After Yeltsin's bid to reinstate
Viktor Chernomyrdin as
Prime Minister of Russia was blocked by the
State Duma in September 1998, the President turned to Primakov as a compromise figure whom he rightly judged would be accepted by the parliament's majority. As prime minister, Primakov was given credit for forcing some very difficult reforms in Russia; most of them, such as the
tax reform, became major successes. Following the 1998 harvest, which was the worst in 45 years, coupled with a plummeting ruble, one of Primakov's first actions as prime minister, in October 1998, was to appeal to the United States and Canada for food aid, while also appealing to the
European Union for economic relief. While Primakov's opposition to US
unilateralism was popular among some Russians, it also led to a breach with the West during the 1999
NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, and isolated Russia during subsequent developments in the former Yugoslavia. On 24 March 1999, Primakov was heading to Washington, D.C. for an official visit. Flying over the Atlantic Ocean, he learned that
NATO had started to bomb Yugoslavia. Primakov decided to cancel the visit, ordered the plane to turn around over the ocean and returned to Moscow in a manoeuvre popularly dubbed "Primakov's Loop". although sources close to Yeltsin said at the time that the president viewed Primakov as being too close to the
Communist Party. Primakov himself would have had good chances as a candidate for the presidency. Primakov had refused to dismiss Communist ministers while the Communist Party was leading the process of preparing unsuccessful
impeachment proceedings against the president. Ultimately, Yeltsin resigned at the end of the year and was succeeded by his last prime minister,
Vladimir Putin, whom Primakov had tried to fire from his role as head of the
FSB when he tapped the phone of the Duma President. ==Post-PM career==