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Vladimir Zhirinovsky

 
Biography: Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky

Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky (born 1946) led the extreme nationalist Liberal Democratic Party of Russia to surprising success in the Russian parliamentary elections of December 1993.

Zhirinovsky proved himself a master of the media available to Russian politicians in the December 1993 elections. A gifted demagogue, his message of extreme nationalism struck a chord among Russians suffering and fearing the hardships and uncertainties brought about by the collapse of the Soviet empire and the transformation from a planned economy to a market economy. He won support from those most vulnerable in the transformation, and from people who wanted to make an emphatic protest of the course Russia was following. His populist style and the simple solutions he proposed came in contrast to the professorial style and approaches of many of his reformist opponents. The unexpected success of Zhirinovsky's party, the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, was regarded by many observers inside and outside Russia as a sign that reform was unraveling.

Zhirinovsky was given to extreme positions expressed vividly, vigorously, and often outrageously. For example, he once proposed that nuclear waste be buried along the borders of the Baltic countries to poison their inhabitants. He favored a strong, even authoritarian, president for Russia and advocated a return to Russia's "natural borders," which would mean the incorporation of parts of the former Soviet Union in the Russian Federation. In his autobiography, Last Thrust to the South, he argues for a division of the world by the great powers that would allow Russia to acquire Iran, Turkey, and Afghanistan. Russian soldiers, he wrote, would "wash their boots in the warm water of the Indian Ocean." Many of the ills that afflicted Russia, he believed, came from the southern regions of the former Soviet Union and the countries that extend southward to the Indian Ocean. Making them a part of Russia would make Russia peaceful, prosperous, and void of ethnic conflict.

Zhirinovsky was born in 1946 in Almaty, the capital of Kazakhstan. His father, who was Jewish, died in an automobile accident before Zhirinovsky was a year old. His mother was left alone to raise Zhirinovsky and his five older brothers and sisters. He attended a Russian school in Almaty, a mostly Russian city in a republic where Russians formed a minority. He grew up resenting both his poverty and the discrimination he saw favoring the Kazakhs, whom he believed were favored over Russians in everything from grades in school to political appointments.

He went to Moscow to study Turkish at the Institute of Oriental Languages and earned a diploma with distinction. He proved to have a talent for languages and learned English, French, and German as well as Turkish. While in his final year at the university, Zhirinovsky spent eight months in Turkey as an interpreter for a delegation of engineers. But he left after the police arrested him for distributing badges with Soviet symbols. This was his second trip abroad, his first outside the Soviet bloc.

Following graduation Zhirinovsky served for two years in the army as a political officer in Tbilisi, Georgia. He then returned to Moscow to work in the International Relations Section of the Soviet Committee for the Defense of Peace. In 1975 he began to work with foreign students at the Higher School of the Trade Union Movement in the office of the dean. Both jobs gave him the opportunity to work extensively with foreigners who came to Moscow.

After he earned a law degree by taking evening courses at the Law Faculty of Moscow State University, he worked at the Foreign Law Collegium under the Moscow City Bar and then as a legal consultant at the Mir Publishing House. He also served as a legal adviser to Shalom, a Jewish cultural organization sponsored by the Soviet Government.

His political career began in 1987 with membership in the informal group Fakel. In December 1989 he joined the Democratic Union, a radical group given to staging demonstrations and challenging the authorities. He and others left to found the Liberal Democratic Party in March 1990. The following April the Liberal Democratic Party became the first political party to be officially registered after the constitution of the U.S.S.R. was amended to end the monopoly enjoyed by the Communist Party.

He ran for president of Russia in June 1991 and received 6.2 million votes, almost 8 percent of the total, which made him third in the race, behind Boris Yeltsin and Nikolai Ryzhkov, the chairman of Gorbachev's Council of Ministers. This was a surprising result for someone previously unknown.

He immediately declared his intention to run again and kept himself in the public eye through his sometimes incendiary remarks. In 1993 he participated in drafting the new constitution that was approved through a referendum held at the same time as the new legislature was elected.

In the December 1993 elections to the new legislature, the Federal Assembly, the Liberal Democratic Party won almost a quarter of the vote for the half of the lower house elected according to party lists, but did less well in the other half of the State Duma, which was elected by district. The party thus gained 63 of the 450 seats in the State Duma, enough to become a significant force allied to the Communist Party of Russia and other conservative forces. Zhirinovsky sought to become the speaker of the Duma, but was denied the post. Despite his strong showing in 1993, Zhirinovsky's often boorish behavior alienated him from many of his supporters. After the LDPR lost 13 seats in the 1995 parliamentary elections Zhirinovsky himself placed only fifth in a field of ten contenders in the preliminary elections for president in 1996. Questioning the fairness of the existing election processes, Zhirinovsky, refused, to vote for any candidate that year indicating they were unsuitable for the task. He then vowed to run again, and win, future elections.

Further Reading

Zhirinovsky's autobiography, (The Final March South) has not yet been published in English however, David Remnick's Lenin's Tomb (1993) provides a vivid description of the Soviet Union as it collapsed. John Dunlop's The Rise of Russia and the Fall of the Soviet Empire (1993) is a well-researched account of the Soviet collapse that deals specifically with the rise of nationalist movements. Vladimir Kartsen's !Zhirinovsky! An insider's account of Yeltsin's chief rival (1995) provides a first hand look at the man himself. Authoritative and accessible analyses of recent events in Russia and Russian foreign policy can be found in the research reports of Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty (RFE/RL). Among the many press reports see "Comrade Zhirinovsky's Shadowy Past" in Parade Magazine (January 30, 1994), Lee Hockstader's "How Russia's Zhirinovsky Rose" in The Washington Post (March 6, 1994), Michael Specter's "Zhirinovsky and the Motherland" in New York Times Magazine (June 19, 1994), Arshad Mohammed, "Zhirinovsky calls polls unfair vows return," Reuters (July 7, 1997) and George Zarycky's, "A primer on Russian elections," Freedom Review (May 1, 1996).

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Russian History Encyclopedia: Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky
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(b. 1946), founder and leader of the Liberal-Democratic Party of Russia, deputy speaker of the State Duma.

Born in Alma-Ata in Kazakhstan, Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky was the son of a Jewish lawyer from Lviv and a Russian woman. After his father's death he was raised by his mother. He graduated from Moscow State University in 1969, then served in the army in Tiflis, where he worked in military intelligence. From 1973 to 1991 Zhirinovsky worked at various jobs in Moscow and at night attended law school at Moscow State University. In the 1980s he directed legal services for Mir publishing.

With the coming of perestroika Zhirinovsky began his political career. In 1988 he founded the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), the second legal party registered in the Soviet Union. In 1991 he ran for the presidency of Russia and received 6 million votes. Emphasizing populism and great-power chauvinism and denouncing corruption, he built up a loyal party organization. In the December 1993 parliamentary elections, Zhirinovsky parlayed discontent with Boris Yeltsin into a plurality in the State Duma. In the complex election system for individual candidates and party slates, the LDPR received 23 percent of the total vote, fifty-nine of the party seats in the Duma, and five individual seats.

In the December 1995 Duma elections, the LDPR vote fell sharply to 11.1 percent, and the party won only fifty-five seats in the parliament, well behind the resurgent Communist Party. In 1996 Zhirinovsky ran for president again, but this time he finished fifth (5.7 percent) in the first round of voting and was eliminated.

In the Duma elections of 1999 the LDPR drew6.4 percent of the vote and got nineteen seats. Zhirinovsky was elected deputy speaker of the Duma. In the 2000 presidential election he ran again and drew only 2.7 percent of the vote, or a little more than 2 million out of the 75 million who voted. Zhirinovsky supported both the first and the second Chechen War. An acute student of mass media, he remained in the national spotlight by combining outlandish behavior, populist appeal, and authoritarian nationalism. His antics included fist fights on the floor of the Duma and throwing orange juice on Boris Nemtsov during a television debate. He made headlines by threatening to take Alaska back from the United States and to flood the Baltic republics with radioactive waste. Zhirinovsky has called for a Russian dash to the south that would end "when Russian soldiers can wash their boots in the warm waters of the Indian Ocean."

Bibliography

Fraser, Graham, and Lancelle, George. (1994). Absolute Zhirinovsky: A Transparent View of the Distinguished Russian Statesman. New York: Penguin Books.

Kartsev, Vladimir, with Todd Bludeau. (1995). Zhirinovsky! New York: Columbia University Press.

Kipp, Jacob W. (1994)."The Zhirinovsky Threat." Foreign Affairs 73 (3):72-86.

Zhirinovsky, Vladimir. (1996). My Struggle: The Explosive Views of Russia's Most Controversial Public Figure. New York: Barricade Books.

—JACOB W. KIPP

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky
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Zhirinovsky, Vladimir Volfovich (vlədyē'mĭr vôl'fəvyĭch' zhĭr'ĭnôf'skē), 1946-, Russian politician, b. Kazakh SSR (now Kazakhstan) as Vladimir Volfovich Eidelshtein. Born into a poor family, he had a mediocre record as a student in Moscow and as a lawyer. In 1989 he was a founder of the Liberal Democratic party, an extreme right-wing Russian nationalist group that has advocated restoring Russia to its previous imperial borders (including Finland and Alaska), and the following year he became its chairman. In 1991 he and his party finished a distant third behind Boris Yeltsin in the Russian Republic's presidential election.

Zhirinovsky later defended the failed 1991 August Coup against Mikhail Gorbachev and was an outspoken critic of Yeltsin, although he did not join the parliament's bid to oust the Russian leader in 1993. That year, his party won the largest share (about 23%) of the popular vote in the elections, and Zhirinovsky was elected to the new Russian State Duma. In 1995 his party was the runner-up to the Communists in the elections for the Duma. Denounced as a fascist and xenophobic extremist by his opponents, he was nonetheless popular with many Russians. In the late 1990s his popularity waned. In 1996 Zhirinovsky again ran for president but received only a small percentage of the vote. His party has not placed better than third in parliamentary elections since 1999, and he won less than 10% of the vote in the 2000 and 2008 presidential elections.

Wikipedia: Vladimir Zhirinovsky
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Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky
Zhirinovsky engaged in a television interview in September 2009.

Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky (Russian: Влади́мир Во́льфович Жирино́вский, born April 25, 1946 as Vladimir Volfovich Eidelstein) is a Russian politician, colonel of the Russian Army, founder and the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), Vice-Chairman of the State Duma, and a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Despite its name, the LDPR is often described as a nationalist party.[1][2][3][4]

Contents

Early life and politics

Zhirinovsky was born in Alma-Ata, the former capital of the then-Soviet Republic of Kazakhstan. In July 1964, Zhirinovsky moved from Alma-Ata to Moscow, where he began his studies in the Department of Turkish Studies, Institute of Asian and African Studies at Moscow State University (MSU), from which he graduated in 1969. Zhirinovsky then went into military service in Tbilisi during the early 1970s. He would later get a law degree and work at various posts in state committees and unions. He was awarded a Ph.D. in philosophy by MSU in 1998.

Although he participated in some underground reformist groups, Zhirinovsky was largely inconsequential in Soviet political developments during the 1980s. While he contemplated a role in politics, a nomination attempt for a seat as a People's Deputy in 1989 was quickly abandoned.[5]

Liberal-Democratic Party

In 1990, Zhirinovsky, along with Vladimir Bogachev, took initiatives which led to the founding of the Liberal Democratic Party, the second registered party in the Soviet Union and therefore the first officially sanctioned opposition party. This party was a joint project of Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) leadership and the KGB[6][7] according to former CPSU Politburo member Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev. Yakovlev wrote in his memories that KGB director Vladimir Kryuchkov presented the project of the puppet LDPR party at a meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev and informed him about a selection of the LDPR leader. According to Yakovlev, the name of the party was invented by KGB General Philipp Bobkov. However Bobkov said that he was against the creation of this "Zubatov's pseudo-party under KGB control that directs interests and sentiments of certain social groups".[8]

Zhirinovsky's first political breakthrough came in June 1991 when he came in third at Russia's first presidential elections, gathering more than six million votes or 7.81%. Afterwards, the LDPR garnered a reputation as an ineffective vehicle for opposition against the government, and one that lacked either credibility or authenticity, particularly given Zhirinovsky's vocal support for the Soviet coup attempt of 1991. This view was further encouraged by rumors, denied by Zhirinovsky, that he was an agent of the KGB and that the LDPR was a farcical creation meant to either discredit or distract earnest opposition to the government. Such impressions would last even as the Soviet Union was dissolved and the Communist Party itself was thrown into an opposition role.

Nonetheless, the Liberal-Democratic Party remained an important force in Russian politics. At the height of its fortunes, the LDPR gathered 23% of the vote in the 1993 Duma elections and achieved a broad representation throughout the country - the LDPR being the top vote-getter in 64 out of 87 regions. This fact encouraged Zhirinovsky to once again vie for the presidential office, this time against incumbent Boris Yeltsin. The fact that Yeltsin's candidacy seemed seriously challenged by Russian nationalist groups and a rejuvenated Communist Party alarmed many outside observers, particularly in the Western world, who were concerned that such developments posed a serious threat to the survival of Russian democracy, already in a very fragile state. Zhirinovsky became a focal point of harsh criticism and seemed to be the living embodiment of authoritarianism and militarism in modern Russia.

For his own part, Zhirinovsky has done a great deal to foster a reputation as a loud and boisterous populist who speaks on behalf of the Russian nation and people, even when the things he says are precisely what many people, at home or abroad, do not want to hear. Zhirinovsky infamously promised voters in 1991 that if he were elected, free vodka would be distributed to all. Similarly, he once remarked, during a political rally inside a Moscow department store, that if he were made president, underwear would be freely available.[9] He has on several occasions been involved in altercations with other politicians and debate opponents. As a candidate, Zhirinovsky also took part in the 2000 and 2008 presidential elections, promising a "police state".[7]

Controversies

Zhirinovsky has been widely accused of anti-Semitism (he also suggested that Jews were often to blame for anti-Semitism[6]) for statements in which he accused Jews of ruining Russia, sending Russian women to foreign countries as prostitutes, selling children and organs to the Western world, and provoking the Holocaust. He repeatedly denied his father's Jewishness until he published Ivan Close Your Soul in July 2001, describing how his father, Volf Isaakovich Eidelshtein, changed his surname from Eidelshtein to Zhirinovsky. He rhetorically asked, "Why should I reject Russian blood, Russian culture, Russian land, and fall in love with the Jewish people only because of that single drop of blood that my father left in my mother's body?"[10]

Zhirinovsky is well known for his boasts pertaining to other countries, having expressed a desire to reunite countries of the ex-Soviet "near abroad" with Russia to within the Russia's borders of 1900 (including Finland and Poland). He also said he's dreaming of a day "when Russian soldiers can wash their boots in the warm waters of the Indian Ocean and switch to year-round summer uniforms",[11] following the Russia's conquest of Afghanistan, Iran and Turkey and occupation of the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean.[12] Zhirinovsky has advocated forcibly retaking Alaska from the United States (which would then become "a great place to put the Ukrainians"), turning Kazakhstan into "Russia's back yard", dumping nuclear waste in Germany and in the Baltic states, provoking wars between the clans and the peoples of the former Soviet Union and occupying what will remain of it when the wars are over, and using nuclear weapons and naval blockade-imposed starvation against Japan.[13]

In July 2007, in response to questions about Russian troops carrying out extensive military simulations which reportedly included rehearsals of a Baltic invasion, Zhirinovsky, who encourages separatism within the Russian minority in the Baltic states,[7] endorsed the forcible re-occupation of these countries.[14] Russia’s southern neighbor Georgia has been another frequent target of Zhirinovsky’s rhetoric.[15] Highly critical of Georgia’s pro-Western line,[16] he is an energetic supporter of the Georgia’s breakaway republic of Abkhazia. In a high-profile incident in August 2004, he departed on a campaign to promote a tourist season in Abkhazia, accompanied by dozens of his party activists and Russian journalists aboard a cruise ship which was briefly intercepted by a Georgian coast guard vessel.[17] He also declared Bulgaria should annex the Republic of Macedonia. About Romania, he said it is an artificial state supposedly created by Italian Gypsies who seized territory from Russia, Bulgaria and Hungary.[18]

Zhirinovsky hailed what he described as "the democratic process" in Iraq under Saddam Hussein, whom he supported strongly. The friendship dated at least until the first Persian Gulf War in 1991, during which time Zhirinovsky sent several armed volunteers from the "Falcons of Zhirinovsky" group to support the Iraqi president. Allegations have dogged Zhirinovsky closely since the fall of Baghdad that he personally profited from illicit oil sales as part of the Oil-for Food scandal, a charge investigated in 2005 by the Independent Inquiry Committee into the Oil-for-Food Programme (Volcker Commission) and the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI).[19] Zhirinovsky is also close to the Serbian nationalist leader and war crimes suspect Vojislav Šešelj.[13] He reportedly even praised Adolf Hitler's ideology of Nazism[13] and befriended Edwin Neuwirth (an Austrian industrialist and a "proud" former officer of the Waffen-SS who has denied that the Nazis used gas chambers to kill Jews during World War II), leading the German press to denounce him as "Russia's Hitler".[7][18]

Zhirinovsky has expressed admiration for the 1996 United States presidential election contender Pat Buchanan, and referred positively to a comment in which Buchanan labeled the United States Congress "Israeli-occupied territory". Zhirinovsky said that both countries were "under occupation" and that "to survive, we could set aside places on US and Russian territories to deport this small but troublesome tribe." Buchanan strongly rejected Zhirinovsky's endorsement, saying he would provide safe haven to persecuted minorities if Zhirinovsky were ever elected Russia's president, eliciting a harsh response by Zhirinovsky: "You soiled your pants as soon as you got my congratulations. Who are you afraid of? Zionists?"[20] Previously, during the 1992 visit to the United States, Zhirinovsky called on television "for the preservation of the white race" and warned that the white Americans were in danger of turning "their country" over to black and Hispanic people.[21] Besides expressing his hatred for Turks and Caucasians,[12] he also called for the deportation of all Chinese from Russian Far East.[22]

In 1999, at the start of the Second Chechen War, Zhirinovsky, the ardent supporter of the first war in Chechnya in the mid-1990s, advocated hitting some Chechen villages with tactical nuclear weapons.[23] In 2006, in answer to the Ramzan Kadyrov's support for polygamy in Chechnya, he said it should be applied across Russia.[24] To eradicate bird flu [disambiguation needed], Zhirinovsky proposed arming all of Russia's population and ordering them and the troops to shoot down the migrant birds returning to Russia from wintering.[25] He has also threatened to remove restrictions on arms sales to Iran and proposed to sell the disputed Kurile Islands to Japan for $50m.[26] Among his early threats, Zhirinovsky claimed Russia possesses "Elipton," a weapon of mass destruction supposedly more powerful than nuclear weapons.[18]

In 2005, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Kazakhstan declared Zhirinovsky persona non grata on the territory of his historical homeland, due to the politician's controversial speech about the change of the Russia-Kazakhstan border, in which he questioned the Kazakh people's place in history. Zhirinovsky maintains his view, claiming that his position is backed by a number of academic works on history and geography.[27] As of 2006, Zhirinovsky was persona non grata also in Ukraine following his statements regarding the January 2006 Russia-Ukraine gas dispute (this was revoked in 2007). In reaction to Condoleezza Rice's criticism of Russian foreign policy during the dispute, Zhirinovsky stated that "Condoleezza Rice needs a company of soldiers [and] needs to be taken to barracks where she would be satisfied."[28] In the past, Zhirinovsky has been expelled from Bulgaria for insulting its president and was also barred from entry to Germany.[26]

On the November 2006 death by poisoning of Russian defector Alexander Litvinenko, Zhirinovsky said: "Any traitor must be eliminated using any methods. If you have joined the special services to work, then you should work, but to betray, to run away abroad, to give up the secrets you learned while working - all of this looks bad."[29][30] Sergei Abeltsev, Zhirinovsky's former bodyguard and State Duma member from the LDPR, added: "The deserved punishment reached the traitor. I am sure his terrible death will be a warning to all the traitors that in Russia the treason is not to be forgiven. I would recommend to citizen Berezovsky to avoid any food at the commemoration for his crime accomplice Litvinenko."[31] In the 2007 election, political patronage from Zhirinovsky enabled Litvinenko murder suspect Andrei Lugovoi to win election to the Russian parliament and thus the formal parliamentary immunity.[32] During the resulting political row between the United Kingdom and Russia, Zhirinovsky accused Great Britain (according to him "the most barbaric country on the planet") of, among other things, fomenting the World War I, the October Revolution, World War II, and the collapse of the Soviet Union,[33] and suggested dropping nuclear bombs over the Atlantic Ocean in an effort to flood Britain.[7]

At the film premiere in Moscow’s Kinoteatr Oktyabr of the film Taras Bulba (April 2, 2009) Zhirinovsky stated: “Everyone who sees the film will understand that Russians and Ukrainians are one people — and that the enemy is from the West".[34]

Personal violence

Zhirinovsky also has a history of igniting personal violence in political contexts. In his notorious debate with Boris Nemtsov in 1995 a "juice fight" broke out.[35] In 2003, Zhirinovsky engaged in a fistfight after a television debate with Mikhail Delyagin.[36] In 2005, Zhirinovsky ignited a brawl in the parliament by spitting at a Rodina party legislator, Andrei Saveliyev.[37] In 2008, he has showed himself shooting a rifle at the targets representing his political rivals.[7] During the 2008 televised presidential debate, he threatened Nikolai Gotsa, the representative of Democratic Party of Russia candidate Andrei Bogdanov with violence, saying he's going to "smash his head" and ordering his bodyguard to "shoot that bastard over there in the corridor". Gotsa sued Zhirinovsky in civil court for 1 million rubles (approximately US$38,000) in damages and eventually received a judgment of 30,000 rubles (approximately US$1,150). [38]

Expert opinions

While some observers were inclined to consider such controversies as stark efforts to drum up nationalist support and should not be viewed as anything more serious than electoral fodder meant for domestic consumption, there was great consternation at the fact that in February 1996, months before a presidential election, Zhirinovsky placed second in opinion polls, behind Communist Gennady Zyuganov and ahead of Boris Yeltsin. In the end, however, Zhirinovsky placed fifth with a 5.7% share in the first round of voting. Since then, the party's fortunes have somewhat stabilized, with the 2003 election seeing a LDPR vote share of 11.7%. In 2004, Zhirinovsky declined to even be nominated by the party, leaving that role to Oleg Malyshkin, who received a nearly negligible portion of the vote.) While some commentators call Zhirinovsky a fascist (or a neo-fascist),[39][40][41] some others dismiss him as a mere "clown"[21][18][32] and the Kremlin's willing political tool to neutralize the right-wing voter potential - and, for a time being, also a radical "bogeyman" for the West.[7]

References

  1. ^ Diary: Campaign circus BBC News, 20 November 2007
  2. ^ Zhirinovsky, Vladimir Encyclopædia Britannica Online
  3. ^ Russian nationalist Zhirinovsky nominated for president RIA Novosti, 13/ 12/ 2007
  4. ^ Zhirinovsky Beat Russia's top nationalist had a busy week abroad Time Magazine, Feb. 14, 1994
  5. ^ Zhirinovsky Vladimir Volfovich Panorama.ru
  6. ^ a b In Moscow, Zhirinovsky Is Remembered as Jewish Advocate, The New York Times, December 16, 1993
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Nuclear Threats and Busty Ladies in the Race for Second-Place in Russia Der Spiegel, February 28, 2008
  8. ^ Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev Time of darkness, Moscow, 2003, ISBN 5-85646-097-9, page 574 (Russian: Яковлев А. Сумерки. Москва: Материк 2003 г.). The book provides an official copy of a document providing the initial LDPR funding (3 million rubles) from the CPSU money
  9. ^ Fedarko, Kevin (1993-12-27). "A Farce to Be Reckoned With". TIME. http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/0,10987,979889,00.html. 
  10. ^ Zhirinovsky admits Jewish roots BBC News, 19 July, 2001
  11. ^ Ultra-right gains in poll The Age, December 9, 2003
  12. ^ a b Zhirinovsky is Russia's big bad wolf - success of Vladimir Wolfovich Zhirinovsky in recent Russian elections - Column
  13. ^ a b c Vladimir Zhirinovsky Information Technology Services at SUNY Brockport
  14. ^ Russia threatens Baltic missile build-up The Baltic Times, Jul 05, 2007
  15. ^ Vladimir Zhirinovsky: Georgia brings trouble to Russia. Pravda.ru. May 10, 2004.
  16. ^ Teresa Whitfield (2007), Friends Indeed?: The United Nations, Groups of Friends, and the Resolution of Conflict, p. 155. US Institute of Peace Press, ISBN 1601270054
  17. ^ Inal Khashig (August 19, 2004), Abkhazia Revels in Nationalist’s Visit. Institute for War and Peace Reporting Caucasus Reporting Service No. 247.
  18. ^ a b c d Hello, I Must Be Going Time Magazine, Jan. 10, 1994
  19. ^ http://www.access.gpo.gov/congress/senate/pdf/109hrg/21438.pdfPDF (78.0 MiB)
  20. ^ Russia's Zhirinovsky now blasts Buchanan as 'crap' Jewish News Weekly, March 1, 1996
  21. ^ a b The World; Here Comes the Clown. No Joke. The New York Times, November 6, 1994
  22. ^ The Beast Reawakens By Martin A. Lee
  23. ^ Russian Parliamentary Election 1999 RFE/RL, 17 December 1999
  24. ^ Polygamy proposal for Chechen men BBC News, 13 January 2006
  25. ^ Action for protection of birds from Zhirinovsky to be held in Moscow
  26. ^ a b Zhirinovsky: Russia's political eccentric BBC News, March 10, 2000
  27. ^ (Russian) Жириновскому запретили приезжать на историческую родину from Lenta.ru
  28. ^ Condoleezza Rice's anti-Russian stance based on sexual problems Pravda, 11.01.2006
  29. ^ Former KGB Agent Dies Associated Press, 24 November 2006
  30. ^ Dead ex-spy claimed Russian agent monitored him CTV, Nov. 25 2006
  31. ^ (Russian) "Address to Duma by Sergei Abeltsev". Duma. 25 November 2006. http://wbase.duma.gov.ru/steno/nph-sdb.exe?B0CW%5bF11&24.11.2006&F11&&F11&&F258&^&%5dH2512. Retrieved 2007-11-20. 
  32. ^ a b Interview with Lugovoi BBC Hard Talk, 19 February 2008
  33. ^ Zhirinovsky Engages in Street Theater, The St. Petersburg Times, January 25, 2008
  34. ^ Barry, Ellen (2009-04-12). "A Wild Cossack Rides Into a Cultural Battle". Kyiv Post. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/13/world/europe/13cossacks.html?_r=1&ref=global-home. Retrieved 2009-04-14. 
  35. ^ (Russian) Жириновский снова брызнул соком from Vesti.ru
  36. ^ Zhirinovsky Gets Into Fistfight After Televised Election Debate The Moscow Times, November 24, 2003 (mirrored by yabloko.ru)
  37. ^ Flamboyant Russian lawmaker in parliament chamber brawl News from Russia
  38. ^ "Vladimir Zhirinovsky chose 30,000 rubles' worth of expressions". Kommersant. 2008-09-30. http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?docsid=1033615. Retrieved 2008-10-03. 
  39. ^ Zhirinovsky's A-Z. (Russian parliamentary elections favored Vladimir Zhirinovsky's fascist Liberal Democratic Party) The Economist, December, 1993
  40. ^ The New Russia of Vladimir Zhirinovsky: Fascist Tendencies in the Liberal-Democratic Party of Russia NATO
  41. ^ Abroad at Home; When You Appease Fascism The New York Times, December 17, 1993

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