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BALKAN THEATRE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124157


Long intervention: continuity in the Balkan theatre / Woodward, Susan L   Journal Article
Woodward, Susan L Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Great Power intervention in the Balkans since the late nineteenth century shows a striking continuity in motivations, methods, and consequences. The article proposes that current intervention practices are largely a response to the Balkan theatre in the 1990s and thus institutionalise this continuity more than arguments about normative and institutional change since 1990 suggest. Three continuities are emphasised: the concept of a 'turbulent frontier' to explain an unintended dynamic of nearly continuous intervention, the importance of local actors' interests (the pull of intervention) alongside those of major power interests (the push), and the primary influence on domestic orders and cause of the 'turbulence' of economic relations.
Key Words NATO  Intervention  European Union  Great Powers  Conflicts  East Europe 
Macedonia  Yugoslavia  UN Charter  1990s  19th Century  Balkan Theatre 
Northern Border  Civil War  International Law 
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2
ID:   128218


Shpion vs. Casus: Ottoman and Russian intelligence in the Balkans during the Crimean War (1853-56) / Köremezli, ?brahim   Journal Article
Köremezli, ?brahim Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In October 1853, a war erupted between the Russian and the Ottoman empires, which became the celebrated Crimean War in the following year. The Danubian theatre, one of the crucial scenes of the war, witnessed both belligerents trying to discover the other's activities and planned operations. As they were inhabited by cosmopolitan and heterogeneous populations, Dobruca (Dobruja) and Bessarabia were the most convenient places for both parties to gather military intelligence. The Ottomans acquired information via the Wallachians and the Cossacks, as well as by diplomatic missions and various merchants. The Ottoman Empire's Orthodox Christian subjects - the Bulgarians and Greeks - assisted Russia in gathering information from the right bank of the Danube. Some of these reports were unreliable, as were the spies themselves. The Russian and Ottoman archives have rich resources related to military intelligence, which is an understudied aspect of the Crimean War. Relying upon the archival sources, this paper aims to discuss an entirely ignored topic: the espionage activities in the Balkan theatre during the Crimean War.
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