In this book, David Cox argues that the initial disagreements
that led to the Cold War largely centered around Central/Eastern
Europe, and Germany in particular. The end of the Cold War,
according to Cox, can best be understood in the context of the
withdrawal of Soviet forces and the disintegration of Soviet
hegemony in these areas.
In this insightful and original book, Cox examines the
circumstances surrounding the Soviet Union's military retreat from
Germany and Eastern Europe as a microcosm of the decline and
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Using Soviet, and later
Russian press reports, as well as German accounts, Cox traces the
origins on the Western Group of Forces (WGF) within the Soviet
alliance system up to the beginning of Gorbachev's reforms and the
consequences of these reforms on the Soviet position in Eastern
Europe. He also examines Gorbachev's new political thinking in
Soviet foreign policy, the East German Revolution, Moscow's
relations with Germany, domestic Soviet politics and the WGF, and
ultimately the end of the Cold War.
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