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SOVIET OCCUPATION (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   150950


Afghanistan's two-party communism: Parcham and Khalq / Arnold, Anthony 1983  Book
Arnold, Anthony Book
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Publication California, Hoover Institution Press, 1983.
Description xviii, 242p.pbk
Series Histories of Ruling Communist Parties
Standard Number 0817977929
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
022176324.2581075/ARN 022176MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   134098


Dancing with dictators: General Jaruzelski's revisionists / Chenoweth, Eric   Journal Article
Chenoweth, Eric Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Twenty-five years ago, breakthrough elections were held in Poland that led, within three months, to the downfall of that country's communist regime. The events helped to spark the Velvet Revolutions that spread, within the next six months, to Budapest, Prague, Bratislava, Berlin, Sofia, Timisoara, and many other major cities, as masses of people went to the streets to demand their rights, oppose Soviet occupation, and win back their freedom. Communist despotisms that had lasted more than four decades collapsed like a house of cards. The world celebrated the fall of communism and the victory of democracy.
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3
ID:   124149


Tale of two retreats: Afghan transition in historical perspective / Steele, Jonathan   Journal Article
Steele, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract NATO troops are leaving Afghanistan in 2014, a quarter of a century after Soviet troops ended their occupation. How comparable are the two retreats, and will Afghans suffer fighting and destruction similar to what happened when foreign troops last left? Mikhail Gorbachev, who took the withdrawal decision in 1985, felt the war had become an expensive stalemate. The USSR opted to base its exit strategy on diplomacy and the idea that the Afghan government should pursue peace talks with its armed opponents. This emphasis on negotiations differs from Obama's policy, which remains predominantly military and rejects compromise with the Taliban. Obama and NATO claim progress on the battlefield and argue that combat duties can safely be "transitioned" to newly trained Afghans. But most Afghans are gloomy. Although they do not expect Kabul to fall to the Taliban, they believe that the insurgents will capture large parts of southern Afghanistan. Many also fear that ethnic tensions will grow throughout the country, perhaps leading to conflict between warlords from the Tajik and Uzbek minorities and the Pashtun majority.
Key Words Afghanistan  Transition  Warlords  Najibullah  ISAF  National Reconciliation 
Mujahedin  Soviet Occupation 
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