You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
In Foreign Policies of the Soviet Union, Richard F. Staar places revolutionary contemporary events into historical perspective. Citing Russian-language sources, he charts the recent structural changes within the USSR and how they have affected foreign policy. Detailing the shift of power from the CPSU political bureau to the presidential council, he explores the increasing importance of the foreign affairs ministry in the exercise of presidential power.
Brought as a child to Poland before WWII, the author lost six years of schooling, half of them in German prisons and internment camps. He took the fast track in education, after being repatriated, dividing his subsequent career between U.S. government service and academia.
Based largely on primary sources in the Russian language, this succinct volume cover the following aspects of Soviet foreign policy: world outlook, personalities and structures of the decisionmaking process, implementation of objectives, and a discussion of practices toward geographic regions as well as specific countries.
None