25 декабря 1991 года, Михаил Горбачёв ушёл с поста президента Советского Союза, объявив об упразднении этой должности и распаде Союза Советских Социалистических Республик (СССР) — огромной коммунистической империи, существовавшей с 1922 года. К моменту прихода Горбачёва к власти в 1985 году СССР находился в состоянии длительной экономической стагнации. Чтобы добиться перемен, он провел ряд реформ, включая перестройку (экономическую реструктуризацию) и гласность. Гласность открыла шлюзы протестов, и многие республики сделали шаги к независимости, поставив под угрозу дальнейшее существование СССР.
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Женщина достает что-то из сумки, лежащей на упавшем советском серпе и молоте на одной из московских улиц в 1991 году. 25 декабря 2011 года исполняется 20 лет со дня распада Советского Союза. (Александр Неменов/AFP/Getty Images)
В августе 1991 года группа сторонников жесткой линии в Коммунистической партии, разочарованных сепаратистским движением, попыталась устроить переворот. Они быстро потерпели неудачу из-за массового сопротивления граждан, но эта попытка еще больше дестабилизировала и без того шаткое правительство. К декабрю 1991 года 16 советских республик провозгласили свою независимость, и Горбачев передал власть президенту России Борису Ельцину, положив конец СССР. Здесь собраны фотографии тех бурных месяцев более чем 20-летней давности. |
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10 января 1990 года литовцы несут литовские флаги в центре Вильнюса во время демонстрации с требованием независимости страны. В начале 1990 года кандидаты, поддерживаемые литовским реформаторским движением «Сайудис», победили на выборах в Верховный Совет Литвы. 11 марта 1990 года Верховный Совет провозгласил восстановление независимости Литвы. Прибалтийские республики были в авангарде борьбы за независимость, и Литва стала первой из советских республик, провозгласившей независимость. (Виталий Арманд/AFP/Getty Images) |
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Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev, center, in animated conversation with residents of
Vilnius, Lithuania, on Thursday, January 11, 1990. Gorbachev was in the
Lithuanian capital to press for reversal of the local communist party's
decision to split from Moscow and to slow the republic's drive for
complete independence. (AP Photo/Victor Yurchenko) |
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A crowd blocks
the passage of Soviet tanks on a road near Ganja, formerly Kirovabad, in
Soviet Azerbaijan, on January 22, 1990. Troops sent into the area last
week to quell ethnic violence met both armed and peaceful resistance.
(AP Photo) |
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People buy
teacups in the Vilnius downtown shop on Friday, April 27, 1990. Despite
an economic blockade of Lithuania by Soviet forces, shops in Vilnius are
well supplied with food and other goods as Lithuania entered the 10th
day of a blockade. (AP Photo/Dusan Vranic) |
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Residents face a
cordon of Soviet Interior Ministry troops in front of the local
Communist Party Headquarters in the Tajikistan capital of Dushanbe, on
February 15, 1990. Soviet authorities declared a state of emergency in
the city, following ethnic rioting. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti) |
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Two Soviet
paratroopers inspect weapons confiscated from a local militia
organization in Kaunas, Lithuania on Sunday, March 26, 1990. Soviet
President Gorbachev ordered all Lithuanians to surrender their firearms
to Soviet authorities. (AP Photo/Vadimir Vyatkin/Novisti) |
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Soviet mothers
who lost their sons in the Red Army are held back by State militia as
they hold photographs of their loved ones in Red Square, on Monday,
December 24, 1990. A group of about 200 Soviet parents who have all lost
sons through ethnic violence and accidents within the Soviet armed
services demonstrated outside the Kremlin. 6,000 Soviet service men were
killed during 1990. (AP Photo/Martin Cleaver) |
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About 100,000
demonstrators march on the Kremlin in Moscow on January 20, 1991. Many
called for the resignation of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev
protesting against the Soviet army crackdown against the nationalist
Lithuanian authorities. Lithuania had been the first Baltic Republic to
proclaim its independence in March 1990. (Vitaly Armand/AFP/Getty
Images) |
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Soviet soldiers
patrol an emptied Red Square in Moscow, on March 27, 1991, after the
area had been blocked off in anticipation of a pro-Yeltsin rally.
(AFP/EPA/Alain-Pierre Hovasse) |
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Anti-Soviet
political graffiti filled an entire wall in Vilnius on January 17, 1991.
The wall surrounding the Lithuanian parliament was erected to defend
against a possible raid by Soviet troops. Many Soviet army deserters
pinned their draft cards to a defaced poster of President Mikhail
Gorbachev. (AP Photo/Liu Heung Shing) |
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In this photo
taken on January 13, 1991, a Lithuanian demonstrator runs in front of a
Soviet Red Army tank during an assault on the Lithuanian Radio and
Television station in Vilnius. Soviet troops opened fire on unarmed
civilians in Vilnius, killing 13 people and injuring 100 others.
(Stringer/AFP/Getty Images) |
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An armed
Lithuanian volunteer guard wakes up as his fellow compatriot slept in
Vilnius, Lithuania, on January 23, 1991. Hundreds of gunmen held vigil
in the heavily fortified Lithuanian parliament while Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev urged all Baltic republics to prevent further
violence. (AP Photo/Liu Heung Shing) |
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Pall-bearers
carry a flag-draped casket during a funeral procession through Vilnius,
on January 16, 1991, for 10 of the 13 people killed when Soviet troops
stormed the Lithuanian broadcast center the previous weekend. Hundreds
of thousands of Lithuanians jammed the procession route to mourn their
national heroes. (AP Photo) |
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Hundreds of
thousands of protesters pack Moscow's Manezh Square next to the Kremlin,
on March 10, 1991, demanding that Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev
and his fellow Communists give up power. The crowd, estimated at
500,000, was the biggest anti-government demonstration in the 73 years
of since the Communists took power, and came a week before the
nationwide referendum on Gorbachev's union treaty. (AP Photo/Dominique
Mollard) |
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A few weeks
before the Coup, Mikhail Gorbachev stands surrounded by his so-called
friends, all of them soon to be leaders of the August Coup against him.
Vice President Gennady Yanayev, second from right, became the most
visible of the Coup leaders. Here, they are lighting the flame at the
tomb of the unknown soldier outside the Kremlin wall in May of 1991.
(AFP/EPA/Alain-Pierre Hovasse) |
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Soviet Army tanks
parked near Spassky Gate, an entrance to the Kremlin and Basil's
Cathedral in Moscow's Red Square after a coup toppled Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev on August 19, 1991. Tanks rolled through Moscow
towards the Russian White House, where Boris Yeltsin, leader of the
Soviet-era Russian republic at the time, gathered his supporters after
denouncing the coup. (Dima Tanin/AFP/Getty Images) |
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The leaders of
the August Coup: from left, Soviet Interior Minister Boris Pugo, Soviet
Vice President Gennady Yanayev, and Oleg Baklanov, the first
Vice-President of the Soviet Defence Council. These men were members of
the self-styled "committee for the state of emergency" which headed the
coup against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. Here, they gave a press
conference on August 19, 1991 in Moscow. (Vitaly Armand/AFP/Getty
Images) |
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A crowd gathers
around a personnel carrier as some people climb aboard the vehicle and
try to block its advance near Red Square in downtown Moscow, on August
19, 1991. Military vehicles were on the streets of Moscow following the
announcement that Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev was replaced by
Gennady I. Yanayev in a coup attempt by hard-line Communists. (AP
Photo/Boris Yurchenko) |
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Supporters of
Russian president Yeltsin roll a large metal pipe to use as a barricade
near the Russian federation building in Moscow, on August 19, 1991,
following a military coup attempt by Soviet hardliners. (Anatoly
Sapronyenkov/AFP/Getty Images) |
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Russian President
Boris Yeltsin (left) stands on top of an armored vehicle parked in
front of the Russian Federation building as supporters hold a Russian
federation flag on August 19, 1991, during a coup attempt. Yeltsin
addressed a crowd of supporters calling for a general strike. (Diane-Lu
Hovasse/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A picture shows
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev speaking in a video message taped on
August 19, 1991, the second day of his captivity. Gorbachev said there
had been an unconstitutional coup and that he was completely well. Photo
taken on August 25, 1991. (NBC TV/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A pro-democracy
demonstrator fights with a Soviet soldier on top of a tank parked in
front of the Russian Federation building on August 19, 1991, after a
coup toppled Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. The same day, thousands
in Moscow, Leningrad, and other cities answered Russian Republic
President Boris Yeltsin's call to raise barricades against tanks and
troops. (Dima Tanin/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A defiant Russian
President Boris Yeltsin (left) raises a fist to his supporters from the
Russian Federation building in Moscow on August 19, 1991, calling on
them to hold a general strike and to resist the pro-communist coup
against Soviet President Gorbachev. (Dima Tanin/AFP/Getty Images) |
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Over 50,000
people ignore a declared state of emergency and gather in front of the
Russian parliament building in order to support Boris Yeltsin, on August
20, 1991. (Vitaly Armand/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A pro-democracy
demonstrator argues with a Soviet soldier late on August 20, 1991, as a
tank blocked access to the center of Moscow. (Andre Durand/AFP/Getty
Images) |
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Residents play
music and talk to soldiers in front of the Russian White House in
central Moscow early on August 20, 1991. (Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty
Images) |
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People stand on a barricade in front the Russian White House in Moscow on August 21, 1991. (Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A soldier waves a
Russian flag from the top of his tank as armored units leave their
positions in Moscow following the collapse of the military coup against
president Gorbachev on August 21, 1991. Coup leaders fled the capital
and president Gorbachev was rumored to be returning soon. (Willy
Slingerland/AFP/Getty Images) |
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Part of a large
crowd, outside the Russian Parliament building in Moscow, celebrates the
news that the hardline Communist coup has failed, on August 22, 1991.
(AP Photo) |
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Celebrations in
Moscow after the failure of the coup attempt, and remembrances of those
killed in the violence, in August of 1991. (AFP/EPA/Alain-Pierre
Hovasse) |
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A crowd watches
the statue of KGB founder Dzerzhinsky being toppled in Lubyanskaya
Square in Moscow, on August 22, 1991. (Anatoly Sapronenkov/AFP/Getty
Images) |
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President Mikhail
Gorbachev, in the Soviet Parliament right after his return from being
under house arrest during the August, 1991 coup. (AFP/EPA/Alain-Pierre
Hovasse) |
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People follow a
funeral procession for the victims of the coup in front of Russian White
House in Moscow on August 24, 1991, after the coup attempt failed.
(Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A group of Boris
Yeltsin supporters rip apart one of the barricades surrounding the
Russian federation building in Moscow, on August 25, 1991, following a
coup attempt a few days before that eventually failed. (Alain-Pierre
Hovasse/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A Baku resident
uses an axe to hack apart a placard showing a portrait of Russian
Bolshevik revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin, on September 21, 1991.
Azerbaijan was proclaimed a Soviet Socialist Republic by Soviet Union in
1920. The Azeri National Council voted for its declaration of
independence in 1991. (Anatoly Sapronenkov/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A member of the
KGB (right) who requested anonymity hands over his weapon to a
Lithuanian official before leaving the KGB headquarters in Vilnius after
Lithuanian government decided to drop the Soviet secret service
organization, on August 31, 1991. (Stephan Bentura/AFP/Getty Images) |
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Soviet rock fans
attend a concert in Moscow on September 28, 1991. Half a million people
jammed an airfield to see the Monsters of Rock concert featuring AC/DC,
Pantera and Metallica at the Soviet Union's biggest Western rock
concert, touted as a gift to Russian youth for their resistance to last
month's coup. (AP Photo/Massimo Alabresi) |
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A young
Lithuanian girl sits on the toppled statue of Russian Bolshevik
revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin in Vilnius after the monument was
removed from the center of the Lithuanian capital, on September 1, 1991.
(Gerard Fouet/AFP/Getty Images) |
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A jubilant
Chechen secessionist with clenched fists opens his arms to the crowd
during a rally in Grozny, on November 14, 1991, to celebrate the pullout
of Soviet troops from the Muslim enclave in Southern Russia. (AP Photo) |
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Citizens of the
Ukraine vote on a referendum for independence from the Soviet Union at
the Ukraine Embassy in Moscow, on December 1, 1991. (AP Photo/Boris
Yurchenko) |
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The Musichick
family watches Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's resignation speech
on Soviet television in their downtown Moscow apartment, on December 25,
1991. Gorbachev, whose reforms gave Soviet citizens freedom but
ultimately led to the destruction of his nation resigned on as President
of a Communist empire that no longer exists. (AP Photo/Sergei
Kharpukhin) |
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For one of the
last times, the Soviet flag flies over the Kremlin at Red Square in
Moscow, on Saturday night, December 21, 1991. The flag was replaced by
the Russian flag on New Year's. (AP Photo/Gene Berman) |
(via
The Atlantic)
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