"Peaceful Coexistence" Or "Iron Curtain"

Author: Arnold Suppan
Publisher: Lit Verlag
Total Pages: 526
Release: 2009
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783825819781

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In the history of the Cold War and detente, reference is seldom made to the international relations of the small states. This volume undertakes the task of reassessing comparatively, on the basis of newly declassified sources from Western and formerly Eastern archives, the preconditions and various developments of bilateral relations across the Iron Curtain, between the USSR, Eastern Europe, and neutral but capitalist Austria. While the Soviet attitude saw neutrality as a valuable model for Western Europe and Austria as a showcase for the "peaceful coexistence" between East and West, this small country and its communist neighbors developed their own kind of Ostpolitik long before the bigger political actors had ushered in European detente.

Iron Curtain Twitchers

Iron Curtain Twitchers
Author: Jennifer M. Hudson
Publisher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2018-11-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 1498559271

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This study examines cases of rhetorical antagonisms and collaborations between the United States and the Soviet Union throughout the Cold War. The author analyzes relations from cultural and political angles and investigates mutual perspectives at both the government and grassroots levels.

The Iron Curtain

The Iron Curtain
Author: Harry Allen Overstreet
Publisher:
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1963
Genre: Communism
ISBN:

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Examines the significance of the Iron Curtain, the necessity of this barricade to insure Communist domination, and what it keeps in and keeps out.

The Iron Curtain

The Iron Curtain
Author: Bruce L. Brager
Publisher: Infobase Publishing
Total Pages: 173
Release: 2004
Genre: Berlin Wall, Berlin, Germany, 1961-1989
ISBN: 0791078329

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Visiting Central Europe, in 1962, a visitor would not see a real "Iron Curtain." There was no huge piece of grim drapery splitting Europe between Communist dictatorships and democracies. The Iron Curtain represented the Central European part of the Cold War, the generally peaceful, but highly dangerous, forty-year competition between the United States and its allies and the Soviet Union and its allies. The Iron Curtain symbolically represented the attempt to permanently, artificially, and arbitrarily split one part of Central Europe from the other. Although there was no real iron curtain, there was lots of steel in the form of barbed wire, ground radar, watchtowers, and machine guns in the hands of troops willing to use them. The boundary between democracy and totalitarianism was clear. This book tells the story of the Iron Curtain, and the Cold War it so vividly represented, from the start of World War II to its end with the dramatic fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. Book jacket.

The Ordeal of Coexistence

The Ordeal of Coexistence
Author: Willy Brandt
Publisher: Cambridge : Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 128
Release: 1963
Genre: Political Science
ISBN:

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The Iron Curtain

The Iron Curtain
Author: Fraser J. Harbutt
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 385
Release: 1988-10-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 0195363779

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It was forty-two years ago that Winston Churchill made his famous speech in Fulton, Missouri, in which he popularized the phrase "Iron Curtain." This speech, according to Fraser Harbutt, set forth the basic Western ideology of the coming East-West struggle. It was also a calculated move within, and a dramatic public definition of, the Truman administration's concurrent turn from accommodation to confrontation with the Soviet Union. It provoked a response from Stalin that goes far to explain the advent of the Cold War a few weeks later. This book is at once a fascinating biography of Winston Churchill as the leading protagonist of an Anglo-American political and military front against the Soviet Union and a penetrating re-examination of diplomatic relations between the United States, Great Britain, and the U.S.S.R. in the postwar years. Pointing out the Americocentric bias in most histories of this period, Harbutt shows that the Europeans played a more significant part in precipitating the Cold War than most people realize. He stresses that the same pattern of events that earlier led America belatedly into two world wars, namely the initial separation and then the sudden coming together of the European and American political arenas, appeared here as well. From the combination of biographical and structural approaches, a new historical landscape emerges. The United States appears at times to be the rather passive object of competing Soviet and British maneuvers. The turning point came with the crisis of early 1946, which here receives its fullest analysis to date, when the Truman administration in a systematic but carefully veiled and still widely misunderstood reorientation of policy (in which Churchill figured prominently) led the Soviet Union into the political confrontation that brought on the Cold War.

The Challenge of Coexistence

The Challenge of Coexistence
Author: Abdurakhman Avtorkhanov
Publisher: London Ampersand 1966.
Total Pages: 140
Release: 1965
Genre: Cold War
ISBN:

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The War Called Peace

The War Called Peace
Author: Harry Overstreet
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Total Pages: 380
Release: 1961
Genre: History
ISBN:

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Coexistence Plus

Coexistence Plus
Author: Christopher Mayhew
Publisher:
Total Pages: 76
Release: 1962
Genre: International Relations
ISBN:

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