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Fuller, Uil`iam (William C. Fuller, Jr.) Vnutrennii Vrag
Shpionomaniia i Zakat Imperatorskoi Rossii
[ Vnutrennii Vrag : Shpionomaniia i Zakat Imperatorskoi Rossii]
The Foe Within: Fansies of Treason and the End of Imperial Russia Transl. from English by M. Malikova
Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie, 2009 376 p Serie: Historia Rossica Hardcover. 13 x 21 cm ISBN: 9785867937294 Language: RussianLt. Colonel S. N. Miasoedov, a former gendarme officer on active duty with the Russian army in World War I, was hanged after a two-hour trial in Warsaw for treason in 1915. Although he was innocent of this charge, Miasoedov’s hasty execution, set against the army’s disastrous performance in the war against Germany, touched off a wave of "spy mania" that resulted in hundreds of arrests and eventually involved the highest reaches of the Russian Empire, including the minister of war, General V. A. Sukhomlinov. The trials of Miasoedov and Sukhomlinov and the purported revelations of elaborate networks of pro-German spies were for many Russians the principal explanation for the military catastrophes Russia had endured at Germany’s hands since WWI. This belief gradually took hold among the Russian public at large and politicians of all stripes. The full story of the events leading up to their fallacious prosecutions—and the extent of the spy mania—has never before been completely revealed. As told here by William C. Fuller, Jr., it is an astonishing narrative full of vivid incident and populated by a cast of characters that includes the emperors of both Germany and Russia, Baltic noblemen, tsarist generals, courtesans, war profiteers, peasants, Jewish businessmen, tsarist ministers, German spymasters, and Rasputin. Fuller explains how they crippled the Russian monarchy and paved the way for the February Revolution of 1917. The Foe Within is an unprecedented portrait of a regime so riddled with intrigue and corruption that its collapse in the face of mounting military and economic difficulty comes to seem all but inevitable
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