57 I owe this point to Valentin Yumashev, who knows Yeltsin’s political thinking as well as anyone. Yeltsin describes his conversations with Grachëv about the constitutional crisis, and his confidence in Grachëv’s support, in
58 Previously undisclosed details from the author’s second interview with Vladimir Bokser (May 11, 2001) and interview with Vitalii Nasedkin (June 9, 2001).
59 Baturin et al.,
60 Yel’tsin,
61 Ibid., 375; Gorshkov, Zhuravlëv, and Dobrokhotov,
62 Yel’tsin,
63 Ibid., 384–86, describes the scene with Grachëv, as does Sergei Filatov,
64 Louis D. Sell, “Embassy Under Siege: An Eyewitness Account of Yeltsin’s 1993 Attack on Parliament,”
65 This act is described in Korzhakov,
66 Some opposition sources put the death toll much higher, at 500 or even 1,000.
67 Yeltsin’s chief of staff, Sergei Filatov, proposed the plebiscite to him on October 5, having fielded a suggestion to this effect from Yurii Ryzhov, the Russian ambassador to Paris (who had heard it from the Sorbonne law professor Michel Lesage). Yeltsin agreed immediately, says Filatov (
68 Valerii Zor’kin had favored a “zero option” whereby Yeltsin and parliament would face election at exactly the same time. Yeltsin was never for it, although it would probably have yielded better electoral results for him than those realized in December 1993.
69 “Prezident Rossii otvechayet na voprosy gazety ‘Izvestiya’” (The president of Russia answers the questions of the newspaper
70 Unnamed speaker on October 23, in
71 Timothy J. Colton, “Public Opinion and the Constitutional Referendum,” in Timothy J. Colton and Jerry F. Hough, eds.,
72 Even a study deeply critical of Yeltsin stresses the self-isolation of his opponents and that “none of our criticism of Yeltsin implies that a military victory by the White House forces would have set Russia on a better path than it in fact took. That seems most improbable.” Peter Reddaway and Dmitri Glinski,
73 “Prezident Rossii otvechayet na voprosy gazety ‘Izvestiya.’”
74 In this sense, Yeltsin “sought to construct the presidency as the ruler of those who govern, rather than one who is himself responsible for governing.” Alexander Sokolowski, “Bankrupt Government: Intra-Executive Relations and the Politics of Budgetary Irresponsibility in El’tsin’s Russia,”
75 Some court decisions indicated he should explain his vetoes, but Yeltsin complied selectively and no systematic list of vetoes was published. Yeltsin signed 752 bills from 1994 through 1998 and vetoed 216. Andrea Chandler, “Presidential Veto Power in Post-Communist Russia, 1994–1998,”