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Origins of Soviet American Diplomacy

Robert Paul Browder

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / 20. Jahrhundert (bis 1945)

Beschreibung

When Litvinov arrived in Washington in 1933 after the sixteen years of diplomatic silence between his country and the U.S., he carried with him his commission as official representative to the U.S., dated 1918 and signed by Lenin and Chicherin, as evidence of the long-standing desire of the Soviet Union for recognition. This is an absorbing narrative of the events which led up to this dramatic arrival, heralded with such high hopes and good will, and of the collapse into discord and disillusionment which followed. A full-length account of these negotiations, it presents a new picture of the pressures for and against diplomatic recognition of the Soviet Union.

Originally published in 1953.

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Schlagwörter

Government of Russia, Joseph Stalin, China–United States relations, National security, Secret treaty, American Relief Administration, Russian Americans, Anti-Sovietism, Communist International, American Russian Institute, Council of People's Commissars, Communist Party USA, Five-year plans for the national economy of the Soviet Union, Mainland invasion of the United States, United States Department of State, Commissar, Britain in Europe, Communism, Economy of the Soviet Union, Military alliance, Mission to Moscow, Soviet Union–United States relations, Foreign policy of the United States, American System (economic plan), Foreign relations of Russia, Russian Republic, Maxim Litvinov, American Affairs, Russian language, New Economic Policy, Russo-Japanese War, Bolsheviks, Vyacheslav Molotov, Soviet Information Bureau, Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Disarmament, Petrograd Soviet, Russia–United States relations, Russian Life, Foreign policy, Imperialism, Grigory Zinoviev, Litvinov, Chinese Eastern Railway, Soviet Union, Foreign relations of the United States, Foreign relations, Stalinism, Congress of Soviets, Russians, Diplomacy, World communism, Japan–United States relations, Izvestia, Russian nationalism, General Treaty, Anti-Americanism, Alexander Kolchak, Socialism in One Country, United States Court of Claims, The American People (book), Industrial espionage, Siberian Intervention, Robert F. Kelley, Manchukuo, Communist propaganda, Karl Radek, Mikhail Kalinin, Tsar, Russian Armed Forces