Beyond Glasnost: Soviet Reform and Security Issues
By (Author) David T. Twining
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International relations
Political structure and processes
Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action
327.47
Hardback
184
Colonel David T. Twining and his colleagues look at the impact of glasnost and the collapse of the Soviet system on the military. The case study approach used allows for in-depth examination of a number of key issues. Within the former USSR, the remarkable record of sacrifice and valour by women in wartime has not been matched by equal opportunities during peacetime, where they are effectively excluded from meaningful military careers. The KGB, the world's largest security and intelligence organization, proved to be among the most resistant to reform, and this, the book contends, appears to have hastened its doom. The adoption of the rule of law was widely resisted in the Soviet armed forces, and reforms in military service have come from demands by parents and relatives that the military change its lethal ways. Soviet foreign military affairs have also been affected by glasnost. The volume looks at the influence of the war in Afghanistan in the reversal of Moscow's Middle East policy. Equally important, but unheralded, has been the re-establishment of ties with China. Together, the essays in this collection illustrate the impact of a stressed political system struggling to adapt to changing circumstances, caught between the exigencies of reform and revolt. Students and scholars involved in Soviet studies as well as in contemporary military studies should find this material useful.
DAVID T. TWINING is Director of Eurasian Independent and Commonwealth States Studies at the U.S. Army War College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Dr. Twining has published Strategic Surprise in the Age of Glasnost, as well as numerous journal articles.