The Triple Entente of Great Britain, Russia, and France was the
foreign policy prong of the Russian imperial government's reaction
to the disastrous events of 1905, including the revolution and the
near defeat in the Russo-Japanese War. This alignment with the two
western, liberal powers was almost universally perceived within
official Russian governing circles as a necessary, if ideologically
distasteful, diplomatic relationship to offset the growing German
threat on the continent. Maintaining the entente would help Russia
retain its great power status. For the first time, Tomaszewski
tells the official Russian side of the story, long inaccessible due
to restrictions imposed by the relevant Russian archives during the
Soviet era. In doing so, she sheds new light on the international
scene as the crisis of World War One approached.
The Triple Entente went hand in hand with two policies of
Stolypin, the Chairman of the Council of Ministers: draconian
repression of the revolutionaries and sweeping domestic reforms.
Acutely aware that serious failures in foreign policy would
threaten the regime's existence, the imperial government designed
both its foreign and its domestic policies to consolidate the
autocracy for the twentieth century. Nicholas II gambled on the
Triple Entente and its diplomatic alignment with the other two
status-quo powers as the best means of preserving the peace in
Europe and thereby preserving the imperial system as well.
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