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International Leverage on Soviet Domestic Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Jack Snyder
Affiliation:
Columbia University
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Abstract

Conventional wisdom holds that the success of Gorbachev's domestic reforms would probably enhance Western security, but that there is nothing the West can do to make this outcome more likely. This conventional wisdom is right on the first count, but wrong on the second. The author supports his conclusion by three bodies of evidence: the effect of the international environment on the domestic politics of great powers in general over the past century; the history of the Soviet Union in particular; and the current constellation of political forces in Gorbachev's Russia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1989

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References

1 Editorial, “Who Wins If Gorbachev Wins?” New York Times, 30 September 1988Google Scholar. In a 27 July 1989 editorial, however, the Times contended that the West could affect Gorbachev's chances “at the margin.” See also remarks of Robert Gates to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 14 October 1988, 21, reported in the New York Times, 15 October 1988. Gates is now the deputy director of the National Security Council.

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4 Jack Snyder, Myths of Empire: Domestic Politics and Strategic Ideology (forthcoming), applying ideas found in Olson, Mancur, The Rise and Fall of Nations (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982)Google Scholar, and Downs, Anthony, An Economic Theory of Democracy (New York: Harper, 1957)Google Scholar. Also relevant is Rosecrance, Richard, The Rise of the Trading State (New York: Basic, 1986)Google Scholar.

5 A third pattern, which I examine at greater length in Myths of Empire (fn. 4), is the unitary autocrat or unitary oligarchy, which checks the logrolling of imperialist interest groups “from above,” just as liberal democracy checks it “from below.” As I will discuss later in this article, such checks have been an important constraint on imperial coalition making in the Soviet Union.

6 See Kurth, James, “The Political Consequences of the Product Cycle,” International Organization 33 (Winter 1979)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 1–34, and Gourevitch (fn. 3). Note also the effect on Germany of the Great Depression of 1873–1896, which ended the agrarian Junkers' preference for free trade and the comparatively liberal phase of Bismarck's political strategy, setting the stage for the formation of the protectionist-imperialist “marriage of iron and rye.” Wehler, Hans-Ulrich, The German Empire, 1871–1918 (Dover, NH: Berg, 1985)Google Scholar; Gourevitch (fn. 3).

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19 For evidence and citations supporting this line of interpretation, see Snyder, Jack, “The Gorbachev Revolution,” International Security 12 (Winter 19871988), 93131CrossRefGoogle Scholar. But note the anomalous fact that conditions of intense international threat during World War II led to a domestic relaxation in the Soviet Union.

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23 Ibid., 439–42. Lloyd George and his political allies had strong political motives to believe such things. Their working-class constitutents were arguing that Russia's absence from world markets was driving up the price of food and depriving Britain of a major export market. The government was quite conscious of the fact that promoting an Anglo-Russian trade agreement would fend off criticism on these grounds (pp. 436–70).

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26 Day (fn. 24), 64–65, 104, no.

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29 Reiman, Michal, The Birth of Stalinism (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987), 67Google Scholar, 75–77. Evelyn Davidheiser puts this in a longer historical and more theoretical perspective in “The Politics of Backwardness: Russian Foreign Economic Policy, 1870–1930” (paper presented to a Soviet studies conference at the University of Toronto, June 1988). See also her dissertation, forthcoming from Duke University.

30 See the evidence cited in Snyder (fn. 19), 97–98.

31 Reiman (fn. 29), 12.

32 Citations supporting arguments advanced in this section can be found, unless otherwise noted, in Snyder (fn. 19). Alternative interpretations are also cited there, especially in the footnotes on pp. 100–105.

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34 The Soviets were not entirely wrong in believing that U.S. leaders intended the Marshall Plan to be an instrument to roll them back in Eastern Europe. See Gaddis, John Lewis, “U.S. Influence in Europe,” in Riste, Olav, ed., Western Security: The Formative Years (Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, 1985), 73Google Scholar; and Pollard (fn. 11), 137.

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36 Dinerstein, Herbert, War and the Soviet Union (New York: Praeger, 1959)Google Scholar, chap. 4. Also making this point is Richter, James, “Action and Reaction in Soviet Foreign Policy” (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1989)Google Scholar.

37 Report to the National Security Council by Task Force “A” of Project Solarium (Washington, DC, 16 July 1953), 131–32, 137. Thanks to Richard Immerman and Robert Jervis for this citation.

38 The foregoing interpretation relies on Richter (fn. 36). Malenkov, too, talked about the correlation of forces, but unlike Khrushchev, he did not link that concept to a strategy of offensive détente. Khrushchev had much more ambitious ideas about the compatibility of detente with active Soviet support for “progressive change,” especially in the third world.

39 Schick, Jack, The Berlin Crisis, 1958–1962 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1971)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

40 A dissertation-in-progress by Richard Anderson at the University of California, Berkeley, is by far the most detailed and analytically ambitious account of this period. He goes far beyond the simple points I have made here in reviewing the connections between the international setting and the domestic political maneuvering of Soviet leaders.

41 However, the two major histories of this period disagree about the extent of U.S. restraint, if any. See Gelman, Harry, The Brezhnev Politburo and the Decline of Detente (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1984)Google Scholar, and Garthoff, Raymond, Detente and Confrontation (Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1985)Google Scholar.

42 Because of the evolution of Soviet society since the early 1950s, and because of the thorough discrediting of old approaches by the stagnation of the Brezhnev years, Gorbachev now has a much better chance of carrying out such a transformation than did previous reformers like Malenkov, Khrushchev, or Kosygin. For elaboration on this and other points, see Snyder (fn. 19). For an alternative view, stressing the intellectual rather than domestic political origins of Gorbachev's new thinking in foreign policy, see Legvold, Robert, “War, Weapons, and Soviet Foreign Policy,” in Bialer, Seweryn and Mandelbaum, Michael, eds., Gorbachev's Russia and American Foreign Policy (Boulder, CO: Westview, 1988), 97132Google Scholar.

43 Shevardnadze, Pravda, 26 July 1988, 4; Foreign Broadcast Information Service-Soviet Union (hereafter FBIS-SOV), 26 July 1988, 29–31.

44 Ligachev speech made in Gorky, Vremya TV version, 5 August 1988; FBIS-SOV, 8 August 1988, 40–43; see also Teague, Elizabeth, “Kremlin Leaders at Loggerheads,” Radio Liberty Research, No. 362, 16 August 1988.Google Scholar

45 FBIS-SOV, 8 August 1988, 37. For the rebuttal to Ligachev by Gorbachev's ally in ideological matters, A. N. Yakovlev, see Pravda, 11 August 1988, 2; FBIS-SOV, 12 August 1988, 40–44.

46 New York Times, 6 October 1988.

47 The term is from Slusser, Robert, “America, China, and the Hydra-Headed Opposition,” in Juviler, Peter and Morton, Henry, eds., Soviet Policy-Making (New York: Praeger, 1967)Google Scholar.

48 Eley, Geoff, Reshaping the German Right (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980)Google Scholar; Martin, Kingsley, The Triumph of Lord Palmerston (London: Hutchinson, 1924)Google Scholar.

49 The defeat of several military officers in the March 1989 elections for the Congress of Peoples' Deputies bodes well in this regard.

50 Meyer, Stephen, “Civilian and Military Influence in Managing the Arms Race in the U.S.S.R.,” in Art, Robert et al. , eds., Reorganizing America's Defense (Washington, DC: Pergamon Brassey's, 1985)Google Scholar; Rice, Condoleezza, “The Party, the Military, and Decision Authority in the Soviet Union,” World Politics 40 (October 1987), 5581.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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52 See Colton (fn. 51), passim.

53 A dissertation-in-progress by Matthew Partan at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is examining the absence of an independent civilian defense-analytical community as a factor in the failure of Khrushchev's military innovations.

54 See Snyder, Jack, “Limiting Offensive Conventional Forces: Soviet Proposals and Western Options,” International Security 12 (Spring 1988), 4877CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

55 Arbatov, , “Glasnost”, Talks, and Disarmament,” Pravda, 17 October 1988, 6Google Scholar; FBIS-SOV, 18 October 1988, 1–4.

56 Falin on Moscow TV, 15 October 1988; FBIS-SOV, 18 October 1988, 82–89, esp. 85.

57 Arbatov (fn. 55), 3; Falin (fn. 56), 88.

58 Rice (fn. 50), 79; Shevardnadze (fn. 43), 30.

59 Lebedev, Major-General Iurii and Podberezkin, Aleksei, “Voennye doktriny i mezhdunarodnaia bezopasnost'” [Military doctrine and international security], Kommunist 13 (September 1988), 110–19Google Scholar.

60 On NATO, Falin (fn. 56), 88; Arbatov (fn. 55), 2; on the Soviet military, author's interviews in Moscow, October 1988.

61 See, for example, Kokoshin, Andrei, “From the Standpoint of the New Thinking,” Krasnaia zvezda, 16 September 1988, 3Google Scholar; FBIS-SOV, 21 September 1988, 2–5.

62 Evangelista, , “Economic Reform and Military Technology in Soviet Security Policy,” Harriman Institute Forum 2 (January 1989)Google Scholar. Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov, former chief of the General Staff, was the prototypical military modernizer, though he has no obvious successor.

63 For relevant arguments and citations, see Brabant, Jozef van, “Planned Economies in the GATT Framework: The Soviet Case,” Soviet Economy 4 (January-March 1988), 335Google Scholar.

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