"The essential meaning of perestroika for Gorbachev and his supporters was creating and acting on alternatives to failed and dangerous policies at home and abroad"
About this Quote
The subtext is sharper than the polite wording suggests. Calling prior policies "failed and dangerous" is an indictment of the late Soviet status quo: economic stagnation at home, militarized overreach abroad, and a political system trained to treat dissent as sabotage. Cohen implies that the real innovation wasn't a single policy tweak but the act of admitting contingency in a regime built on inevitability. Alternatives are politically explosive when your legitimacy depends on the claim that there are none.
Context matters: perestroika arrives after Afghanistan, Chernobyl, a draining arms race, and a bureaucracy skilled at self-preservation. Cohen's emphasis on "at home and abroad" underscores that Gorbachev's wager was holistic: you can't modernize the economy while maintaining an imperial posture, and you can't reduce external risk without changing internal incentives. The sentence also gestures at why perestroika destabilized the USSR: once the state authorizes alternatives, it can't fully control who gets to propose them, or where the logic of change leads.
Quote Details
| Topic | Change |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Gorbachev's Lost Legacy (Stephen Cohen, 2005)
Evidence:
The essential meaning of perestroika for Gorbachev and his supporters was creating and acting on alternatives to failed and dangerous policies at home and abroad.. I was able to verify the quote in a reprint of Stephen F. Cohen’s article “Gorbachev’s Lost Legacy,” dated 09 March 2005, which identifies the original publication as The Nation. The reprint links to a The Nation URL that now returns a 404 (not found), so I cannot independently confirm the exact original The Nation webpage or whether the piece appeared in print with page numbers. Based on the reprint’s explicit attribution and the surrounding matching text, the best-supported primary-source identification is: Stephen F. Cohen, “Gorbachev’s Lost Legacy,” The Nation, March 9, 2005. |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Cohen, Stephen. (2026, February 10). The essential meaning of perestroika for Gorbachev and his supporters was creating and acting on alternatives to failed and dangerous policies at home and abroad. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-essential-meaning-of-perestroika-for-93618/
Chicago Style
Cohen, Stephen. "The essential meaning of perestroika for Gorbachev and his supporters was creating and acting on alternatives to failed and dangerous policies at home and abroad." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-essential-meaning-of-perestroika-for-93618/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The essential meaning of perestroika for Gorbachev and his supporters was creating and acting on alternatives to failed and dangerous policies at home and abroad." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-essential-meaning-of-perestroika-for-93618/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.






