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Soviet Perceptions of U.S. “Positions-of-Strength” Diplomacy in the 1970s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
Abstract
Soviet political scholars have argued that, since 1970, it has become impossible for the United States to pursue a “positions-of-strength” foreign policy effectively. These analysts feel that in the past, the U.S. has relied heavily on projecting its military strength in diplomatic affairs, and that changes in the international political and economic order now prevent the continuation of this policy. A study of the positions-ofstrength issue in Soviet scholarly journals reveals that Soviet scholars do not agree on how the United States will react to this development. While the majority contends that the U.S. will try to regain its ability to pursue positions-of-strength diplomacy, a significant minority believes that the time is right for a deepening of Soviet-American cooperation. Although the prospects for cooperation appear less promising at present than they did during 1972–1975, the study shows a general softening on the subject of cooperation since 1970.
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References
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52 Matveev, V., “Ideologiia i diplomatiia v usloviakh razriadki” [Ideology and Diplomacy in the Conditions of Détente], Mezhdunarodnaia zhizn' (June 1977), 90–99Google Scholar; Geevski, I. A., “Vashington i prava cheloveka” [Washington and Human Rights], SShA (July 1977), 9Google Scholar.
53 Svetlov, A, “Razoruzhenie—nasushchnaia zadacha bor'by za mir” [Disarmament—A Vital Problem in the Struggle for Peace], Mirovaia ekonomika (July 1976), 3–16Google Scholar; Kaliadin, A., “Obshchvennost' v bor'be za razoruzhenie i razriadki” [Public Opinion in the Struggle for Disarmament and Détente], Mirovaia ekonomika (December 1976), 17–25Google Scholar; Stakh, G. and Afanas'ev, B., “Razoruzhenie—v tsentre vnimaniia narodov” [Disarmament at the Center of Attention], Mezhdunarodnaia zhizn' (May 1978), 3–12Google Scholar.
54 A few examples: Khesin, E., “Militarizm i uglublenie obshchego krizisa kapitalizma” [Militarism and the Deepening of the General Crisis of Capitalism], Mirovaia ekonomika (December 1975), 57–68Google Scholar; Iur'ev, D. P., “Chto stoit za mifom o ‘sovetskoi ugroze?’” [What Is Behind the Myth of the “Soviet Menace?”], SShA (September 1976), 62–68Google Scholar; Zhurkin, V. V., “Vzgliad iznutri VPK” [The View from Inside the Military-Industrial Complex], SShA (January 1977), 79–81Google Scholar; Nikonov, A., “Voennaia razriadka i perestroika mezhdunarodnykh otnoshenii” [Military Détente and the Reorientation of International Relations], Mirovaia ekonomika (June 1977), 28–39Google Scholar.
55 A good example is Trofimenko (fn. 20), 27.
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57 The sole exception: Iudina, T. N., “‘Faktor kongressa’ vo vneshnoi politike SShA 70-kh godov” [The “Congress Factor” in U.S. Foreign Policy in the 1970s], SShA (April 1978), 71–77Google Scholar.
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