COLD WAR
COLD
WAR
AN INTERNATIONAL HISTORY
CAROLE K. FINK
THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
A MEMBER OF THE PERSEUS BOOKS GROUP
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Designed by Jack Lenzo
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Fink, Carole, 1940-
Cold War : an international history / Carole K. Fink, The Ohio State University.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8133-4796-7 (ebook) 1. Cold War. 2. World politics1945-1989. 3. Cold WarInfluence. I. Title.
D843.F456 2014
909.825--dc23
2013029847
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
To my students
CONTENTS
Almost three years ago I decided to transform my many years of teaching and writing on the Cold War into an accessible book for twenty-first-century readers. It has been a fascinating task to revisit the rivalry between the worlds first communist state and the Western powers, one that consumed a major portion of the twentieth century and altered its politics and economy along with its physical, social, and cultural environment.
Although the Cold Wars unexpected end led to an unprecedented opening of archival sources and the publication of numerous memoirs and books, there have been few efforts up to now to view this conflict in a broad international perspective. Based on new evidence along with the observations and analyses of contemporaries and two generations of scholarship, this book is an attempt to comprehend the Cold War as a dynamic rivalry, one in which large and small powers and diverse groups of people maneuvered in a militarized and divided world.
I thank my original editor, Priscilla McGeehon, and her successor, Ada Fung, and their able assistant, Stephen Pinto, for their generous support, and Annie Lenth, Carolyn Sobczak, and Beth Wright for bringing this book to completion. I thank David Lincove, History, Political Science, and Philosophy Librarian at The Ohio State University, and Sue Ann Cody, Associate University Librarian for Public Services Emerita, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, for helping me obtain research materials. The late Terry Benjey, a devoted friend and computer mentor, provided superb technical assistance. I thank family and friends who have given unstinting support to this project: Renate Bridenthal, Nan Cameron, Sandi Cooper, Emily Davidson, Muriel Dimen, Hilda Godwin, John Haley, Dorothy Kahn, Joyce Kuhn, Marjorie Madigan, Richard Nochimson, Peter Schuck, Ben Steelman, and Juanita Winner. My son, Stefan Harold Fink, has made my move to Wilmington, North Carolina, a joy.
Thanks also to the reviewers who provided such thoughtful feedback on this project: John Chambers (Rutgers University), David Messenger (University of Wyoming), Thomas Maulucci (American International College), Cristofer Scarboro (Kings College), and Michael Slattery (Campbell University).
I am grateful to all my students (including the recent Cold War class in OLLI, the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington) for their inspiration and especially to Stuart J. Hilwig (19682012), who will long be remembered as a wise, witty, and extraordinarily dedicated scholar and teacher.
Wilmington, North Carolina
March 2013
ABM | Antiballistic Missiles |
AK | Armia KrajowaHome Army (Poland) |
ANC | African National Congress (South Africa) |
APEC | Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation |
ASEAN | Association of Southeastern Asian Nations |
Benelux | Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg |
CCP | Chinese Communist Party |
CDU | Christlich Demokratische Union DeutschlandsChristian Democratic Union (Germany) |
CFM | Council of Foreign Ministers (Britain, China, France, United States, USSR) |
CHR | Commission on Human Rights (UN) |
CGDK | Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea (Cambodia) |
CIA | Central Intelligence Agency (United States) |
Comecon | Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (USSR-directed, sometimes referred to as CMEA) |
Cominform | Communist Information Bureau |
Comintern | Communist International |
CSCE | Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe |
EEC | European Economic Community |
ETIM | East Turkestan Islamic Movement |
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