The term "Soviet empire" collectively refers to the world's territories that the Soviet Union dominated politically, economically, and militarily. This phenomenon, particularly in the context of the Cold War, is also called Soviet imperialism[1][2] by Sovietologists to describe the extent of the Soviet Union's hegemony over the Second World.
In a wider sense, the term refers to Soviet foreign policy during the Cold War, which has been characterized as imperialist: the countries that comprised the Soviet empire were nominally independent with native governments that set their own policies, but those policies had to stay within certain limits decided by the Soviet government. These limits were enforced by the threat of forceful regime change and/or by the threat of direct action by the Soviet Armed Forces (and later by the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact). Major Soviet military interventions of this nature took place in East Germany in 1953, in Hungary in 1956, in Czechoslovakia in 1968 and in Afghanistan from 1979 until 1989. Countries in the Eastern Bloc were widely regarded as Soviet satellite states rather than as independent allies of the Soviet Union.
Characteristics
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Although the Soviet Union was not ruled by an emperor, and declared itself anti-imperialist and a people's democracy, it exhibited tendencies common to historic empires.[3][4] The notion of "Soviet empire" often refers to a form of "classic" or "colonial" empire with communism only replacing conventional imperial ideologies such as Christianity or monarchy, rather than creating a revolutionary state. Academically the idea is seen as emerging with Richard Pipes' 1957 book The Formation of the Soviet Union: Communism and Nationalism, 1917–1923, but it has been reinforced, along with several other views, in continuing scholarship.[5]: 41 Several scholars hold that the Soviet Union was a hybrid entity containing elements common to both multinational empires and nation-states.[3] The Soviet Union practiced colonialism similar to conventional imperial powers.[4][6][7][8][9][10][11]
The Soviets pursued internal colonialism in Central Asia. For example, the state's prioritized grain production over livestock in Kyrgyzstan, which favored Slavic settlers over the Kyrgyz natives, thus perpetuating the inequalities of the tsarist colonial era.[9] The Maoists argued that the Soviet Union had itself become an imperialist power while maintaining a socialist façade, or social imperialism.[12][13] While Maoists criticized post-Stalin USSR's imperialism from a hardline communist viewpoint, reformist socialist critics of Soviet imperialism, such as Josip Broz Tito and Milovan Djilas, have referred the Stalinist USSR's foreign policies, such as the occupation and economic exploitations of Eastern Europe and its aggressive and hostile policy towards Yugoslavia as Soviet imperialism.[14][15] Another dimension of Soviet imperialism is cultural imperialism, the Sovietization of culture and education at the expense of local traditions.[16] Leonid Brezhnev continued a policy of cultural Russification as part of Developed Socialism, which sought to assert more central control.[17] Seweryn Bialer argued that the Soviet state had an imperial nationalism.[18]
A notable wave of Sovietization occurred during the Russian Civil War in the territories captured by the Red Army. Later, the territories occupied by the Russian SFSR and the USSR were Sovietized. Mongolia was invaded by the Soviet Union and Sovietized in the 1920s after it became a Soviet satellite state, and after the end of the Second World War, Sovietization took place in the countries of the Soviet Bloc (Eastern and Central Europe: Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, the Baltic states etc.). In a broad sense, it included the involuntary creation of Soviet-style authorities, imitation of elections held under the control of the Bolsheviks with the removal of opposition candidates, nationalization of land and property, repression against representatives of "class enemies" (kulaks, or osadniks, for instance). Mass executions and imprisoning in Gulag labor camps and exile settlements often accompany that process. This was usually promoted and sped up by propaganda aimed at creating a common way of life in all states within the Soviet sphere of influence. In modern history, Sovietization refers to the copying of models of Soviet life (the cult of the leader's personality, collectivist ideology, mandatory participation in propaganda activities, etc.).[19]
From the 1930s through the 1950s, Joseph Stalin ordered population transfers in the Soviet Union, deporting people (often entire nationalities) to underpopulated remote areas, with their place being taken mostly by ethnic Russians and Ukrainians. The policy officially ended in the Khrushchev era, with some of the nationalities allowed to return in 1957. However, Nikita Khrushchev and Leonid Brezhnev refused the right of return for Crimean Tatars, Russian Germans and Meskhetian Turks.[20] In 1991, the Supreme Soviet of Russia declared the Stalinist mass deportations to be a "policy of defamation and genocide".[21]
The historical relationship between Russia (the dominant republic in the Soviet Union) and these Eastern European countries helps explain their longing to eradicate the remnants of Soviet culture. Poland and the Baltic states epitomize the Soviet attempt to build uniform cultures and political systems. According to Dag Noren, Russia was seeking to constitute and reinforce a buffer zone between itself and Western Europe so as to protect itself from potential future attacks from hostile Western European countries.[18] The Soviet Union had lost approximately 20 million people over the course of the Second World War, although Russian sources are keen on further inflating that figure.[22] To prevent a recurrence of such costly warfare, Soviet leaders believed that they needed to establish a hierarchy of political and economic dependence between neighboring states and the USSR.[18]
During the Brezhnev era, the policy of "Developed Socialism" declared the Soviet Union to be the most complete socialist country—other countries were "socialist", but the USSR was "developed socialist"—explaining its dominant role and hegemony over the other socialist countries.[23] This and the interventionist Brezhnev Doctrine, permitting the invasion of other socialist countries, led to characterisation of the USSR as an empire.[17]
Soviet influence in the "socialist-leaning countries" was mainly political and ideological rather than economically exploitative: the Soviet Union pumped enormous amounts of "international assistance" into them in order to secure influence,[24] ultimately to the detriment of its own economy. The Soviet Union sought a group of countries which would rally to its cause in the event of an attack from Western countries, and support it in the context of the Cold War.[25] After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Russian Federation was recognized as its successor state, inheriting $103 billion of Soviet foreign debt and $140 billion of Soviet assets abroad.[24]
Economic expansion did, however, play a significant role in Soviet motivation to spread influence in its satellite territories. These new territories would ensure an increase in the global wealth which the Soviet Union would have a grasp on.[25]
Soviet officials from the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic intertwined this economic opportunity with a potential for migration. In fact, they saw in these Eastern European countries the potential of a great workforce. They offered a welcome to them upon the only condition that they work hard and achieve social success. This ideology was shaped on the model of the meritocratic, 19th-century American foreign policy.[25]
Formal or informal empire?
Scholars discussing Soviet empire have discussed it as a formal empire or informal empire. In a more formal interpretation of "Soviet empire", this meant absolutism, resembling Lenin's description of the tsarist empire as a "prison of the peoples" except that this "prison of the peoples" had been actualized during Stalin's regime after Lenin's death. Thomas Winderl wrote "The USSR became in a certain sense more a prison-house of nations than the old Empire had ever been."[5]: 41–42
Another view, sees the Soviet empire as constituting an "informal empire" over nominally sovereign states in the Warsaw Pact due to Soviet pressure and military presence.[26] The Soviet informal empire depended on subsidies from Moscow.[27] The informal empire in the wider Warsaw Pact also included linkages between Communist Parties.[28] Some historians consider a more multinational-oriented Soviet Union emphasizing its socialist initiatives, such as Ian Bremmer, who describes a "matryoshka-nationalism" where a pan-Soviet nationalism included other nationalisms.[5]: 48 Eric Hobsbawn argued that the Soviet Union had effectively designed nations by drawing borders.[5]: 45 Dmitri Trenin wrote that by 1980, the Soviet Union had formed both a formal and informal empire.[29]
The informal empire would have included Soviet economic investments, military occupation, and covert action in Soviet-aligned countries. The studies of informal empire have included Soviet influence on East Germany[28] and 1930s Xinjiang.[30][31] From the 1919 Karakhan Manifesto to 1927, diplomats of the Soviet Union would promise to revoke concessions in China, but the Soviets secretly kept tsarist concessions such as the Chinese Eastern Railway, as well as consulates, barracks, and churches.[32][33] After the Sino-Soviet conflict (1929), the Soviet Union regained the Russian Empire's concession of the Chinese Eastern Railway and held it until its return to China in 1952.[33]
Alexander Wendt suggested that by the time of Stalin's Socialism in one country alignment, socialist internationalism "evolved into an ideology of control rather than revolution under the rubric of socialist internationalism" internally within the Soviet Union. By the start of the Cold War it evolved into a "coded power language" that was once again international, but applied to the Soviet informal empire. At times the USSR signaled toleration of policies of satellite states indirectly, by declaring them consistent or inconsistent with socialist ideology, essentially recreating a hegemonic role. Wendt argued that a "hegemonic ideology" could continue to motivate actions after the original incentives were removed, and argued this explains the "zeal of East German Politburo members who chose not to defend themselves against trumped-up charges during the 1950s purges."[28]: 704
Analyzing the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Koslowski and Kratochwil argued that a postwar Soviet "formal empire" represented by the Warsaw Pact, with Soviet military role and control over of member states' foreign relations, had evolved into an informal suzerainty or "Ottomanization" from the late 1970s to 1989. With Gorbachev's relinquishing of the Brezhnev Doctrine in 1989, the informal empire reduced in pressure to a more conventional sphere of influence, resembling Finlandization but applied to the erstwhile East Bloc states, until the Soviet fall in 1991. By contrast "Austrianization" would have been a realist model of great power politics by which the Soviets would have hypothetically relied on Western guarantees to keep an artificial Soviet sphere of influence. The speed of reform in the 1989 to 1991 period made both a repeat of Finlandization and Austrianization impossible for the Soviet Union.[34][35]
Communist states aligned with the Soviet Union
Warsaw Pact
These countries were the closest allies of the Soviet Union and were also members of the Comecon, a Soviet-led economic community founded in 1949. The members of the Warsaw Pact, sometimes called the Eastern Bloc, were widely viewed as Soviet satellite states. These countries were occupied (or formerly occupied) by the Red Army, and their politics, military, foreign and domestic policies were dominated by the Soviet Union. The Warsaw Pact included the following states:[36][37]
- People's Socialist Republic of Albania (1946–1968)[lower-alpha 1]
- People's Republic of Bulgaria (1946–1990)
- Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (1948–1990)
- German Democratic Republic (1949–1990)
- Hungarian People's Republic (1949–1989)
- Polish People's Republic (1947–1989)
- Socialist Republic of Romania (1947–1960s)[lower-alpha 2]
In addition to having a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council, the Soviet Union had two of its union republics in the United Nations General Assembly:
Other Marxist–Leninist states
These countries were Marxist-Leninist states who were allied with the Soviet Union, but were not part of the Warsaw Pact.
- Democratic Republic of Afghanistan (1978–1991)
- People's Republic of Angola (1975–1991)[lower-alpha 3]
- People's Republic of Benin (1975–1990)
- Chinese Soviet Republic (1931–1937)
- People's Republic of China (1949–1961)[lower-alpha 4]
- People's Republic of the Congo (1969–1991)
- Republic of Cuba (1959–1991)
- Provisional Military Government of Socialist Ethiopia, then People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (1974–1991)
- People's Republic of Kampuchea (1979–1989)
- People's Revolutionary Government of Grenada (1979–1983)
- Democratic People's Republic of Korea (1948–1991, also allied with China)[38][lower-alpha 5]
- Lao People's Democratic Republic (1975–1991)
- Mongolian People's Republic (1924–1991)
- People's Republic of Mozambique (1975–1990)
- Somali Democratic Republic (1969–1977)[lower-alpha 6]
- Tuvan People's Republic (1921–1944)[lower-alpha 7]
- Democratic Republic of Vietnam (1954–1976), then Socialist Republic of Vietnam (1976–1991)[lower-alpha 8]
- People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen) (1967–1990)
- Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (1945–1948)[lower-alpha 9]
Non-communist states aligned with the Soviet Union
Some countries in the Third World had pro-Soviet governments during the Cold War. In the political terminology of the Soviet Union, these were "countries moving along the socialist road of development" as opposed to the more advanced "countries of developed socialism" which were mostly located in Eastern Europe, but that also included Cuba and Vietnam. They received some aid, either military or economic, from the Soviet Union and were influenced by it to varying degrees. Sometimes, their support for the Soviet Union eventually stopped for various reasons and in some cases the pro-Soviet government lost power while in other cases the same government remained in power, but ultimately ended its alliance with the Soviet Union.[41]
- Algeria (1962–1991)
- People's Republic of Bangladesh (1971–1975)
- Brazil (1963–1964)
- Burma (1962–1988)
- Cape Verde (1975–1990)
- Chile (1970–1973)[lower-alpha 10][42]
- Republic of China (KMT) (1921-1927)
- Egypt (1954–1973)
- Ghana (1964–1966)
- Guinea (1960–1978)
- Guinea Bissau (1973–1991)
- Equatorial Guinea (1968–1979)
- India (1971–1991)
- Indonesia (1959–1965)
- Iraq (1958–1963; 1968–1990)
- Israel (1948–1953)[43]
- Jamaica (1972–1980)
- Libya (1969–1991)
- Madagascar (1975–1991)
- Mali (1960–1991)
- Nicaragua (1979–1990)
- Palestine (1988-1991)
- Peru (1968–1975)
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (1976-1991)
- Sao Tome and Principe (1975–1991)
- Seychelles (1977–1991)
- Sudan (1968–1972)
- Syria (1955–1991)
- Tanzania (1964–1985)
- Second East Turkestan Republic (1944–1949)[lower-alpha 11]
- Turkey (1923-1930)
- Uganda (1969–1971)
- Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) (1962–1972)
- Zambia (1964–1991)
- Zimbabwe (1980-1991)
Communist states opposed to the Soviet Union
Some communist states were opposed to the Soviet Union and criticized many of its policies. Although they may have had many similarities to the USSR on domestic issues, they were not considered Soviet allies in international politics. Relations between them and the Soviet Union were often tense, sometimes even to the point of armed conflict.
- Albania (1960–1989)
- Cambodia (1975–1979)[lower-alpha 12]
- China (1961–1989)
- Somalia (1977–1991)
- Yugoslavia (1948–1991)[lower-alpha 13]
Neutral states
Finland
The position of Finland was complex. The Soviet Union invaded Finland on 30 November 1939, launching the Winter War. The Soviets intended to install their Finnish Democratic Republic puppet government into Helsinki and annex Finland into the Soviet Union.[44][45] Fierce Finnish resistance prevented the Soviets from achieving this objective, and the Moscow Peace Treaty was signed on 12 March 1940, with hostilities ending the following day.
Finland would re-enter the Second World War when they invaded the Soviet Union alongside Germany in late June 1941. Finland reclaimed all territory lost in the Winter War, and would proceed to occupy additional territory in East Karelia. The Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk offensive of 1944 pushed Finland out of this territory, but Finland halted the offensive at the Battle of Tali-Ihantala. The Moscow Armistice brought the Continuation War to an end. Finland retained most of its territory and its market economy, trading on the Western markets and ultimately joining the Western currency system.
Nevertheless, although Finland was considered neutral, the Finno-Soviet Treaty of 1948 significantly limited Finnish freedom of operation in foreign policy. It required Finland to defend the Soviet Union from attacks through its territory, which in practice prevented Finland from joining NATO, and effectively gave the Soviet Union a veto in Finnish foreign policy. Thus, the Soviet Union could exercise "imperial" hegemonic power even towards a neutral state.[46] Under the Paasikivi–Kekkonen doctrine, Finland sought to maintain friendly relations with the Soviet Union, and extensive bilateral trade developed. In the West, this led to fears of the spread of "Finlandization", where Western allies would no longer reliably support the United States and NATO.[47]
See also
Notes
- ↑ Following the Albanian–Soviet split and the withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact (1968)
- ↑ After Nicolae Ceaușescu's refusal to participate in the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 (see de-satellization of Communist Romania). Remained as member of Comecon and Warsaw Pact until 1989.
- ↑ With the Soviet intervention in the Angolan Civil War.
- ↑ Following the Sino-Soviet split (1956–1961).
- ↑ After Chinese intervention in the Korean War in 1950, North Korea remained a Soviet ally,[39] but rather used the Juche ideology to balance Chinese and Soviet influence, pursuing a highly isolationist foreign policy and not joining the Comecon or any other international organization of communist states following the withdrawal of Chinese troops in 1958.
- ↑ At the outbreak of the Somali invasion of Ethiopia in 1977, the Soviet Union ceased to support Somalia, with the corresponding change in rhetoric. In turn, Somalia broke diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union and the United States adopted Somalia as a Cold War ally.[40]
- ↑ It was absorbed by the Soviet Union in 1944, and became part of the RSFSR.
- ↑ Unlike other countries and although leaning towards the Soviet side, Vietnam's domestic policy and foreign policy were not dominated by Soviet Union.
- ↑ It ended affiliation with the Soviet Union in 1948 due to Tito–Stalin split. After Joseph Stalin's death and the repudiation of his policies by Nikita Khrushchev, peace was made with Josip Broz Tito and Yugoslavia, although relations between the two countries were never completely rebuilt. See also the Informbiro period.
- ↑ Soviet-Chilean alliance ended with the overthrow of the Allende government in a military coup, after which Chile became a Cold War ally of the United States. The Soviet Union would later support an armed insurgency against the military government until Chile returned to democracy in 1990.
- ↑ Declared independence from the Republic of China in 1944, annexed by the PRC in 1949.
- ↑ Due to the Cambodian–Vietnamese War.
- ↑ The two countries went through a very hostile Informbiro period after the Tito–Stalin split in 1948 and partially rapproached after the Belgrade declaration in 1955, although the latter failed to result in a lasting change after the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968. Yugoslavia remained highly wary of a possible invasion itself from the Soviet Union during their entire existence.
References
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- ↑ "Remembering Soviet imperialism – Taipei Times". taipeitimes.com. 17 September 2022. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
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- ↑ Annus, Epp (2019). Soviet Postcolonial Studies: A View from the Western Borderlands. Routledge. pp. 43–48. ISBN 978-0367-2345-4-6.
- ↑ Cucciolla, Riccardo (23 March 2019). "The Cotton Republic: Colonial Practices in Soviet Uzbekistan?". Central Eurasian Studies Society. Archived from the original on 15 January 2021. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
- ↑ Kalnačs, Benedikts (2016). 20th Century Baltic Drama: Postcolonial Narratives, Decolonial Options. Aisthesis Verlag. p. 14. ISBN 978-3849-8114-7-1.
- 1 2 Loring, Benjamin (2014). ""Colonizers with Party Cards" Soviet Internal Colonialism in Central Asia, 1917–39". Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History. Slavica Publishers. 15 (1): 77–102. doi:10.1353/kri.2014.0012. S2CID 159664992.
- ↑ Thompson, Ewa (2014). "It is Colonialism After All: Some Epistemological Remarks" (PDF). Teksty Drugie. Institute of Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences (1): 74.
- ↑ Vardys, Vytas Stanley (Summer 1964). "Soviet Colonialism in the Baltic States: A Note on the Nature of Modern Colonialism". Lituanus. 10 (2). ISSN 0024-5089. Archived from the original on 9 November 2021. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
- ↑ Szymanski, Albert (1977). "Soviet Social Imperialism, Myth or Reality: An Empirical Examination of the Chinese Thesis". Berkeley Journal of Sociology. 22: 131–166. ISSN 0067-5830. JSTOR 41035250.
- ↑ "The Soviet Union: Is it the Nazi Germany of Today?". www.marxists.org. 1977. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
- ↑ Perović, Jeronim (2007). "The Tito–Stalin split: a reassessment in light of new evidence" (PDF). Journal of Cold War Studies. MIT Press. 9 (2): 32–63. doi:10.1162/jcws.2007.9.2.32. S2CID 57567168.
- ↑ Djilas, Milovan (1957). The New Class: An Analysis of the Communist System (PDF). London: Thames & Hudson. Retrieved 9 October 2023 – via Internet Archive.
- ↑ Tsvetkova, Natalia (2013). Failure of American and Soviet Cultural Imperialism in German Universities, 1945–1990. Boston, Leiden: Brill.
- 1 2 Roberts, Jason A. (2015). The Anti-Imperialist Empire: Soviet Nationality Policies under Brezhnev (PhD dissertation). West Virginia University. doi:10.33915/etd.6514.
- 1 2 3 Noren, Dag Wincens (1990). The Soviet Union and eastern Europe: considerations in a political transformation of the Soviet bloc. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Amherst. pp. 27–38.
- ↑ Myron Weiner, Sharon Stanton Russell, ed. (2001). "Stalinist Forced Relocation Policies". Demography and National Security. Berghahn Books. pp. 308–315. ISBN 1-57181-339-X.
- ↑ Rodriguez, Junius P. (2011). Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression. ABC-CLIO. p. 179. ISBN 978-1-85109-783-8.
- ↑ Perovic, Jeronim (1 June 2018). From Conquest to Deportation: The North Caucasus under Russian Rule. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-093467-5.
- ↑ Ellman, Michael; Maksudov, S. (1 January 1994). "Soviet deaths in the great patriotic war: A note". Europe-Asia Studies. 46 (4): 671–680. doi:10.1080/09668139408412190. ISSN 0966-8136. PMID 12288331.
- ↑ Sandle, Mark (2002), Bacon, Edwin; Sandle, Mark (eds.), "Brezhnev and Developed Socialism: The Ideology of Zastoi?", Brezhnev Reconsidered, Studies in Russian and East European History and Society, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 165–187, doi:10.1057/9780230501089_8, ISBN 978-0-230-50108-9, retrieved 30 May 2021
- 1 2 Trenin, Dmitri (2011). Post-Imperium: A Eurasian Story. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. p. 144–145.
- 1 2 3 Виталий Лейбин: Экономическая экспансия России и имперский госзаказ – ПОЛИТ.РУ (in Russian). Politic. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
- ↑ Starr, S. Frederick; Dawisha, Karen (16 September 2016). The International Politics of Eurasia: v. 9: The End of Empire? Comparative Perspectives on the Soviet Collapse. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-48363-4.
- ↑ Parker, Noel (6 May 2016). Empire and International Order. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-14439-7.
- 1 2 3 Wendt, Alexander; Friedheim, Daniel (1995). "Hierarchy under anarchy: informal empire and the East German state". International Organization. 49 (4): 689–721. doi:10.1017/S0020818300028484. ISSN 1531-5088. S2CID 145236865.
- ↑ Trenin, Dmitri. "Russia's Post-Imperial Condition". Carnegie Moscow Center. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
- ↑ Kinzley, Judd C. (1 October 2015). "The Spatial Legacy of Informal Empire: Oil, the Soviet Union, and the Contours of Economic Development in China's Far West". Twentieth-Century China. 40 (3): 220–237. doi:10.1179/1521538515Z.00000000067. ISSN 1521-5385. S2CID 155349242.
- ↑ Kinzley, Judd (2018), "Industrial Raw Materials and the Construction of Informal Empire", Natural Resources and the New Frontier, University of Chicago Press, doi:10.7208/chicago/9780226492322.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-226-49215-5, S2CID 134342707, retrieved 8 February 2022
- ↑ Elleman, Bruce A. (1997). Diplomacy and Deception: The Secret History of Sino-Soviet Diplomatic Relations, 1917–1927. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 134, 165, 168, 174. ISBN 978-0-7656-0142-1.
- 1 2 Elleman, Bruce A. (1994). "The Soviet Union's Secret Diplomacy Concerning the Chinese Eastern Railway, 1924–1925". The Journal of Asian Studies. 53 (2): 459–486. doi:10.2307/2059842. ISSN 0021-9118. JSTOR 2059842. S2CID 162586404.
- ↑ Lebow, Richard Ned; Risse-Kappen, Thomas (1995). International Relations Theory and the End of the Cold War. Columbia University Press. pp. 146–148, 155–157. ISBN 978-0-231-10195-0.
- ↑ Koslowski, Rey; Kratochwil, Friedrich V. (1994). "Understanding Change in International Politics: The Soviet Empire's Demise and the International System". International Organization. 48 (2): 215–247. doi:10.1017/S0020818300028174. ISSN 0020-8183. JSTOR 2706931. S2CID 155023495.
- ↑ Cornis-Pope, Marcel (2004). History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe: Junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries. John Benjamins. pp. 29. ISBN 978-90-272-3452-0.
- ↑ Dawson, Andrew H. (1986). Planning in Eastern Europe. Routledge. p. 295. ISBN 978-0-7099-0863-0.
- ↑ 『북한 사회주의헌법의 기본원리: 주체사상』(2010년, 법학연구) pp. 13–17
- ↑ Shin, Gi-Wook (2006). Ethnic Nationalism in Korea: Genealogy, Politics, and Legacy. Stanford University Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-8047-5408-8.
- ↑ Crockatt, Richard (1995). The Fifty Years War: The United States and the Soviet Union in World Politics. London and New York City, New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-10471-5.
- ↑ Friedman, Jeremy (2015). Shadow Cold War: The Sino-Soviet Competition for the Third World.
- ↑ "Soviet Intelligence in Latin America During the Cold War Archived 28 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine", Lectures by General Nikolai Leonov, Centro de Estudios Publicos (Chile), 22 September 1999.
- ↑ Kass, Ilana (September 1977). "The Forgotten Friendship: Israel and the Soviet Bloc 1947–1953". American Political Science Review. 71 (3): 1304–1305. doi:10.2307/1960285. ISSN 0003-0554. JSTOR 1960285. S2CID 146764535.
- ↑ Tanner, Väinö (1956). The Winter War: Finland Against Russia, 1939–1940, Volume 312. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press. p. 114.
- ↑ Trotter, William (2013). A Frozen Hell: The Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1939–1940. Algonquin Books. p. 58,61.
- ↑ "The Empire Strikes Out: Imperial Russia, "National" Identity, and Theories of Empire" (PDF).
- ↑ "Finns Worried About Russian Border".
Further reading
- Crozier, Brian. The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire (1999), long detailed popular history.
- Dallin, David J. Soviet Russia and the Far East (1949) online on China and Japan.
- Friedman, Jeremy. Shadow Cold War: The Sino-Soviet Competition for the Third World (2015).
- Librach, Jan. The Rise of the Soviet Empire: A Study of Soviet Foreign Policy (Praeger, 1965), online free, a scholarly history.
- Nogee, Joseph L. and Robert Donaldson. Soviet Foreign Policy Since World War II (4th ed. 1992).
- Service, Robert. Comrades! A history of world communism (2007).
- Ulam, Adam B. Expansion and Coexistence: Soviet Foreign Policy, 1917–1973, 2nd ed. (1974), a standard scholarly history online free.
- Zubok, Vladislav M. A Failed Empire: The Soviet Union in the Cold War from Stalin to Gorbachev (2007) excerpt and text search.