and now we're joined by donald jensen in washington he's a resident fellow at the center for transatlantic relations ok let's let's break it out a little bit here for a lot of people in this country in russia the russian federation is that the end of the soviet economy is part of the soviet union and the soviet union itself all i'm very close proximity is really about personal ambition about you know between yeltsin and the queen got a much off and it didn't matter not be provocative here it didn't matter the damage that both left behind it was a power grab and it was for prestige and and legacy essentially and they didn't care if the promised party fell apart or the soviet union it's there it was their place in history and what and how they would rule in the future obviously mr yeltsin won. yes very much i thought a couple of points i agree peter that i was it was a power grab between those two leaders but i think it's more deep as well and two elements i don't think we may have touched upon in sufficient depth one would be the role of nationalism not only russian nationalism which a lot