Tsar
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Review: Moscow Rules: What Drives Russia To Confront The West – by Keir Giles

I am a new member of Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs, in London. On a recent visit, I made use of the vast resources of a very well-stocked library at Chatham House and this book is the first of the loans that I have finished reading. It is apt as Keir Giles… Continue reading
Arab, Armageddon, autocracy, Baltic States, Baltics, border, Brezhnev, buffer, buffer state, Catherine the Great, Chatham House, Christian Missionaries, cold war, Communism, Communist, democracy, diplomat, Europe, foreign policy, geoplotics, Gorbachev, hitler, Keri Giles, KGB, Khrushchev, Kyiv, Little Russia, Mad, middle east, Mikhail Gorbachev, miltary, Moscow, Mother Russia, Napoleon, NATO, Nazi, North America, nuclear war, oligarch, peace, Peter the Great, Propaganda, psychology, Putin, Revolution, Russia, Russia and Eurasia, Russian Revoluution, Soviet Union, the west, thinktank, Tsar, USA, USSR, Vladimir Putin, war -
Review: War and Peace – by Leo Tolstoy

‘War and Peace’ needs no introduction. It holds its place in the minds of contemporary society as a literary classic. One cannot pick up a newspaper article on great books without a passing mention of Leo Tolstoy’s masterpiece. Like other classical works such as the Bible, I think that their obvious fame means and their… Continue reading
1789, Adolf Hitler, Anna Karenina, Artitocracy, Austerlitz, battle of austerlitz, battle of borodino, Bezukhov, Bolkonsky, Bolshevik, Borodino, Bourgeoisie, Communism, Communist, Count, CrimeaN WAR, Czar, Denisov, dictator, Dostoyevsky, eating horses, enlioghtenment, European, fiction, France, French revolution, Grande Armée, history, hitler, Homer, Iliad, imperialism, Kulak, Lenin, Leo Tolstoy, Little Corsican, Military, Moscow, Napoleon, Napoleon Bonaparte, Naqzi, Natalya, Natalya Rostov, nationalism, non-fiction, Odyssey, old Boney, on mutatis, Paris, peace, Pierre, Pierre Bezukhov, Prince Andrei, Prince Andrei Nikolayovich Bolkonsky, Red Army, romance, Rostov, Rousseau, Rus, Russia, Russian, Russian Aristocracy, Russian Literature, russian revolution, serfs, society, Soviet Union, St Petersburg, Stalin, Steppes, Tolstoy, Translation, translator, Trotsky, Tsar, Tsar Alexander I, USSR, Voltaire, war, War and Peace, World War 2 -
Review: Kim – by Rudyard Kipling

‘Kim’ is recognised as the greatest work of famous author Rudyard Kipling. This is a cult novel especially in espionage circles. It is fiction but documents the widely popular Great Game between the British Empire and Tsarist Russia, a clandestine cat and mouse conflict between the two powers fought out on in British India and… Continue reading
British Empire, Buddhism, buddhist, Chela, classics, colonialism, enlightenment, espionage, fiction, Geography, Great Britain, Great Game, himalayas, Hindi, Hindu, Imperial India, India, Islam, KGB, Kim, kim philby, Kipling, lama, Little Friend of the World, mi6, Muslim, Musselman, Queen Victoris, Raj, religion, Rudyard Kipling, Russia, Sahib, Soviet Union, Spiritual, spy, The Great Game, The Wheel of Life, Travel, treachery, Tsar, Tsarist Russia, U.K., United Kingdom -
Review: The Great Game – On Secret Service in High Asia – by Peter Hopkirk

The Great Game, as immortalised by Rudyard Kipling in ‘Kim’ was the nineteenth century adventures in espionage between Russia and the U.K. across Central Asia. Both sides were on the verge of a full on military confrontation and sought advantage. The Russian Tsars sought territorial expansion across Asia and always had their eye on the… Continue reading
Afghanistan, Anglophobe, Asia, Britain, British, British Empire, British Geographical Society, China, CrimeaN WAR, espionage, exploration, Geographical Society, Geography, Great Britain, India, intrigue, Kim, London, Persia, Queen Victoria, Rudyard Kipling, Russia, Russian, Russophobe, spy, St Petersburg, The Great Game, Tibet, Tirkmenistan, Tsar, U.K., Vodka -
Review: Putin’s People – How the KGB took back Russia and then took on The West – by Catherine Belton

The author of this, the best study of Vladimir Putin that I have read to date, is Catherine Belton, a Financial Times journalist that was based in Moscow. It is a comprehensive study of the rise of Putin and how he has cemented a Tsar-like power as head of the New Russia. We go from… Continue reading
Belton, Boris Berezovsky, Boris Yeltsin, Brexit, Capitalism, Catherine Belton, cold war, Communism, Conservative, Conservative Party, Conservatives, corruption, crime, DOnald Trump, Dostoyevsky, espionage, Financial Times, FSB, Gangster, KGB, Kremlin, London, Londongrad, mafia, Mikhail Khodorkhovsky, Moscoow, Moscow, oligarch, Organised Crime, organized crime, Panama Papers, Putin, Roman Abramovich, Russia, Russian Mafia, siloviki, Soviet Union, spy, St Petersburg, Tambov, Tambov Group, Trump, Trump Towers, Tsar, U.K., Ukraine, USA, USSR, Vladimir Putin
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