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Secret diary of a top Soviet official shows the leadership was in turmoil 15 years before the USSR’s demise

The Soviet Union 40 years ago already faced a declining economy, contradictions between its policy of détente and its leadership of the international communist movement, and "senility" in its leadership, according to the diary of senior Soviet official Anatoly S. Chernyaev published today by the National Security Archive (the Russian version can be found at http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/rus/Chernyaev.html). The excerpts posted today - for the first time in English - cover the year 1975, along with edits and a postscript by the author. This is the tenth set of extracts the Archive has posted from the Chernyaev diary covering critical years from the 1970s through 1991 (see links at left).

Anatoly Chernyaev, the deputy head of the International Department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) - and later the senior foreign policy aide to Mikhail Gorbachev - started keeping a systematic diary in 1972, in which he recorded the highlights (and low points) of his work at the International Department, his attendance at Politburo meetings, participation in speech - and report - writing sessions at state dachas, as well as his philosophical reflections on daily life in the Soviet Union from the point of view of a high-level Soviet apparatchik.

Today, on his 94th birthday, Anatoly Sergeyevich remains a champion of glasnost, sharing his notes, documents and first-hand insights with scholars seeking a view into the inner workings of the Soviet government, the peaceful end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. In 2004, he donated the originals of his detailed diaries, covering the years 1972 through 1991, to the National Security Archive in order to ensure permanent public access to this record - beyond the reach of political uncertainties in contemporary Russia.

In the 1975 installment of the diary, Anatoly Chernyaev writes about the International Department's work on the European Conference of Communist Parties, as well as the internal workings of the Soviet government and the state of its leadership, particularly the health and mental state of the General Secretary, Leonid Brezhnev. In the second half of 1975, as preparations begin for the 25th Congress of the CPSU, Chernyaev participates in the drafting of numerous texts and reports and deeply reflects on the state of the Soviet Union's economy. Throughout the year, the author considers the future of détente and how it would affect the economic and political position of the Soviet Union.

One of the main projects of the Central Committee's International Department in 1975 was preparation of the European Conference of Communist Parties, which ultimately failed to be held in 1975. Unlike many of his colleagues in the Department, Chernyaev analyzes critically the state of the international communist movement and motivations behind the actions of the CPSU's fraternal parties, especially the Italian and French Communist Parties. He observes that European communists are eager to disassociate themselves from Moscow, concludes that the European Conference of Communist Parties would provide the stage to expose the disintegration of the movement, and over and over attempts to alert his boss, Boris Ponomarev, to the contradictions between the Soviet Union's position in the international communist movement and Brezhnev's détente and practical foreign policy.

Read entire article at The National Security Archive