Tradition vs the market
Dealing with the past was hardly a priority for the authorities in Russia’s first post-Soviet years. Reformers were betting on market individualism, seeing citizens as sovereign consumers. The Thatcher-style there’s-no-such-thing-as-society approach might have worked in a state with strong political institutions and social harmony, but that definitely wasn’t the case in the new Russia, which soon became the stamping ground of Orthodox criminals, National Bolsheviks, communists teaming up with far-right extremists and conservative liberals from the centre-right Democratic Choice of Russia party, all of whom called themselves traditionalists.
Former Communist Party functionaries and KGB servicemen kept their jobs, with then-President Boris Yeltsin even protecting the latter from an angry mob gathered outside the Lubyanka in August 1991.