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  1. Georgy Khosroevich Shakhnazarov (Armenian: Գեորգի Շահնազարով; October 4, 1924 in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, Transcaucasian SFSR, Soviet Union – May 15, 2001 in Tula, Russia) was a Soviet politician and political scientist.

  2. In this memo, Shakhnazarov thus repeats the taboo expressed by Gorbachev in conversations with his advisers and at Politburo meetings: no more military interventions. Shakhnazarov reminds Gorbachev that “even the old leadership” renounced the use of military force towards Poland in 1980-1981.

  3. The author, Georgy Shakhnazarov, is enough of a realist to argue that the Soviet Union needs to take the initiative before either its domestic political opponents—or, more likely, the new governments in Eastern Europe—demand such withdrawals, leaving Moscow on the defensive.

  4. Georgy Khosroevich Shakhnazarov was a Soviet politician and political scientist. He was one of the half-dozen aides closest to Mikhail Gorbachev while he was Soviet leader and after his fall from power at the collapse of the Soviet Union.

  5. 18 de may. de 2001 · Georgy Shakhnazarov, 77, a close aide to Mikhail Gorbachev before, during and after the tumult of the 1991 Soviet collapse, died near Moscow after giving a speech, the Russian news media reported...

  6. 19 de may. de 2001 · Georgi K. Shakhnazarov, a propagandist and political scientist of the Soviet era who rose to become a pro-reform assistant to Mikhail S. Gorbachev in the final years of the Soviet Union, died on...

  7. Here, Shakhnazarov urges Gorbachev to announce unilateral Soviet troop withdrawals from Czechoslovakia during his upcoming April 1987 trip to Prague. The memo reads like a debater’s brief, taking each possible point of objection and arguing against it, finding every distinction betwe...