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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An intrepid critique of the KGB,
By A Customer
This review is from: The State Within a State: The KGB and Its Hold on Russia-Past, Present, and Future (Hardcover)
Reviewed by NIGEL CLIVE in International Relations, Volume XIII, No 2, August 1996 - Yevgenia Albats, a journalist on Moscow News and Isvestia, has written a convincing analysis of the almost unbroken continuity of the political police from Lenin's Cheka to the present-day Chekists, as she rightly calls them, who ostensibly serve the president, but whose loyalty is in fact confined to their own leaders. Her courage as an intrepid critic of the KGB is shown in her many interviews with both the victims and torturers and with several former KGB leading figures, notably Oleg Kalugin who told her: `There is no area of our lives, from religion to sports, where the Committee does not pursue some interest of its own'. Citizens' private lives have always been the KGB's main target. Penetration of the Orthodox Church started with the Cheka and continued without a break for the next seventy years. There was similar penetration of Catholics, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists and Seventh day Adventists. The formal structure of the `State within a State' has only been the tip of the iceberg. `Reliable' people, secret helpers, directors of scientific research institutes and deans of academic institutions make up the countless number of shadow workers. Albats has tracked down and interrogated such notorious executioners as Alexander Khvat and exposed such specialists in torture as Professor Vladimir Boyarsky, the NKVD's investigator turned professor in the field of mining science and technology.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The terrors of the KGB and much more!,
By Christiana Washington (Colorado) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The State Within a State: The KGB and Its Hold on Russia-Past, Present, and Future (Hardcover)
This book is an excellent expose of the terrors and tortures of the Russian KGB. One marvels at their tenacity, brutality, and animal-like ruthlessness in hunting down their prey. Prey that included innocent and harmless religious groups, student groups, and just about anyone who disagreed with the Communist Ideology. America could learn much from the terrible living history of Russia. Americans have adopted similar tactics in dealing with those who disagree with the politically correct movements of our day. These are scary times we live in, and Russia should be a lesson to us all.
6 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
passionate albeit muddled,
By A Customer
This review is from: The State Within a State: The KGB and Its Hold on Russia-Past, Present, and Future (Hardcover)
The State Within a State is an extremeley interesting book with a credible thesis (the KGB never really went away). I have problems with the author's obvious hatred of the Russian Revolution and Stalin and the way she claims there is an unbroken chain of horror going all the way back to 1917. Obviously things are better today- hence her book! She says 66.7 million people died under "Chekist" rule since the Russian Revolution-and then cites the Guiness Book of Records as her source!? No one could ever prove such a figure, I think its one of things thats repeated 'til it becomes fact. I also find the author's lack of knowledge about our own CIA kind of disheartening. This fine organization has spread as much death and terror in the Third World (Indonesia, Guatemala,Chile, Argentina, Brazil etc. etc. ) as the KGB ever did anywhere, yet she seems to make them out to be benevolent compared to the KGB (which if you read this book are responsible for everything wrong with the world today). After reading this book I still don't understand why she thinks the KGB or its incarnations are as bad today as they were at the height of the Terror in 1937. Its not really explained in the book. I still am not convinced that the KGB was the NKVD, and definitely convinced that either was the SS. Research I have done casually has never come up with hard, convincing figures for a Nazi style genocide in the USSR, and this anecdotal, unconvincing book didn't change my historical views.
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