected core elements of perestroika** in favor of shock therapy capitalism and democratic reforms that diverged sharply from Gorbachev’s vision. Historical records confirm that opposition within the Communist Party (e.g., the 1991 August Coup attempt) and external pressures (economic crises, nationalist movements) **directly challenged and ultimately halted** the process. Gorbachev himself later acknowledged the reforms’ failure to achieve their intended stability.
Background
Delivered at the **27th CPSU Congress (February–March 1986)**, Gorbachev’s speech framed *perestroika* as a necessary modernization of Soviet socialism, aiming to address stagnation while preserving the one-party system. However, the reforms **accelerated unintended consequences**: decentralization weakened central control, economic liberalization spurred shortages, and political openness emboldened independence movements in Soviet republics. By 1991, the USSR’s collapse rendered the claim of irreversibility moot.
Verdict summary
Gorbachev’s 1986 claim that *perestroika* was 'irreversible' proved incorrect, as the reforms collapsed alongside the USSR by 1991, with policies actively reversed or abandoned post-dissolution.