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Friends or Foes? - The United States and Soviet Russia, 1921-1941 (Hardcover)
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Friends or Foes? - The United States and Soviet Russia, 1921-1941 (Hardcover)
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With Friends or Foes? Norman Saul continues his monumental
multivolume magnum opus on U.S.-Russian relations over the course
of 200 years. This fourth volume provides the first comprehensive
study in any language of an era that shaped the rest of the century
and captures the major changes in relations between two nations on
the verge of becoming dominant global powers. Among other things,
Saul examines the rationale for America's failure to recognize the
Soviet government through the early 1930s, analyzing the impact of
the Red Scare and the roles of the State Department, Russian migrs,
religious groups, and key individuals-like Charles Evans Hughes,
Robert Kelley, Herbert Hoover, Boris Skvirsky, Olga Kameneva, and
Maxim Litvinov-on the policy process. In addition, he recalls the
American Relief Administration's gigantic effort to help Russian
peasants and garners new material from American business records on
concession arrangements and commerce and on Soviet responses during
the first Five Year Plan. He also records travelers' impressions,
cultural exchange, and the role of academia in each
country-particularly the contribution of Russian migr scholars to
American education and the contributions of American journalists in
Russia. Saul also reveals the tendency on both sides to preserve an
atmosphere of secrecy, conducting business behind closed doors and
rarely on paper. His prodigious research in the Hoover Presidential
Library, the Franklin Roosevelt Library, and the Hoover Institution
at Stanford University-incorporating overlooked Diplomat Post
Records and featuring an interview with George Kennan on his
diplomatic role-has yielded a wealth of new insights into what
really happened during a period in the history of the relations
between the two countries that remains mysterious and
controversial. Breaking new ground in diplomatic, economic, social,
and cultural history, Saul's book illuminates both the mutual
fascination that briefly permitted peaceful coexistence (and
eventual alliance) and the ideological battles that ultimately led
to the Cold War.
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