The Warsaw Pact Reconsidered: International Relations in Eastern Europe, 1955-1969

Bìa trước
Routledge, 11 thg 2, 2015 - 348 trang

The Warsaw Pact is generally regarded as a mere instrument of Soviet power. In the 1960s the alliance nevertheless evolved into a multilateral alliance, in which the non-Soviet Warsaw Pact members gained considerable scope for manoeuvre. This book examines to what extent the Warsaw Pact inadvertently provided its members with an opportunity to assert their own interests, emancipate themselves from the Soviet grip, and influence Soviet bloc policy. Laurien Crump traces this development through six thematic case studies, which deal with such well known events as the building of the Berlin Wall, the Sino-Soviet Split, the Vietnam War, the nuclear question, and the Prague Spring. By interpreting hitherto neglected archival evidence from archives in Berlin, Bucharest, and Rome, and approaching the Soviet alliance from a radically novel perspective, the book offers unexpected insights into international relations in Eastern Europe, while shedding new light on a pivotal period in the Cold War.

 

Nội dung

List of illustrations
Note on translations
PART I
The Warsaw Pact in the shadow of the SinoSoviet split
The Warsaw Pact compromised by the German question
Warsaw Pact reforms and Westpolitik
Ceausescus challenge
the Prague Spring
Closing ranks while clashing with China
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Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng

Giới thiệu về tác giả (2015)

Laurien Crump is Associate Professor in Contemporary European History at Utrecht University, The Netherlands

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