The End of the Cold War. 1985-1991

(Sean Pound) #1

622 THE END OF THE COLD WAR



  1. A. Yakovlev, Omut pamyati, p. 469. Yakovlev did not specify that Gorbachëv
    made the offer at that meeting, but the balance of probability is that it was
    then and there.

  2. Shevardnadze, Kogda rukhnul zheleznyi zanaves, pp. 211–12. On 30
    November 1991, Shevardnadze was to ask Yeltsin whether he thought that
    Gorbachëv had been involved in the August coup. Apparently Yeltsin had
    replied: ‘I don’t exclude [the possibility].’: T. G. Stepanov-Mamaladze working
    notes, 30 November 1991: T. G. Stepanov-Mamaladze Papers (HIA), box 3.

  3. Shevardnadze, Kogda rukhnul zheleznyi zanaves, pp. 211–12.

  4. G. Bush and B. Scowcroft, A World Transformed, p. 539.

  5. Washington Post, 30 August 1991.

  6. Bush and Scowcroft, A World Transformed, pp. 541–2.

  7. G. H. W. Bush, Address to the Nation on Reducing United States and Soviet
    Nuclear Weapons, 27 September 1991: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/
    ws/?pid=20035

  8. Bush and Scowcroft, A World Transformed, p. 546.

  9. Ibid., p. 547.

  10. Braithwaite, ‘Moscow Diary’, 7 October 1991.

  11. Chernyaev, Sovmestnyi iskhod, p. 1016 (3 November 1991).

  12. V. L. Kataev, diary: 15 November 1991: Vitalii Leonidovich Kataev Papers
    (HIA), box 3, folder 5.

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