Название: Grand Delusion: Stalin and the German Invasion of Russia Автор: Gabriel Gorodetsky Издательство: Yale University Press Год: 1999 ISBN: 0300077920 Формат: pdf Страниц: 424 Размер: 30,7 mb Язык: English
Gorodetsky's diplomatic history of the period immediately preceding WWII effectively refutes the argument, made most popular by Viktor Suvorov's Icebreaker, that Stalin authorized the Nazi-Soviet nonaggression pact of 1939 because he was preparing to bring revolutionary war to Europe and wanted to neutralize Hitler. Having examined recently opened Soviet archives, Gorodetsky, a professor of history at Tel Aviv University, shows that, while Stalin feared a German attack, he thought he could work out a traditional balance-of-power arrangement with Germany that established recognized spheres of influence. The reason Stalin succumbed to this delusion, according to Gorodetsky, was that he distrusted Britain more than he feared Hitler. He loathed the idea of becoming Britain's pawn, believing (not without reason, as it turned out) that a Soviet-British alliance would make cannon fodder of the poorly prepared Red Army. Gorodetsky reveals that Stalin both courted and bullied the leaders of Bulgaria and Turkey in hopes of gaining control of the Bosphorus and then using that control as a bargaining chip when striking a balance of power in the region. As for the contention that Stalin planned to export revolution by war, Gorodetsky, like many before him, observes that Stalin's purges of the officer corps had rendered the Red Army ill-prepared for a defensive war, much less an attack on Nazi Germany. Though stiffly written in some places, this thorough analysis of Soviet diplomatic brinksmanship makes it more than clear that Stalin was ultimately driven more by a combination of paranoia and realpolitik than by Bolshevik ideology.
Preface Introduction: The Premises of Stalin's Foreign Policy
1. 'Potential Enemies': London and Moscow at Loggerheads 'The Truce of the Bear' 'He Who Sups with the Devil' Cripps's Mission to Moscow
2. The Scramble for the Balkans Soviet-Italian Collusion The Soviet Seizure of Bessarabia British Schemes for the Balkans The Vienna Award: The German Encroachment in the Balkans Clash over the Danube
3. On a Collision Course Drang nach Osten: The Initial Plans Soviet Intelligence and the German Threat The Bulgarian Corridor to the Turkish Straits
4. The Road to 'Barbarossa' Molotov's Visit to Berlin Hitler Opts for War Postscript: Preventive War?
5. The Curtain Falls on the Balkans The British Perspective: Co-operation or Embroilment? Bulgaria Turns to the Axis The Urge for the Straits
6. The Red Army on Alert The Soviet Defence Plans The Bankruptcy of the Military The Gathering Clouds
7. At the Crossroads: The Yugoslav Coup d'Etat
8. Churchill's Warning to Stalin British Intelligence and 'Barbarossa' The 'Cryptic' Warning Rumours of War and a Separate Peace The Bogy of a Separate Peace Aftermath
9. Japan: The Avenue to Germany
10. 'Appeasement': A New German-Soviet Pact?
11. The Special Threatening Military Period' On the Alert Emergency Deployment
12. The Flight of Rudolf Hess to England The Conspiracy The Mission Fictitious Negotiations 'Running the Bolshevik Hare' Hess as Perceived by the Kremlin
13. On the Eve of War 'Mobilization Is War!' A Middle East Diversion: The Flaw in British Intelligence The Tass Communiqu?
14. Calamity Self-Deception London: 'This Avalanche Breathing Fire and Death' 22 June 1941: The Long Weekend
Уважаемый посетитель, Вы зашли на сайт как незарегистрированный пользователь.
Мы рекомендуем Вам зарегистрироваться либо войти на сайт под своим именем.
Информация
Посетители, находящиеся в группе Гости, не могут оставлять комментарии к данной публикации.