Only Russia could have produced a man like Korzhakov and ended up giving him so much power
Thomas de Waal: Boris Yeltsin, 2 April 1998
Boris Yeltsin: From Dawn to Dusk
by Aleksandr Korzhakov.
Interbook, 477 pp., £9.95, December 1997,5 88589 039 0 Show More
by Aleksandr Korzhakov.
Interbook, 477 pp., £9.95, December 1997,
Romance with the President
by Vyacheslav Kostikov.
Vagrius, 352 pp., £10.50, October 1997,5 7027 0459 2 Show More
by Vyacheslav Kostikov.
Vagrius, 352 pp., £10.50, October 1997,
“... Alexander Korzhakov, Boris Yeltsin’s former chief bodyguard, operated out of a poky cubby-hole in the Kremlin with room for barely anyone but himself. Vyacheslav Kostikov, Yeltsin’s press secretary, was given a grand office once occupied by the first Soviet President, Mikhail Kalinin. Both men were alter egos of the Russian President, but it was Korzhakov, his darker other half who hatched dirty plots to keep him in power and was spectacularly sacked when the plotting got out of hand, who in his time wielded the power ... ”