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열친 러시아 前대통령 일생 사진첩 본문

대북정책

열친 러시아 前대통령 일생 사진첩

CIA bear 허관(許灌) 2007. 4. 24. 11:32

*러시아 언어 모습.........))))))))

 

*영어 언어 모습 .....^^^^^^^^^))))))

 

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/6584547.stm

 

 

Boris Yeltsin in 1993

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin - the man credited with bringing down the Soviet Union - has died aged 76.

 

 

Candidate for Moscow seat in upcoming parliamentary elections, Boris Yeltsin addresses some 500 delegates of the ZIL car factory 21 March 1989 in Moscow

In 1988, two years after being transferred to a top job in Moscow, he quit the Soviet politburo. Soon afterwards, he shocked communists as he was elected to parliament

 

Yeltsin outside the parliament building during a failed coup attempt

In August 1991, a failed coup by hardliners served him well as he proceeded to discredit the Soviet system.

 

 

Boris Yeltsin and Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991

And he did not stop the offensive - and a meteoric rise to national leadership - even though the target was none other than his former benefactor, Mikhail Gorbachev.

 

 

Russian President Boris Yeltsin clenching a fist during the funeral of three young men killed during the coup attempt of mid-August in 1991.

The strong man of Russian politics knew exactly what he wanted next: he banned the Communist Party and by the end of the year the Soviet Union had broken apart.

 

 

Russian President Boris Yeltsin taking the oath of the presidency at the Supreme Soviet in Moscow.

So the first elected leader of Russia as a Soviet republic became president of a newly-independent successor state to the USSR.

 

 

Boris Yeltsin with US President Bill Clinton at the G7 summit in 1997

Soon, Russia's Boris Yeltsin emerged onto the world stage as a new player, though one who caused some Russians embarrassment.

 

 

Russian President Boris Yeltsin (R) in Rostov, dancing with musicians during a rock performance as part of his pre-election campaign in 1996

During his energetic campaigning for re-election in 1996, he suffered a heart attack, leading to a quintuple heart bypass operation.

 

 

Russian President Boris Yeltsin announcing his resignation in 1999.  He hands powers over to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

Erratic behaviour - some say a result of too much drink - led to a drop in popularity. He resigned in 1999 after presiding over a second military intervention in Chechnya.

 

Boris Yeltsin at a Volleyball match 2002

Largely out of sight since then, he is nonetheless remembered fondly by some Russians - as others accuse him of undermining Russian prestige.

 

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin died Monday, April 23, at age 76. He died of heart failure, according to Russian news media. Yeltsin was the first democratically elected president of Russia, but leaves behind mixed memories of his tenure. He is survived by his wife, Naina, and two children

 

 

Yeltsin plays a tennis match in Moscow against cosmonaut Igor Volk in May 1991, two months before being elected president of the Russian Federation

 

 

Yeltsin addresses supporters from atop a tank outside the Russian Federation building in Moscow in August 1991. Yeltsin denounced an attempted coup against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev by Soviet hard-liners

An army officer discusses the suitcase that contains the country's nuclear launch controls with Yeltsin in December 1991, after the resignation of Gorbachev

 

 

Yeltsin gestures to the crowd after visiting a new housing project for Afghanistan war veterans in April 1993. The next day, voters cast ballots on his rule; he won

 

Then-President Clinton and Yeltsin laugh during a news conference on October 23, 1995, after Yeltsin chided the media for stressing U.S.-Russian differences ahead of their meeting in Hyde Park, New York.

 

 

Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov and Yeltsin sign a peace treaty in Moscow on May 12, 1997. Yeltsin had sent tanks into Chechnya, leading to a 21-month conflict that claimed tens of thousands of lives.

 

Yeltsin drinks a glass of champagne during an event in April 1999. The public attributed some of Yeltsin's bizarre behavior to alcohol, though aides cited jet lag, medication or illness

 

Yeltsin shakes hands with then-Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on December 31, 1999. on the eve of the millennium, Yeltsin announced he was resigning and that Putin would serve as president until elections in March 2000

Yeltsin congratulates Russian tennis player Marat Safin at the Davis Cup tennis tournament in December 2006. After his resignation, Yeltsin maintained a quiet life at his cottage outside Moscow, appearing in public occasionally at tennis tournaments