Diplomacy in the Former Soviet Republics
By (Author) James P Nichol
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
22nd August 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
327.20947
Hardback
256
Soviet authorities in 1987-1991 tried to encourage the union republics to use their diplomatic apparatuses, created by Stalin in 1944, to solicit foreign economic trade and aid. In many cases, union republics were able to draw upon diplomatic precedents established during the early Soviet period, or when they were independent states in the period 1918-1921. The many international contacts and ties the former union republics had established abroad helped them to promptly gain diplomatic recognition and establish diplomatic relations with many foreign states, mitigating to some degree the shock to the world order caused by the breakup of the Soviet Union.
The author has made an important, orginal contribution to our understanding of why the processes of dismantling central authority and of acquiring state sovereignty by fifteen cquriring state sovereignty by fifteen....a meticulously researched account that fills a glaring gap in the otherwise extensive literature... subject republics procded so fluidly.-The Russian Review
"The author has made an important, orginal contribution to our understanding of why the processes of dismantling central authority and of acquiring state sovereignty by fifteen cquriring state sovereignty by fifteen....a meticulously researched account that fills a glaring gap in the otherwise extensive literature... subject republics procded so fluidly."-The Russian Review
JAMES P. NICHOL is an analyst in the Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division, Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress. His publications include Stalin's Crimes Against the Non-Russian Nations (1992) and Perestroika of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1988).