

An edition of The Soviet attitude to political and social change in Central America, 1979-90 (2000)
case-studies on Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala
By Danuta Paszyn
Publish Date
2000
Publisher
St. Martin's Press, in association with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London
Language
eng
Pages
161
Description:
"This study examines Soviet policy towards the Sandinista left-wing government in Nicaragua and towards the guerrillas fighting for political and social change in El Salvador and Guatemala. It covers the period from the Sandinista victory in July 1979 until the loss of power in February 1990.". "If focuses on the chief determinants which underlay the Soviet involvement in this geographically remote area within the US immediate sphere of influence, and assesses the extent of this involvement. The Soviet-Nicaraguan relationship is examined in the context of both parties' relations with the United States, which conditioned the evolution of Soviet-Nicaraguan links. It also stresses the leading role played by Cuba, which acted in its own right, not as mere Soviet proxy.". "The author concludes that the Soviet Union had no intention of establishing another socialist regime in Nicaragua or a second 'Cuba', nor of promoting a revolution in El Salvador or Guatemala. Its limited involvement in the region was aimed at distracting the US at a time when Soviet foreign policy suffered many set-backs."--BOOK JACKET.