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WAR SCARE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   181202


In the shadow of the war: Bolshevik perceptions of Polish subversive and military threats to the Soviet Union, 1920–32 / Whitewood, Peter   Journal Article
Whitewood, Peter Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines Soviet perceptions of subversive and military threats from Poland to the Soviet Union in the 1920s and early 1930s. Drawing on archival materials from the Soviet foreign ministry, Communist Party leadership and security organs, it shows how the Soviet leadership held exaggerated fears about Polish threats to the Soviet western border regions and military intervention. A pattern of misperception stemmed from the Bolshevik defeat to Poland in the 1919–20 Soviet-Polish War, which rather than moderating the early Soviet regime ultimately encouraged more widespread use of state violence and provided further rationale for Stalin’s ‘Revolution from Above’.
Key Words Poland  Ukraine  Industrialisation  Collectivisation  War Scare  Soviet Union 
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2
ID:   132457


Revisiting the nuclear 'war scare' of 1983: lessons retro- and prospectively / Cimbala, Stephen J   Journal Article
Cimbala, Stephen J Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Between 1979 and 1983, relations between the United States and NATO and the Soviet Union deteriorated gradually due to disagreements and controversies growing out of Cold War rivalry. Some Soviet leaders apparently convinced themselves that there was a nontrivial likelihood of a US or NATO nuclear first use or first strike in the near future, and Soviet intelligence agencies were tasked to anticipate it. A NATO exercise in the autumn of 1983 taking place in this hothouse atmosphere possibly lent itself to misperceptions of American and NATO intentions on account of its realism and some Soviet mind sets. The following discussion revisits the 1983 'war scare' episode by: (1)?reviewing high water marks in the political context leading up to the 1983 'war scare' situation; (2)?considering quantitative evidence on US and Soviet strategic nuclear force structures and possible operational performances; and (3)?deriving from this analysis certain conclusions about the 'war scare' of 1983 and its wider significance.
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