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To Run the World: The Kremlin's Cold War Bid for Global Power

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What would it feel like To Run the World? The Soviet rulers spent the Cold War trying desperately to find out. In this panoramic new history of the conflict that defined the postwar era, Sergey Radchenko provides an unprecedented deep dive into the psychology of the Kremlin's decision-making. He reveals how the Soviet struggle with the United States and China reflected its irreconcilable ambitions as a self-proclaimed superpower and the leader of global revolution. This tension drove Soviet policies from Stalin's postwar scramble for territory to Khrushchev's reckless overseas adventurism and nuclear brinksmanship, Brezhnev's jockeying for influence in the third world, and Gorbachev's failed attempts to reinvent Moscow's claims to greatness. Perennial insecurities, delusions of grandeur, and desire for recognition propelled Moscow on a headlong quest for global power, with dire consequences and painful legacies that continue to shape our world.

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  • A sweeping new history of Soviet foreign policy from the end of the Second World War to the collapse of the Soviet Union which uncovers the inner workings of the Kremlin  
  • Reveals the role that political legitimacy, and the accompanying desire for recognition, played and continue to play in Soviet and Russian foreign policies
  • Provides new insights into key episodes of the Cold War on the basis of previously unknown archival materials
Author: Radchenko Sergey
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 768
ISBN: 9781108477352
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2024

Introduction
Part I. Ambition:
1. The Postwar
2. The parting of ways
3. Stalin in Europe
4. Stalin in Asia
Part II. Hubris:
5. Love Us As We Are
6. The Golden Hoop
7. The Twin Crises
8. Killing Flies
9. Camp David
10. Berlin
11. Cuba
Part III. Decline:
12. Vietnam
13. Detente
14. Yom Kippur
15. Decline
16. Tensions Mount
17. The Final Nail
Part IV. Collapse:
18. Fear
19. Hope
20. Collapse
Conclusion.

Sergey Radchenko is the Wilson E. Schmidt Distinguished Professor at the Henry A. Kissinger Center for Global Affairs, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. He is a historian of the Cold War, and an expert on Russian and Chinese foreign and security policies. Previous publications include Two Suns in the Heavens: the Sino-Soviet Struggle for Supremacy and Unwanted Visionaries: the Soviet Failure in Asia.

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