Fülszöveg
Soviet/East European Studies International Relations
A Midland Book MB 561
THE BLOC THAT FAILED
Soviet-East European Relations in Transition
BY CHARLES GATI
". . . the most current and best-informed study of this rapidly changing world."
—William H. Luers, former U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia
"Charles Gati's book is both a superb synthesis of the postwar evolution of Soviet-East European relations and the first up-to-date analysis of the revolutionary events in that part of the world."
—Michael Mandelbaum, Council on Foreign Relations
"Students and policy makers alike will find this book an indispensable resource for understanding tomorrow's news."
—Sarah M. Terry, Tufts University
Revolution swept each of the six Warsaw Pact countries of Eastern Europe in 1988-89. The Soviet bloc, as it had existed since Stalin, disintegrated. In light of the key questions that the momentous events of 1989 raise for the final decade of this century, Charles Gati assesses...
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Fülszöveg
Soviet/East European Studies International Relations
A Midland Book MB 561
THE BLOC THAT FAILED
Soviet-East European Relations in Transition
BY CHARLES GATI
". . . the most current and best-informed study of this rapidly changing world."
—William H. Luers, former U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia
"Charles Gati's book is both a superb synthesis of the postwar evolution of Soviet-East European relations and the first up-to-date analysis of the revolutionary events in that part of the world."
—Michael Mandelbaum, Council on Foreign Relations
"Students and policy makers alike will find this book an indispensable resource for understanding tomorrow's news."
—Sarah M. Terry, Tufts University
Revolution swept each of the six Warsaw Pact countries of Eastern Europe in 1988-89. The Soviet bloc, as it had existed since Stalin, disintegrated. In light of the key questions that the momentous events of 1989 raise for the final decade of this century, Charles Gati assesses Soviet-East European relations since the end of World War II and summarizes developments in the political, economic, and military realms in the Gorbachev era.
CHARLES GATI is Professor of Political Science at Union College and Consultant on Eastern Europe to the Policy Planning Staff of the U.S. Department of State. He is author of Hungary and the Soviet Bloc, which was awarded the Marshall Shulman prize of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies for 1986.
Published in association with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C.
Also available in a clothbound edition ISBN 0-253-32531 -5
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