A precarious equilibrium : human rights and détente in Jimmy Carter's Soviet policy

Author(s)

    • Tulli, Umberto

Bibliographic Information

A precarious equilibrium : human rights and détente in Jimmy Carter's Soviet policy

Umberto Tulli

(Key studies in diplomacy)

Manchester University Press, 2020

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [199]-205) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In January 1981, just days before Jimmy Carter left the White House, many of the president's officials were well satisfied with the administration's campaign to promote human rights. But as commentators, scholars, and the incoming president began to critique Carter's bipolar policy, it became clear that Carter had not only failed to persuade the American public that he had a clear grasp on the international role of the US, but he failed to build a lasting domestic consensus on foreign policy. The Carter administration aimed to renew its ideological challenge to the USSR through human rights and to persuade the Soviets to ease internal repression in order to strengthen Congressional support for detente and arms control. Contrary to what he envisioned, the more vigorously the White House pursued a pro-human rights agenda, the more the Soviets lost interest in detente; the more the administration relegated human rights to quiet diplomacy, the more critics within the United States accused the President of abandoning his commitment to human rights. In the end, the White House lost the opportunity to stabilise bipolar relations and the domestic support Carter had managed to garner in 1976. Critics of detente, helped by the Iran hostage crisis and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, defeated him. Based on recently declassified archival documents, A precarious equilibrium offers a fresh interpretation of President Jimmy Carter's human rights policy and its contradictory impact on US-Soviet affairs. -- .

Table of Contents

  • Introduction 1 Setting the Stage for a Human Rights Policy 2 Human Rights and the 1976 Presidential Election 3 Firmness Abroad
  • Consensus at Home, 1977-1978. 4 Coping with Critics: the Choice in Favour of Quiet Diplomacy, 1978. 5 Critics' Triumph: Quiet Diplomacy, SALT II and the Invasion of Afghanistan, 1979-1980. Conclusions -- .

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