New Soviets Movement (1987: Bombs Over Kabul)

'New Soviets' Movement (1987: Bombs Over Kabul)
The 'New Soviets' Movement, also called NU-Soviets Movement, abbreviated as the NSM, was an underground anarchist-commmunist subculture in the streets of Moscow from around the early 1990s to the early 2000s. Sparked by the 1987 Soviet overthrow and nuclear campaign, young street gangs quickly began utilizing forms of guerrilla warfare to manipulate the Russian government.

Incarnation
In 1990, following the dissolution, a street gang calling themselves the Chernye Orly (Черные Орлы - 'Black Eagles') began recruiting followers to launch 'a raid on the Imperials'. Over a course of several months, they trained, hardened, and mentored twenty-or-more recruits in the field of guerilla warfare. In March, the NSM began to plan a 'serious operation', and on April 22, 1991, the Russian White House Raid began.

Day One
On April 22, 1991, at 2:29 pm, ten men entered the lobby of the Russian White House, brandishing illegally licensed submachine guns. Threatening the clerk and patrons, they took seven hostages and fled to the eighteenth floor. Moscow police were alerted within minutes, and the standoff began after a police helicopter was shot at, injuring the pilot.