68 “Poslaniye Prezidenta Rossiiskoi Federatsii Federal’nomu Sobraniyu, ‘Poryadok vo vlasti—poryadok v strane’” (Message of the president of the Russian Federation to the Federal Assembly, “Order in government, order in the country) (Moscow: Rossiiskaya Federatsiya, 1997), 5–6.
69 Ibid., 9, 29.
70 Lebed was more ambitious than Korzhakov and had already had success as an independent politico. But he lacked the resource that was vital to Korzhakov’s influence—a friendship with Yeltsin.
71 Eugene Huskey,
72 Baturin et al.,
73 Yurii Baturin, interview with the author (June 3, 2002). Schooled in rocket science, law, and journalism, Baturin had been rejected by the Soviet program for poor eyesight. He flew to the Mir space station in 1998 and in 2001 to the international space station with Dennis Tito, the world’s first space tourist.
74 The membership fluctuated. Valentin Yumashev chaired it after Boiko. Other members of the group in 1996–98 included Tatyana Dyachenko, press secretary Sergei Yastrzhembskii, poll taker Aleksandr Oslon, political consultant Gleb Pavlovskii, Georgii Satarov and Mikhail Lesin of Yeltsin’s staff, and Igor Malashenko of NTV.
75 In
76 All these points are from the third Yumasheva interview. Yeltsin in his memoirs (
77 The difference between the sisters, and the similarity of Tatyana to their mother, was pointed out by Naina Yeltsina in my second interview with her (September 18, 2007). On disorganization, see the comments of Naina’s former press secretary: Natal’ya Konstantinova,
78 Newcomers to the Kremlin team soon learned the utility of the Dyachenko channel if all else failed. But veterans like Pikhoya often refused to use it. She implied in her interview with me (September 26, 2001) that it would have been beneath her dignity.
79 Dikun, “Yel’tsin v Gorkakh.”
80 The experience of Anatolii Kulikov, the interior minister from 1995 to 1998, was typical. “The whole time I was minister this weekly report to the president was a ritual that could not be violated under any circumstances.” On only one occasion in the three years, when Yeltsin happened to be occupied at the designated hour, did Kulikov miss a planned telephone call. He substituted by calling Chernomyrdin, which infuriated Yeltsin: “The prime minister, that is fine, but you are subordinated to the supreme commander-in-chief and are obligated to report personally to him!” Kulikov,
81 Author’s first interview with Mikhail Krasnov (June 5, 2000) and third with Yumashev; and Baturin et al.,
82 Yeltsin offered these explanations in my second interview with him. Viktor Ilyushin and Oleg Lobov were the last of the prominent Sverdlovskers to leave high posts, as deputy premier, in March 1997.
83 Kulikov,
84 Sergei Kiriyenko, interview with the author (January 25, 2001).
85 Yel’tsin,
86 Ibid., 88.
87 Author’s interviews with principals; and, on Vyakhirev, “Boris Nemtsov—Yevgenii Al’bats o Yel’tsine” (Boris Nemtsov to Yevgeniya Al’bats about Yeltsin),
88 “Boris Nemtsov—Yevgenii Al’bats o Yel’tsine.”
89 Thomas F. Remington, “Laws, Decrees, and Russian Constitutions: The First Hundred Years” (unpublished paper, Emory University, 2006). Decrees averaged twenty-one per month in 1992–95 and fifteen per month in 1997–99.