Soviet Foreign Policy after Stalin
In: Routledge Library Editions: Soviet Foreign Policy Ser. v.13
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Original Title Page -- Original Copyright Page -- Preface -- Preface to the British Edition -- Table of Contents -- Part One: The International Situation of the Soviet Union at the End of the Stalin Era -- 1. Stalin and His Lieutenants in Foreign Affairs -- 2. Stalin's Empire Building -- 1. No Second Communist Empire -- 2. The Yugoslav Rebellion -- 3. The "People's Democracies" -- 3. Germany: The Big Issue -- 4. The Far East -- 1. The Korean War -- 2. China -- Stalin's Course in China -- Who is Leader in Asia? -- 3. Japan -- 5. The Deadlock -- 1. Stalin's Legacy in the Middle East -- The Balkans -- The Arab Nations -- The Mediterranean -- Eastern Turkey -- Iran -- 2. Conflicts Everywhere -- Part Two: The Malenkov-Molotov Era -- 1. The Death of the Leader -- 2. Relaxation -- 3. The Course in Respect to the West -- 4. Conferences and Crises -- 1. The Berlin Conference -- 2. The Geneva Conference -- 3. Crisis in the Western Bloc -- 4. The Anti-NATO Alignment -- 5. The "People's Democracies" -- 1. Rumblings in the East -- 2. Conformity with Moscow -- 3. Police and Internal Affairs -- 4. The National Economies -- 5. Abolition of Mixed Companies -- 6. The Middle East -- 1. The Balkan and the Baghdad Pacts -- 2. Failure in Iran -- 7. The Ascendancy of Nikita Khrushchev -- Part Three: The First Khrushchev Era -- 1. The Session of the Central Committee of July, 1955 -- 2. The Thaw and its Limits -- 1. No Success in London -- 2. The French in Moscow -- 3. The Western Socialists -- 3. "Relaxation of Tensions" -- 1. The Austrian State Treaty -- 2. Relations with the Bonn Government -- 3. Finland: Hesitation and Concessions -- 4. The First Summit Conference -- 4. The Uncommitted Nations -- 1. No Neutrals? -- 2. The Bandung Conference -- 3. India and Burma -- 4. Khrushchev and Bulganin in South Asia.