Dane szczegółowe książki
The international politics of Russia and the successor states / Webber, Mark
Autorzy
Tytuł
The international politics of Russia and the successor states
Serie wydawnicze
Wydawnictwo
Manchester ; New York: Manchester University Press, 1996
ISBN
0-7190-3960-6; 0-7190-3961-4
Hasła przedmiotowe
Informacje dodatkowe
Tables and boxes
Tables
Boxes
Abbreviations
Preface
Maps
Introduction The study of the international politics of Russia and the successor states
Definitions
International politics
The USSR and its republics, Russia and the successor states
Foreign policy
Theoretical approaches to the study of international politics
Realism
Pluralism
Globalism
Theories of international politics and the collapse of the USSR
The former Soviet Union: its inward and outward orientations
Notes
Recommended reading
1 Soviet foreign and defence policies during the Gorbachev period
The Brezhnev legacy
The new political thinking
New thinking in practice: Soviet foreign policy during the Gorbachev period
Objectives of Soviet foreign policy
Arms control and disarmament
Soviet-East European relations
Soviet-West European relations
Sino-Soviet relations
Soviet-Third World relations
Conclusion: the end of the Cold War and the heritage of the Gorbachev period
Notes
Recommended reading
2 The transition: the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the initiation of the post-Soviet order
Economic reform and external economic relations
Changes in the military
The nationalities issue
The Communist Party
The August coup
The role of the armed forces
The role of Boris Yeltsin
The role of Mikhail Gorbachev
The role of the republics
The role of the outside world
August-December 1991: things fall apart
Decommunisation
The transfer of power to Russia and the other republics
From Union to Commonwealth
Notes
Recommended reading
3 The former Soviet Union: its inward and outward orientations
The inward orientation: the CIS and Russia’s relations with the ‘near abroad’
Membership
Conflicting conceptions of the CIS amongst its members
Bilateralisation and localisation
The outward orientation: the successor states and the wider world
Internationalisation
Regionalisation
Conclusion: the foreign policies of new states
Notes
Recommended reading
4 Defence and security in the former Soviet Union
Controversies over nuclear forces
The nuclear legacy of the USSR
Nuclear issues and the formation of the Commonwealth of Independent States
From the formation of the CIS to the Lisbon Protocol
From the Lisbon Protocol to START-2
START 2 to the Massandra Agreements
The Trilateral Statement and after
Motives for retaining and relinquishing nuclear weapons
The nuclear problem: an overview
Upheaval in conventional armed forces
Conventional armed forces of the Soviet Union
The failure to set up CIS joint forces
National armed forces**41
Case studies of disagreement
Troops in the Baltic states
The Black Sea Fleet
The CFE Treaty
Alliances and security interests
Russia
The non-Russian states
Conclusion
The national security problem
National security policies
The security dilemma
Notes
Recommended reading
5 Diplomacy and conflict resolution: the Soviet legacy and the challenges of the post-Cold War world
Disputes involving open warfare, either between or within the successor states
The war in Nagorno-Karabakh
Georgia’s three-way civil war
Tajikistan
Moldova’s Trans-Dniester
Conflict resolution in the former Soviet Union
Disputed territorial claims involving one or more of the successor states plus an outside party
Violent conflicts in the Third World
The wars in the former Yugoslavia
An interest in a settlement
Pan-Slavism
Russia’s desire for an independent and influential role
Conclusion: conflict resolution in the post-Cold War world
Notes
Recommended reading
6 Post-Soviet external economic relations
The Soviet economy: crawling from the wreckage
Economic viability
Interdependence
Interdependence, integration and the formation of the CIS
Economic issues and the CIS
The rouble zone
Trade relations
The CIS Economic Union
The former Soviet Union and the international economy**33
Economic assistance (‘aid’)
Foreign trade
Investment
Conclusion
Post-Soviet economic interdependence: two views.
Post-Soviet economic transformation: two views
Notes
Recommended reading
Conclusion Perspectives on the post-Cold War world and the former Soviet Union
(Neo)realism
Pluralism
Globalism
Prospects
1 A revival of Russian power
2 A saturated Russia
3 Integration within the FSU
4 Disintegration within the FSU
5 The international isolation of the successor states
6 An international profile for the successor states
Notes
Recommended reading
Index