Putin The Man and Power
-
- 5,99 €
-
- 5,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
This book is a sweeping, deeply researched portrait of Vladimir Putin and the era he has shaped—one of the most consequential periods in modern global history. Written with clarity, narrative force, and strategic insight, it moves beyond headlines to explain how a little-known former intelligence officer rose to power, rebuilt a fractured state, and reasserted Russia as a central actor on the world stage.
Rather than reducing Putin to caricature or controversy, this book asks a more serious question: How does power actually work in a world shaped by collapse, insecurity, and competition? The answer unfolds across three decades of Russian transformation, tracing Putin's journey from post-war Leningrad to the Kremlin, from national recovery to global confrontation.
Each chapter explores a critical phase of leadership: the restoration of state authority after the chaos of the 1990s; the reining in of oligarchic power; the rebuilding of institutions; the forging of a disciplined governing elite; and the deliberate crafting of a leadership image built on endurance rather than spectacle. These domestic foundations are paired with a clear-eyed examination of foreign policy—from early cooperation with the West, to growing distrust, to the decisive assertion of sovereignty in Georgia, Crimea, Syria, and ultimately Ukraine.
What sets this book apart is its insistence on coherence. Whether one agrees or disagrees with Putin's decisions, the book demonstrates that they follow a consistent internal logic shaped by history, security perception, and lived experience. From the collapse of the Soviet Union to NATO expansion, from sanctions to war, each development is shown not as an isolated event but as part of a cumulative strategic environment in which choices narrowed and consequences intensified.
The narrative does not shy away from controversy or cost. War, sanctions, protest, and isolation are treated with gravity and seriousness. Yet the book avoids polemic. Instead, it offers readers the tools to understand why Russia acted as it did, why pressure produced endurance rather than capitulation, and why the global order itself is changing as a result.
Written in a compelling, authoritative voice, the book blends political biography, strategic analysis, and historical storytelling. It is accessible to general readers while rigorous enough for scholars, policymakers, and professionals. By grounding global events in leadership psychology and institutional realities, it explains not only what happened, but why it unfolded the way it did.
This is not a book about approval or condemnation. It is a book about power—how it is built, defended, challenged, and remembered. It explores leadership under pressure, decision-making when options disappear, and the enduring tension between stability and freedom in times of upheaval.
In the final chapters, the book confronts legacy. What does Vladimir Putin leave behind? A restored but hardened state. A world more multipolar and more dangerous. A Russia that chose endurance over accommodation and sovereignty over integration. History's verdict is still unfolding—but the framework, the choices, and the consequences are now clear.
For readers seeking to understand Russia, global power, and the forces reshaping the 21st century, this book is essential. It does not tell you what to think—it shows you how history, strategy, and leadership collide when the stakes are highest.