What Happened to the Soviet Union?: How and Why American Sovietologists Were Caught by SurpriseBloomsbury Academic, 2002年9月30日 - 248 頁 Xenakis examines the responses of Soviet experts in American academia—primarily political scientists, but also economists and defense scholars who specialized in the USSR—to the unfolding evidence of Soviet reform during the 1970s and 1980s and to its ultimate collapse. He concludes that American Sovietologists and other political scientists were more responsive to the Cold War consensus—to the needs of the State Department, Defense, and CIA policy makers and to the official Washington line of the moment—than to the changing face of the Soviet Union. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 88 筆
... USSR as unreformable , Kennan believed that Washington could , and perhaps should , compel the Soviet Union to change : " The United States has it in its power , " Kennan wrote , " to increase enormously the strains under which Soviet ...
... Soviet Union , should have been the first to appreciate the evi- dence of Soviet change presented in Chapter 1 , and should have recognized that such change was eminently possible . Yet the scholarly literature we have exam- ined ...
... Soviet experts and economists used to explain how the Soviet Union could pose a serious military threat against the West even though it could not provide its citizens with enough food to eat . In effect , their schema was dichotomous ...
內容
George F Kennan Zbigniew Brzezinski Jerry F Hough | 23 |
Khrushchev | 61 |
Neoconservatism and American | 95 |
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