I've seen many people on this site talk about how if Andropov lived longer he could have prevented the collapse of the USSR or at least increased its odds of survival. I'm curious as to what his reforms were that people here mention.
I've seen many people on this site talk about how if Andropov lived longer he could have prevented the collapse of the USSR or at least increased its odds of survival. I'm curious as to what his reforms were that people here mention.
I'm not sure if they couldve pulled off dengism, gorby insisted on glasnost and political reform because of the nomenklatura - they probably wouldn't have implemented dengism without some change up. They really should've been training up lower cadres way more and, honestly, China was probably only able to do dengism because the cultural revolution eliminated or at least side lined their version of the nomenklatura in addition to later seeing how those reforms turned out in the USSR.
Here's a quote from Vladislav Zubok's collapse that shows what Andropov thought about this:
You may be right that he would have been pressured into doing some kind of Glasnost-like political reform at some point, but the question is if it would have happened in an improving or deteriorating economic and social situation. Gorbachev rammed through Glasnost because he blamed the Party for the failures of Perestroika and was looking to create a political force to counter it. Several of the AES countries that still exist, specifically China, Vietnam, and Cuba, have implemented political reforms that are aimed at making Socialist institutions more responsive and accountable to the public, and the intelligentsia of those countries seems to be happier with their system than the Soviet intelligentsia were.