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Politics of Uncertainty - The United States, the Baltic Question, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union (Hardcover)
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Politics of Uncertainty - The United States, the Baltic Question, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union (Hardcover)
Series: OXFORD STUDIES IN INTL HISTORY SERIES
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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In March 1990, Lithuania became the first Soviet Republic to
declare its independence. Within weeks, the two other Baltic
states, Estonia and Latvia, announced the beginning of a transition
period toward full sovereignty. The Soviet Union, which considered
the Baltic declarations illegal, harshly condemned them and imposed
an economic blockade against Lithuania. Fearing an outbreak of
violence in the region, the United States tried to de-escalate the
crisis, pressuring all sides to engage in dialogue. Thirty years
after the Soviet collapse Politics of Uncertainty investigates the
interplay between international and domestic dynamics in the Soviet
disintegration process. Based on extensive multilingual archival
research, this book recovers the voices of local actors in Riga,
Tallinn, and Vilnius in its examination of the triangular relations
between Washington, Moscow, and Baltic independence movements.
Occupied and annexed by the USSR in 1940, Estonia, Latvia, and
Lithuania were the first Soviet republics to push the limits of
Perestroika. The Baltic problem, at first seemingly minor,
increasingly gained international visibility and by 1990 risked
derailing issues that mattered in the eyes of both Soviet and
American leaders-the transformation of the Soviet state and
transformation of the European order. The United States, which had
never recognized the annexation of the Baltic states, tried to
perform a highly challenging balancing act of supporting Baltic
independence without jeopardizing relations with the Kremlin.
Meanwhile Mikhail Gorbachev, who saw the Baltics as an integral
part of the USSR, was frustrated that their secessionist tendencies
distracted from the monumental opportunity for change that the
Perestroika project offered to his country and the world.
Meanwhile, George Bush, Francois Mitterrand, and Helmut Kohl were
exasperated that events at the margins of the Soviet empire risked
destabilizing Gorbachev and souring East-West relations during
negotiations over German reunification. By focusing on the
relations between those at the top of global power hierarchies and
those situated at their margins, Una Bergmane underscores how the
Soviet collapse was driven much more by uncertainty, domestic
pressures, and last-minute decisions than by long-term
strategy-while warning about the tenuous geopolitical positions of
these three states that joined NATO and the European Union after
breaking out of the Soviet empire.
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