“We Will Not Change Our Attitude Towards You, Until You Change Your Attitude Towards Us”. How Washington Considered the Reaction of Western European Communist Parties to The Events in Afghanistan, 1978–1985

IF 0.2 Q4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
V. Yungblud, M. Bakshaev
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The invasion of a limited contingent of Soviet troops into Afghanistan at the end of 1979 caused a mixed reaction among the Communist parties in Europe. Some of them subject the actions of the USSR leadership to sharp criticism. The article reveals to what extent the US administration was aware of the critical attacks against the USSR and the CPSU by the most powerful Western European Communist parties to determine how the factor of Eurocommunism influenced the Afghan vector of the US policy in 1979-1982 and how the American course turned out for the Communist parties themselves. The study is based on published documents (including electronic collections) of the Administration of the President of the United States J. Carter, the State Department, and the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States, as well as unpublished documents of the Central Committee of the CPSU from the funds of the Russian State Archive of Modern History, press materials and memoirs. It is concluded that 1) the invasion of Soviet military units into Afghanistan provoked a fierce battle of superpowers on the periphery of the Cold War, and in fact, became its peak; 2) one of the results of the Soviet operation was a deeper split in the world communist movement with its subsequent decline; 3) the United States sought to take advantage of the escalated disagreements between the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the largest communist parties in Western Europe (especially Italian, to a lesser extent Spanish and French) and encouraged the actions of the European Communists aimed at distancing themselves from the CPSU and severing relations with the USSR. At the same time, Washington avoided public statements and actions that could look like a manifestation of solidarity with the Communist parties of Western Europe (primarily with the ICP), including the relation to the USSR policy in Afghanistan, giving priority to the policy to exclude completely the possibility for communists to participate in the governments of NATO states. Such a policy, against the background of the ongoing war in Afghanistan and the decline in the USSR's international prestige, contributed to the isolation of the European communist parties in their countries and the weakening of their electoral opportunities.
“我们不会改变对你的态度,除非你改变对我们的态度。”华盛顿如何看待西欧共产党对阿富汗事件的反应(1978-1985)
1979年底,一支数量有限的苏联部队入侵阿富汗,在欧洲共产党中引起了不同的反应。他们中的一些人对苏联领导人的行为进行了尖锐的批评。这篇文章揭示了美国政府在多大程度上意识到最强大的西欧共产党对苏联和苏共的关键攻击,以确定欧洲共产主义因素如何影响1979-1982年美国政策的阿富汗向量,以及美国的路线如何对共产党本身产生影响。这项研究的依据是美国总统J.卡特政府、国务院和美国中央情报局发表的文件(包括电子文集),以及俄罗斯国家近代史档案馆资助的苏共中央委员会未发表的文件、新闻材料和回忆录。结论是:1)苏联军队入侵阿富汗引发了冷战边缘超级大国之间的激烈战斗,实际上成为了冷战的顶峰;2)苏联行动的结果之一是加深了世界共产主义运动的分裂及其随后的衰落;3)美国试图利用苏联共产党与西欧最大的共产党(特别是意大利,在较小程度上是西班牙和法国)之间不断升级的分歧,并鼓励欧洲共产党人采取旨在与苏共保持距离并切断与苏联关系的行动。与此同时,华盛顿避免公开声明和行动,这些声明和行动可能看起来像是与西欧共产党(主要是与ICP)团结一致的表现,包括与苏联在阿富汗的政策关系,优先考虑完全排除共产党人参与北约国家政府的可能性。在阿富汗战争持续不断和苏联国际威望下降的背景下,这种政策导致欧洲共产党在其国内遭到孤立,并削弱了它们的选举机会。
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来源期刊
MGIMO Review of International Relations
MGIMO Review of International Relations INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
审稿时长
12 weeks
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