Soviet Strategy Towards Southern Africa


Book Description

Evaluates basic Soviet strategy towards southern Africa in the period immediately before Angola gained its independence on 11 November 1975, the reaction from the Soviet Union with reference to the pro-Moscow MPLA takeover, and the basic aims of the Soviet Union in the post-Angola phase.




Africa


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Southern Africa and the Soviet Union


Book Description

Describes the African and Soviet motivations, objectives and strategies, the Southern African geopolitical environment and the development of Soviet theoretical approaches to the region - all taken from an African perspective. The book is a survey of the relations of African states with the USSR.










Soviet Strategy Toward Southern Africa


Book Description

This study is the first significant work to examine Soviet involvement with national liberation movements (NLMs) in Africa as a separate subcategory of Soviet foreign policy in the developing world. The text compares and contrasts actual Soviet behavior with declared policy. Daniel R. Kempton presents three case studies: the African National Congress (ANC) in South Africa, The Movimento Popular de Libertacao de Angola (MPLA) and the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU). These cases trace the development of the Soviet Union's ties to the national liberation movements, the amount and types of assistance provided, and the impact of the relationship on the national liberation movements. General analysts of international relations, analysts of Soviet foreign policy and Africanists will find this a valuable resource. The author contends that during the 1960s and 1970s the Soviet Union pursued a common strategy toward all three national liberation movements. Although the strategy was applied flexibly to take into account the idiosyncracies of the individual liberation struggles, in each case the Soviet Union pushed the national liberation movement to adopt the Soviet political model. The Soviet view was that the adoption of this model would eventually lead to the development of relatively more stable and dependable allies. Since 1980, however, in each case there is significant evidence that the Soviet Union has altered markedly, if not abandoned, its previous strategy.




Sino-Soviet Intervention in Africa


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Soviet Shadow Over Africa


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