Shortly after the signing of the treaty, and partly because of the reaction to its poor terms, civil war (complicated by foreign intervention) broke out in Russia. It continued until 1920, when the Soviet regime emerged victorious. (For a more detailed account of the intellectual and political background of the Russian Revolution and for the events of the revolution and the civil war, see Russian Revolution.) Poland, Finland, and the Baltic countries emerged as independent states in the aftermath of the civil war; Ukraine, Belorussia, and the Transcaucasian countries of Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Armenia proclaimed their independence, but by 1921 were conquered by the Soviet armies. In 1917, Russia was officially proclaimed the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, which in 1922 was united with the Ukrainian, Belorussian, and Transcaucasian republics to form the see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
Post-Soviet Russia
After more than seven decades of Soviet rule, the
regime of President Gorbachev marked the end of repressive political controls
and permitted nationalist movements to arise in the constituent republics of the
USSR. In 1990, Boris Yeltsin and other nationalists and reformers were elected
to the Russian parliament; Yeltsin was subsequently chosen Russian president.
Under Yeltsin, Russia declared its sovereignty (but not its independence) and
began to challenge the central government's authority. In 1991, Yeltsin was
reelected in the first popular election for president in the history of the
Russian Republic.
Yeltsin and the leaders of eight other republics reached a power-sharing agreement with Gorbachev, but its imminent signing provoked a coup attempt (Aug., 1991) by Soviet hard-liners. In the aftermath, the USSR disintegrated. With Ukraine and Belarus, Russia established the Commonwealth of Independent States. When Gorbachev resigned (Dec., 1991), Yeltsin had already taken control of most of the central government, and Russia assumed the USSR's UN seat.
Yeltsin moved rapidly to end or reduce state control of the economy, but control of parliament by former Communists led to conflicts and power struggles. On Sept. 21, 1993, Yeltsin suspended the parliament and called for new elections. Parliament retaliated by naming Vice President Aleksandr Rutskoi as acting president, and anti-Yeltsin forces barricaded themselves inside the parliament building. On Oct. 3, supporters of the anti-Yeltsin group broke through a security cordon to join the occupation, and also attacked other sites in the capital. The military interceded on Yeltsin's side, and on Oct. 4, after a bloody battle, troops recaptured the parliament building. Many people were jailed, and the parliament was dissolved.
In Dec., 1993, voters approved a new constitution that strengthened presidential power, establishing a mixed presidential-parliamentary system similar to that of France. In legislative elections at the same time, Yeltsin supporters fell short of a majority, as voters also supported ultranationalists, radical reformers, Communists, and others. The Russian government, under Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, generally advocated moderate reform. The program made slow but discernible progress in stimulating growth and halting rampant inflation, but the economy continued to suffer from serious malfunctions, including a weak banking system and widespread corruption.
In Feb., 1994, parliament granted amnesty to persons implicated in the Aug.,
1991, coup attempt and the Oct., 1993, rebellion. In the Dec., 1995, legislative
elections the Communist party won the largest share of the vote (22%) and more
than a third of the seats in the State Duma. The results were a new rebuff to
Yeltsin and his government, and he subsequently replaced the more liberal
ministers in the government with pragmatists and conservatives. Although his
popularity had significantly diminished since he was first elected president, he
ran again in June, 1996. He finished ahead of his chief rival, Communist Gennady
Zyuganov, in the first round and was reelected after a runoff in July.
Ministerial replacements continued, and in Mar., 1998, Yeltsin dismissed his
entire cabinet, hiring a new group of economic reformers and naming Sergei
Kiriyenko as prime minister. By August he had dismissed many of his top aides
and attempted to reinstate Chernomyrdin as prime minister. The nomination was
rejected by parliament, however, and Yevgeny Primakov, a compromise candidate
agreeable to reformers and Communists, became the prime minister in September;
two Communists became ministers in the government.