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Alexander Litvinenko

    Alexander Litvinenko was a Russian dissident and writer, formerly an officer in Russia's security services. After publicly accusing his superiors of ordering the assassination of Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky, he faced political persecution. Litvinenko fled to the United Kingdom, where he was granted political asylum. During his time in exile, he authored books accusing Russian secret services of staging terrorist acts to bring Vladimir Putin to power.

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    Genscherismus
    Blowing up Russia
    • 'Blowing Up Russia' contains the attacks of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko against his former spymasters in Moscow which led to his being murdered in London by poisoning. Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky detail how, since 1999, the secret service has been hatching a secret plot to return to the terror that was the hallmark of the KGB.

      Blowing up Russia
    • Genscherismus

      Ein transatlantisches Phänomen der späten 1980er Jahre

      • 90 pages
      • 4 hours of reading

      Der Genscherismus als Kampfbegriff hat seinen Ursprung in der deutschen Außenpolitik der 1980er-Jahre. Mithilfe des New Cultural Approach on Diplomatic History geht Alexander Litvinenko der Genese und der Tiefendimension dieses transatlatischen Phänomens auf den Grund und verortet die Wurzeln in der von Washington geäußerten Kritik an Genschers Zustimmung gegenüber Gorbatschows Reformen in den entspannungspolitischen Entwürfen des vorangegangenen Jahrzehnts. Somit ist der Begriff keineswegs eine wohlwollende Umschreibung des Außenpolitikstils Genschers, sondern stellt die Rezeption eines Bahrismus der 1980er-Jahre dar. Jedoch zeichnet sich bei der Beobachtung der weiteren Entwicklung des Begriffs eine anerkennende Umdeutung ab.

      Genscherismus
    • Wysadzić Rosję

      • 351 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Butterfly ballots, balky machines, absentee ballot scandals, felons voting, Supreme Court intervention - all these made headlines during the infamous 2000 Florida recount. Could it happen again in this year's presidential election? The answer is yes, because not much has changed to improve our election systems, while both major parties are poised on a hair trigger to file lawsuits and challenge any close statewide vote. The issues may boil down to whether the margin of victory in any state exceeds the ''margin of litigation. John Fund offers a guided tour of our error-prone election systems, which nearly half of Americans say they don't trust. When some states have systems so flawed that you can't tell where incompetence ends and possible fraud begins, it isn't surprising that scandals have ranged from rural Texas to big cities such as Milwaukee and St. Louis. Fund dissects some anomalies of Florida 2000 and analyzes the bitterly protracted election for governor of Washington State in 2004. He spotlights the perils of ''provisional ballots, the flaws of the ''Motor Voter law that has allowed people to get absentee ballots for phantom voters, and the shady registration drives of the radical group ACORN. Meanwhile, the simple safeguard of a photo ID requirement is fiercely resisted on specious claims that it would disenfranchise poor and minority voters. Stealing Elections presents a chilling portrait of electoral vulnerability, as a combination of bureaucratic bungling and ballot rigging put our democracy at risk.

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