The Cambridge History of the Cold War Edited by Melvyn P
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Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-83721-7 — The Cambridge History of the Cold War Edited by Melvyn P. Leffler , Odd Arne Westad Index More Information Index Cumulative index for Volumes I, II, and III. Bold page numbers refer to maps and photographs. 9/11 attacks, III.134, 537, 550, 554–5 anti-Sovietism, I.150 Berlin crisis, II.168 abortion, III.468, 469, 473 Cuban missile crisis, II.73 Abstract Expressionism, II.30 division of Germany and, II.482–3 Accornero, Aris (Italian social scientist), I.54 European integration, II.182, 183–4 Achaeans, II.1 French relations, II.168, 169, 184 Acheson, Dean, I.78 German unification and, II.203 Acheson–Lilienthal Report, II.397 Khrushchev and, I.319 Excomm, II.71 loss of power, II.483 on Germany, II.119, III.156 Marshall Plan, I.170 grand strategy, I.84–6 NPT and, II.408 Ho Chi Minh and, I.82–3 nuclear weapons, II.487 Japanese policy, I.82, III.156 US relations, II.484 Korean War, I.276 values, II.462–3 Marshall Plan and, I.155, 159 Advanced Research Projects Agency, see NATO, I.81 ARPA Pacific policy, I.274 advertising, III.503, 504–5 political influence, I.83 Adzhubei, Aleksei (Soviet journalist), III.402 postwar assessment, I.74 affluent society, II.510–13, 518 on racial segregation, I.433–4, III.456 Afghanistan Schuman Plan and, II.182 Al Qaeda, III.133–4 Ackermann, Anton (German Communist), bibliography, III.566 I.180 Cold War and, I.484 Acton, John (British historian) I.1, 2 Egyptian relations, III.126 Adamec, Ladislav (Czechoslovak prime fundamentalism, III.536–7 minister), III.325, 326, 463 history (1945–79), III.121–34 Adams, John Quincy (US president), I.21 1973 coup, III.125–6 Addou, Abdullahi (Somalian ambassador to 1978 Communist coup, II.17, III.103, 127–8 United States), III.76–7 Communist opposition groups, Adenauer, Konrad (West German III.123, 127 chancellor), I.152, II.167 Daoud regime (1973–8), III.125–7 1953 election victory, I.315 democratic phase, III.123–4, 125 603 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-83721-7 — The Cambridge History of the Cold War Edited by Melvyn P. Leffler , Odd Arne Westad Index More Information Index Afghanistan (cont.) Daoud regime, III.125, 126–7 Islamist opposition groups, III.124–5, 128 Islamic guerrillas, II.324 Islamist uprisings, III.128 Soviet sphere of influence, III.114, 121–2 royal rule, III.121–3 Taliban government, III.133–4 Iranian relations US relations border dispute, III.122–3 1950s, III.122 Communist coup, III.127 2001 invasion, III.554–5 Daoud regime, III.126 Communist government, III.127, 128 madrasas, III.131 counterintervention strategy, III.40, 67, Pakistani relations 129–34, 272, 275, 286 border dispute, III.122, 123, 125 covert actions, II.427–8, III.130–1 Communist coup, III.127–8 economic assistance, III.123 growing influence, III.133 Pakistani border dispute, III.122, 123 intelligence services, III.125, 128 post-Soviet withdrawal, III.133 Islamist groups, III.125, 128 Reagan, III.130, 151–2, 273, 275, 517 postwar position, III.113 Soviet withdrawal and, III.255 refugees from, III.471 Africa Saudi relations, III.126 see also specific countries Soviet occupation, II.17, 426 Cold War politics, I.10 Carter policy, III.70, 83–5, 87, 129 Cuban policy, II.331–4, 340, III.99 Chinese response, III.87, 129, 192, 193–4 end of Cold War, I.485 CIA operations, II.427–8, III.130–1 green revolution and, III.428 costs, II.19, III.362, 509 historiography, I.7 détente and, II.40, III.63, 85, 150–2 human rights and, III.453 economic impact, III.39–40, 111 Johnson presidency, II.131 end of Cold War, III.254–6 Kennedy presidency, II.122–3 Geneva Peace Accords (1988), III.132–3 neoliberalism and, III.36 Gorbachev, III.131–3, 286 post-Cold War, III.536–7, 556 international sanctions, III.313 refugees, III.471 invasion, III.102–4 Soviet gambles, III.98–9 Islamist resistance, III.125, 130–1 uranium mining, III.438 military tactics, III.131 Agat (Soviet computer), III.397 miscalculation, III.90, 102–3 agriculture mujahedin, III.130, 132, 133 capitalist, I.52 nationalist resistance, III.532 environment and, III.423–9 political impact, II.522, III.520 global transition, I.53 postinvasion politics, III.112 green revolution, I.65, III.425–9, 431–4, 476 return of Cold War, III.150–2, 409 mechanization, III.466 role of intelligence services, II.436 Poland, I.59 South Africa and, III.234 Soviet Union, I.46, 447, 448, 450, II.514, Soviet perceptions, III.128, 239 515–16, III.429 technology and, III.41 technology, I.13 US counterintervention, III.40, 67, United States, II.256 129–34, 272, 275, 286 USSR Virgin Lands, I.450, III.429–31 US election (1980) and, III.66 air traffic, I.12 US monetary system and, III.31 Akhromeev, Sergei (Soviet marshal), watershed, III.129, 520 III.80, 414 West European response, III.289, Al Qaeda, III.133–4 290–3, 308 Albania withdrawal, III.133, 239, 254–6, 286, China and, I.220, 331, II.205, 247 318–19, 362, 418, 520 Hoxha dictatorship, I.220 Soviet relations, II.426–7 New Course, I.338 1950s, III.123 post-Stalin, I.216 604 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-83721-7 — The Cambridge History of the Cold War Edited by Melvyn P. Leffler , Odd Arne Westad Index More Information Index show trials, I.193, 214 Andropov, Iurii (KGB chairman, CPSU Soviet relations, I.490, II.205, 247 general secretary), II.427 rupture, I.331, II.349 access to leadership, III.109 Stalin, I.189, 200 Afghan invasion, III.103, 104, 150 Sovietization, I.178, 184, 201, 202 African policy, III.99 Stalinization, I.194 Brezhnev patronage, II.143 Yugoslavia and, I.106, 201, 212 death, III.92, 109 Aldrich, Robert (US film director), II.445 discipline program, III.110 Aleksandrov, G. F. (CPSU propaganda domestic vulnerabilities, II.463 department, film director), I.454, Eurocommunism and, III.57 II.447 foreign policy power, III.91 Aleksandrov-Agentov, Aleksei (Soviet Helsinki Accords (1975), II.155, 214 foreign policy strategist), III.250 human rights and, III.362 Alekseev, Alexandr (KGB agent in Cuba), illness, III.249, 299 II.426 KAL007 incident, III.272 Algeria KGB strategy, Third World, II.425, 426–7 Chinese relations, II.267, 274 nuclear weapons, II.20, III.108 Cold War and, II.247 arms reduction negotiations, III.296 Non-Aligned Movement, I.480 personality, III.109 oil nationalization, II.256 Poland, Solidarity, III.106, 107 population control, III.482 Prague Spring and, II.144–5 Soviet policy, II.243, 246, 252 on reform, II.519 war of independence RYAN, II.432–4 Cuban support, II.277, 331–2, Sakharov and, II.436, III.452 II.333, II.342 Androsov, Stanislav (KGB officer), II.434 diplomatic revolution, I.484 Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, I.61, 477, 491, Egyptian support, I.501, II.309 496, 498–9, II.306, III.114 end, II.165, 242, 302 Angola motivation, II.164 crisis of détente, III.92 outbreak, I.482 Cuban support, II.15, 16 US relations, II.164 Carter and, III.72 All-African People’s Conference, I.483 China and, II.277–8 Allen, Vic (CND activist), III.415 Cold War framework, II.346–8, III.242 Allende Gossens, Salvador (Chilean motivation, II.342–4, III.228, 242 president), II.33, 46, 424, 425, 426 offensive (1987), III.240–1 Alliance for Progress, I.307, 308, II.62, 116, overview, II.335–8 121–2, 125, 131, 132, 263, 269, 346, SALT II and, II.346 III.204 South African view, III.225 Allison, John (US ambassador to Japan), training, II.332 I.256 troops, II.327, III.520–1 Almond, Gabriel (US social scientist), II.262 US response, III.141 Americanization, I.411, III.490, 511 withdrawal of troops, III.520–1 Amin, Hafizullah (Afghan Communist independence, II.46, III.520–1 leader), III.103, 104, 124, 127, 128, 150 liberation movement, I.484 Amini, Ali (Iranian prime minister), III.116 China and, II.156, 277–8, III.229 Amnesty International, III.401, 454 Cold War battlefield, II.259, 260–1, 277–8 ancient Greece, II.1, 2, 6, 7–8, 9, 16, 17, 19, 21 Kennedy and, II.122–3 Anderson, Martin (Reagan’s presidential Soviet support, II.15, 17, 156, 277–8, 426–7 adviser), III.273 US policy, II.156, 277–8 Andreotti, Giulio (Italian Christian MPLA victory, III.225–7, 229 Democrat leader), III.56 Namibia and, III.230, 241 Andrew, Christopher (British historian), South Africa III.453 ANC bases, III.241 605 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-83721-7 — The Cambridge History of the Cold War Edited by Melvyn P. Leffler , Odd Arne Westad Index More Information Index Angola (cont.) Reagan, III.210 Cabinda incident (1985), III.237 support for dictatorships, III.451 invasion, II.277, 278, 336, III.229, 240 Arias-Navarro, Carlos,1st Marquess of Lusaka Accord (1984), III.237 Arias-Navarro (Spanish prime policy, II.335–6, 337 minister), II.255 view of Cuban support, III.225 Arias Sánchez, Oscar (Costa Rican leader), Soviet relations, III.237–8 III.215 Cold War framework, III.242 Armenia, I.101, III.358, 460 Gorbachev, III.239, 240 Armstrong, Charles K., I.283 interests, I.42 Armstrong, Louis (US musician), I.414 military advisers, III.228 Armstrong, Neil (US astronaut), I.415 US policy, II.335–8, 389 Aron, Raymond (French social scientist), Cold War framework, III.242 I.50, II.31, III.2, 7, 517 Ford, III.225, 229 ARPA, III.393–4 Reagan, III.236, 237–8, 240–1, 517 ARPANET, II.103, III.397 anti-Americanism, I.407–8, 411–14, 418, 419, Asakai, Koichiro (Japanese ambassador to III.490, 493 United States), III.165, 171 anti-politics, III.16–20 ASEAN, III.176 antibiotics, III.474 Ashbrook, John (member,