What do you think?
Rate this book
848 pages, Hardcover
First published June 30, 2022
From judo he learnt how to use others' strengths against them and was to exploit their vulnerabilities. At the [KGB] Dzerzhinsky School he was taught that 'all else being equal, the side which goes onto the attack will achieve the best results', a principle the KGB called nastupatelnost, 'offensive posture'. That too, was familiar, both from judo and from his childhood fights.For me the book really took off in 2000s-era after he took a country "groping around in the dark" to become a stable world power (pg 294). He became president, his second term re-election, and the power vertical that morphed into what is present-day Russia. Short explained lots of areas: the economy, reform and realignment, dealings with the Chechen conflict, bolstering Russian Orthodoxy to become a pillar of the regime, the Belsan school massacre, the war with Georgia and Ossetia, falling out with western European leadership and the Bush administration over Iraq & Afghanistan, Syria, and his gradual assumption of power as the ultimate decision-maker.
Putin's character fitted the kind of the work the KGB did. He liked to stay in the background and observe others, rather than to be the center of attention himself. He was disciplined and pragmatic and able to concentrate his energies on the priority of the moment. He had been brought up not to show emotions, which was another quality the KGB valued. pg 94