Survival and Consolidation: The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia, 1918-1921

Etukansi
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 27.4.1992 - 520 sivua
With victory in sight, the Bolsheviks turned their attention to the consolidation of power within the former Russian empire. When they took power in 1917, the Bolsheviks believed their revolution had to spread beyond Russia or perish. Neither happened, and in the spring of 1921, at the end of hostilities, they stood alone in the wreckage of the former Tsarist empire. The Bolsheviks had, in Lenin's words, "won the right to an independent existence." This entirely unforseen situation surprised both them and their enemies. Debo shows, however, that nothing predetermined that Soviet Russia would, at the end of the civil war, enjoy an "independent existence" -- or even exist at all. He suggests that a wide range of circumstances contributed to the eventual outcome of the war and that it could have ended indecisively. In his evaluation of the Soviet diplomatic achievement, Debo describes their successes with Britain, Poland, and Germany, their continuing difficulties with Romania, France, and the United States, and the threat from the Far East. This diplomatic success, he maintains, was the result of Soviet victory in the civil war and the patient pursuit of realizable objectives.
 

Sisältö

I Introduction
3
Soviet Russia the German revolution and eastern Europe
11
The Soviets propose peace
22
Soviet Russia and the Bullitt Mission
34
Soviet policy in the Baltic and Poland
55
Soviet Russia and the final months of the Paris peace conference
71
Soviet nationalities policy and the Baltic
85
Ukraine Hungary and Bessarabia
106
The end of the Polish ephemeron
231
AngloSoviet negotiations MayNovember 1920
248
The preliminary peace of Riga and the destruction of Wrangel
272
SovietGerman relations
289
The treaties with Britain Poland and Germany
311
Soviet policy in Southwest Asia 19201921
344
The creation of the Far Eastern Republic
374
Conclusion
400

A dress rehearsal for an agreement with the Entente
119
The Soviet initiation of peace negotiations with Great Britain
147
Soviet policy in the Caucasus 19191920
168
Attempted peace negotiations with Poland
191
Soviet policy in eastern Europe AprilAugust 1920
213
Notes
419
Bibliography
471
Index
493
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