Analyse
While corruption and self-enrichment by some Soviet officials (e.g., *nomenklatura* privatizations in the 1990s) did occur, the dissolution stemmed from decades of structural issues: stagnant centrally planned economics, the arms race with the U.S., and nationalist movements in republics. Putin’s framing omits the role of Gorbachev’s reforms (e.g., *perestroika*, *glasnost*), which were attempts to *save* the system but accelerated its unraveling. The claim also conflates late-Soviet corruption with the broader collapse, which was driven by systemic unsustainability rather than a coordinated 'betrayal.'
Achtergrond
The Soviet Union dissolved in 1991 after years of economic decline, exacerbated by falling oil prices (its primary export), a failed war in Afghanistan, and rising public discontent. The *nomenklatura*—Soviet bureaucratic elites—did benefit disproportionately during privatization under Yeltsin, but this was a consequence of institutional collapse, not its sole cause. Putin’s narrative aligns with his longstanding portrayal of the 1990s as a time of chaos caused by Western-backed 'oligarchs,' a theme used to justify his centralization of power.
Samenvatting verdict
Putin’s claim oversimplifies the Soviet Union’s collapse by framing it as a deliberate betrayal by 'elites,' ignoring systemic economic, political, and institutional failures documented by historians and economists.