Boris Yeltsin
Moscow party secretary. Gorbachev's adversary, becomes Russian President in June 1991. Six months later he initiates the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
Yegor Ligachev
Party chief in the Siberian region of Tomski for 18 years. Under Gorbachev he served as second secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and also one of the perestroika creator's chief ideologic detractors.
Viktor Chebrikov
Army general. Took on an important role in the KGB in 1967 and became its chairman in 1982. However, Gorbachev considered him a hindrance to his policies and replaced him in 1988.
Vladimir Kryuchkov
Army general. Was stationed in Hungary during the uprising at embassy in Budapest. In 1988, he became head of the KGB. He was jailed after his participation in the putsch against Gorbachev.
Andrei Gromkyo
Foreign minister of the Soviet Union for 28 years. Suggested Gorbachev as the new party chief in 1985 and shortly afterwards was bestowed with the position of head of state, an office lacking any influence.
Nikolai Ryzhkov
Industry chief who became prime minister under Gorbachev in 1985. Generally conservative, but proposed and failed in 1989 to pass a market economy reform package.
Eduard Shevardnadze
Became interior minister of Georgia in 1968 and then party chief in the republic. In 1985, Gorbachev brought him to Moscow to serve as Soviet foreign minister and he would become the Soviet leader's closest ally in the fight to push through his perestroika and glasnost reforms.
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