Of course Yeltsin was a big part of the problem too.
Of course Yeltsin was a big part of the problem too.
I think US did enough divide and conquer and meddling to help bringing back an authoritarian government.
Anyway, totalitarian has a specific meaning, not a random one, it's a government that holds total control on all powers in a country. Stalinist USSR and Nazi germany (modern eritrea and north korea) apply to that definition, Italian or spanish fascisms do not (in both the head of state was the king), even less Russia since it is a de jure democracy.
There is a phrase in Russia, :) "But in USA they lynch people". The idea is that in Russia it's often that discussion is interrupted by listing the ills of America, to avoid talking about Russia or for other reasons, so it's easy to justify pointing fingers to "the real evil".
I think you're wrong and your arguments are misplaced.
The phrase "never stopped the expansion eastwards" suggests that you don't see e.g. Slovenia as an interested party to join NATO, for whatever reason they chose, and instead see it as an evidence of guilt.
> Stalinist USSR and Nazi germany ... apply to that definition... even less Russia since it is a de jure democracy.
Current Russian laws mean little to define Russia de facto. Just like Hitler laws meant little at the time.