The precarious truce : Anglo-Soviet relations, 1924-27

Bibliographic Information

The precarious truce : Anglo-Soviet relations, 1924-27

Gabriel Gorodetsky

(Soviet and East European studies)

Cambridge University Press, 1977

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Note

Bibliography: p. [267]-275

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Lenin's death at the beginning of 1924 coincided with an exhaustive search by the USSR for a modus vivendi with the capitalist world. In laying the foundations of peaceful co-existence, priority was given to the cultivation of relations with Britain. This study examines the British government's various responses to the Soviet overtures. The scope of the work ranges from Labour's de jure recognition of the Soviet Union at the beginning of 1924 to the Conservatives' severance of relations in May 1927. The bulk of the study is set against the background of rapidly deteriorating relations and traces the unsparing measures employed by the Russians to forestall an open breach. Equal attention is paid to the Soviet government's straightforward diplomatic moves and to activities under the auspices of Comintern and the Soviet trade unions which rallied support without regard to frontiers or international protocol. The main aim was to strengthen the security and economic recovery of the Soviet Union, but revolutionary aspirations remain on the agenda.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Soviet Russia and the first Labour Government
  • 2. The policy of doing nothing
  • 3. The Anglo-Soviet trade union alliance: an uneasy partnership
  • 4. Russia and the general strike
  • 5. Attempts to heal the breach
  • 6. The rupture of Anglo-Soviet relations.

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