User Tag List

+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: The Doomed Voyage of Pepsi’s Soviet Navy

  1. #1

    tPF Moderator
    Points: 479,425, Level: 100
    Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
    Overall activity: 67.0%
    Achievements:
    Social50000 Experience PointsTagger First ClassYour first GroupVeteranRecommendation First ClassOverdrive
    Awards:
    Master Tagger
    DGUtley's Avatar tPF Moderator
    Karma
    201359
    Join Date
    Jul 2016
    Location
    Northeast Ohio
    Posts
    53,442
    Points
    479,425
    Level
    100
    Thanks Given
    17,191
    Thanked 46,629x in 25,166 Posts
    Mentioned
    892 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Post The Doomed Voyage of Pepsi’s Soviet Navy

    The Doomed Voyage of Pepsi’s Soviet Navy - A three-decade dream of communist markets ended in the scrapyard.

    ezgif-3-e6cc97e14d24.jpg

    In 1989, PepsiCo Inc., the maker of Pepsi, acquired 17 submarines, a cruiser, a frigate, and a destroyer from the Soviet Union. In recent years, an internet legend has grown up around this deal, which holds that Pepsi briefly possessed the sixth-largest fleet in the world. In one way, that isn’t far off. According to an analysis of Jane’s Fighting Ships 1989-90, a country operating a squadron of 17 submarines would have tied with India for possessing the seventh-largest fleet of attack submarines.

    Yet in any real sense the story is false. What PepsiCo acquired were small, old, obsolete, unseaworthy vessels. The Pepsi navy no more conferred military power than a rusting Model T could have been a Formula 1 contender. What’s more, the ships themselves were immediately turned over to a Norwegian shipyard to be scrapped. PepsiCo was more a middleman than a maritime power.

    Most interpretations of the story get its meaning wrong, too. The Pepsi navy is sometimes portrayed as an embarrassment for the USSR. Far from it. The multinational firm and the country founded by Vladimir Lenin were business partners, and in 1989 Pepsi executives were bullish on Soviet prospects. PepsiCo acquired the rusting fleet as part of a multibillion-dollar bet on the long-term stability of the Soviet Union, an enormous market that had little to trade immediately besides raw material and the promise of future profits.

    American leaders hoped that exposure to Western business could transform the Soviet Union into a country just like theirs. Pepsi executives influenced U.S. policymakers to gain a major advantage in its rivalry with Coca-Cola. Soviet officials saw the deal as part of a larger strategy of external trade that could help revitalize their creaking economy. In the end, almost nobody got what they wanted.

    external-content.duckduckgo.com.jpg
    external-content.duckduckgo.com.jpg


    external-content.duckduckgo.com.jpg


    external-content.duckduckgo.com.jpg

    https://cyberdandy.org/the-doomed-vo...s-soviet-navy/
    https://lflank.wordpress.com/2019/06...si-had-a-navy/
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/11/27...=pocket-newtab
    Any time you give a man something he doesn't earn, you cheapen him. Our kids earn what they get, and that includes respect. -- Woody Hayes​

  2. #2
    Points: 25,327, Level: 38
    Level completed: 76%, Points required for next Level: 323
    Overall activity: 50.0%
    Achievements:
    Veteran25000 Experience Points
    LWW's Avatar Senior Member
    Karma
    2813
    Join Date
    Jan 2021
    Location
    People's Midwest Republic of Ameristan
    Posts
    8,520
    Points
    25,327
    Level
    38
    Thanks Given
    3,053
    Thanked 2,803x in 2,030 Posts
    Mentioned
    52 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Fascinating.
    More 1776, less 1984.
    Make Orwell Fiction Again.



+ Reply to Thread

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts