The Soviets in world affairs; a history of the relations between the Soviet Union and the rest of the world, 1917-1929. Abridged by the author.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Vintage Russian libraryPublication details: New York, Vintage Books [c1960]Description: 616, xxxvii p. 19 cmSubject(s):
Contents:
The Bolsheviks make peace -- Ally and enemy -- "Big" allied intervention -- The Paris Peace Conference -- The allies and the whites -- White Poland v. Red Russia -- The armistice between two worlds -- America, Japan, and Soviet Russia -- The Genoa Conference -- In the royal Dutch capital -- Disarmament and Bolshevism -- Revolutionary Russia and revolutionary Turkey -- Anglo-Russian rivalry in Central Asia -- The Curzon ultimatum -- Ruhr, Russia, and revolution -- The passing of Lenin -- Soviet Russia enters the comity of nations -- Locarno or Rapallo? -- Anti-Locarno -- Bright rays in France -- Dark clouds over London -- Moscow and the Chinese revolution -- The British rupture with Russia -- The after-effects of the break with England -- The Bolshevik war scare -- Shall the world disarm? -- The Kellogg and Litvinov pacts -- Moscow entertains a king -- The Manchurian crisis -- Soviet-American business -- The resumption of Anglo-Soviet relations -- Conclusion : problems of a revolutionary foreign policy.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books (30-Day Checkout) Books (30-Day Checkout) Nash Library General Stacks DK63.F5 1 Available 33710000886684

Bibliographical footnotes.

WAR, NEWBERY,

The Bolsheviks make peace -- Ally and enemy -- "Big" allied intervention -- The Paris Peace Conference -- The allies and the whites -- White Poland v. Red Russia -- The armistice between two worlds -- America, Japan, and Soviet Russia -- The Genoa Conference -- In the royal Dutch capital -- Disarmament and Bolshevism -- Revolutionary Russia and revolutionary Turkey -- Anglo-Russian rivalry in Central Asia -- The Curzon ultimatum -- Ruhr, Russia, and revolution -- The passing of Lenin -- Soviet Russia enters the comity of nations -- Locarno or Rapallo? -- Anti-Locarno -- Bright rays in France -- Dark clouds over London -- Moscow and the Chinese revolution -- The British rupture with Russia -- The after-effects of the break with England -- The Bolshevik war scare -- Shall the world disarm? -- The Kellogg and Litvinov pacts -- Moscow entertains a king -- The Manchurian crisis -- Soviet-American business -- The resumption of Anglo-Soviet relations -- Conclusion : problems of a revolutionary foreign policy.