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National Salvation Front (Russia) : ウィキペディア英語版
National Salvation Front (Russia)
The National Salvation Front ((ロシア語:Фронт Национального Спасения), Front Natsional'nogo Spaseniya, ФНС, ''FNS'') was a broad coalition of communist, socialist and ultra-nationalist movements against reforms in Russia. Established in 1992, the FNS was the first group to be banned in post-Soviet Union Russia before playing a leading role in the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis.
==Foundation==
The FNS was established at a congress on 24 October 1992 at which an alliance was concluded between some 3,000 communist and nationalist activists united by their opposition to the presidency of Boris Yeltsin.〔 Hard-line nationalism was represented by a number of leading authors and ideologues, including Valentin Rasputin, Alexander Prokhanov and Igor Shafarevich.〔 They were joined by former leading figures from the Soviet days such as General Albert Makashov and Colonel Viktor Alksnis and political figures including Sergey Baburin and Constitutional Democratic Party – Party of Popular Freedom leader Mikhail Astafyev.〔Richard Sakwa, ''Russian Politics and Society'', Routledge, 1996, p. 83〕 The co-chairmen of the movements were Baburin, Nikolay Pavlov (both Russian All-People's Union), Gennady Zyuganov (future leader of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation), Ilya Konstantinov, Astafyev, Valery Ivanov, Vladimir Isakov, Gennady Sayenko and Albert Makashov. The involvement in Zyuganov in the FNS helped to ensure that when he established his new Communist Party in 1993 it included a significant strain of nationalism in its ideology.〔Henry E. Hale, ''Why Not Parties in Russia?: Democracy, Federalism, and the State'', Cambridge University Press, 2005, p. 64〕〔Michael McFaul, ''Russia's Unfinished Revolution: Political Change from Gorbachev to Putin'', Cornell University Press, 2002, pp. 177-179〕

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