Kapitalizm: Russia's Struggle to Free Its Economy; Collision and Collusion: The Strange Case of Western Aid to Eastern Europe, 1989-1998
Two impressive and informative accounts of the agonies of economic reform in Russia. Brady, Business Week's former Moscow correspondent, takes the story back to the original plan of the economic reformers and traces its course through the early stages, particularly the privatization of massive state assets, to its present disarray. Skillfully employing wide-ranging interviews with policymakers, entrepreneurs, and experts, and making the most of her keen eye for human and social detail, she gives the reader an insider's view of where the process went awry and why so few have benefited.
Where Brady tends to be understanding of the brash young men who launched reform against great odds, anthropologist Wedel sees them as more scheming, even unsavory. She focuses on the role of outsiders in the reform process, including USAID and collaborators from Harvard. She marches the reader through this complicated interaction with ease, but most of the way wagging her finger at the Westerners, portrayed as imperious, shallow, and (in the Russian context) often disrespectful of their own countries' democratic values.
Related
Socio-political conditions in the former communist bloc do not favour the development of that tolerant political culture which is essential to democracy and economic progress.
"The historical nature and development of Finnish-Russian relations... should tell us not only some things about Finland but also some seldom-recognized things about Russian foreign policy under Stalin".
German reunification ranks high on George Bush's impressive list of foreign policy achievements. Philip Zelikow and Condoleezza Rice's engaging account reveals how American leadership won the day.

Sign-up for free weekly updates from ForeignAffairs.com.