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Inside the Soviet Alternate Universe
The Cold War's End and the Soviet Union's Fall Reappraised

By Dick Combs

312 pages | 6 x 9 | 2008

ISBN 978-0-271-03355-6 | cloth: $29.95 tr

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"Richard Combs was by training and experience a leading analyst of Soviet doctrine and behavior within the U.S. from the early 1960s until the late 1990s. His book combines scholarly exegesis with historical narrative. It will interest anyone seeking to make sense of the sudden collapse of the Soviet state. Its account of decision-making and advocacy within the Department of State and the National Security Council is equally compelling. In short, Mr. Combs has made a significant contribution to the international history of the twentieth century."—Richard H. Ullman, David K.E. Bruce Professor of International Affairs, Emeritus, Princeton University

“Synthesizing memoir, history, and policy analysis, Dick Combs’s book combines an instructive inside account of a high-ranking American diplomat’s years in the Soviet Union with a critical analysis of the evolution of Soviet thinking about world affairs. It also analyzes American thinking about the USSR and applies the lessons of all this to understand post-Soviet Russian politics and foreign policy, and American misperceptions thereof.”
—William Taubman, Amherst College

Much ink has been spilled by scholars, journalists, and former government officials from both the United States and the Soviet Union in efforts to explain how the Cold War came to an end and the Soviet system collapsed. Yet little consensus has emerged regarding these historic events. In this unique contribution to the debate, Dick Combs brings his many years of experience as academic researcher, policy analyst, and government insider to bear on these questions and finds the answer primarily in the destabilizing impact of Mikhail Gorbachev’s effort to modernize the Kremlin’s Stalinist mind-set.

Part I of the book sets the stage by affording the reader an “existential feel for the reality, including the psychological atmosphere, of Soviet communism” in everyday life as the author himself experienced it while serving as a young diplomat in the U.S. legation in Sofia, Bulgaria, in the late 1960s and later during eight years of diplomatic service at the U.S. embassy in Moscow. Part II then builds on this direct exposure to the Soviet mind-set to develop an analytical perspective on the causes for the Cold War’s end and the USSR’s disintegration as arising “essentially from Gorbachev’s attempt to reform the regime’s official conception of governance” once the Stalinist fixation on international class struggle had proven no longer viable as a basic rationale for policy making. Part III, finally, deploys this perspective to explain the unfolding of events that led to the ending of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet system, to reveal the relationship between the two, to point out the relevance of this explanation to current U.S. foreign policy, and to show how it can help us better understand what is happening in today’s Russia.


Dick Combs spent many years as a Foreign Service officer, from 1966 to 1989, with three tours of duty at the U.S. embassy in Moscow during the height of the Cold War. He later served as a Congressional foreign policy adviser to Senator Sam Nunn and as research professor at the Monterey Institute of International Studies.



Contents

Foreword:  Myths That Mislead

           by - Jack F. Matlock

Jr. Author’s Preface

Part One.

           Reminiscence: Ten Years Inside the Empire

                      Introduction to Part One
                      1    Initial Encounters with the Other Side
                      2    Working Levels of the Soviet Regime
                      3    Stagnation and Disaffection
                      4    The Beginning of the End

Part Two.

            Reflection: A Neglected Psychological Perspective

                      Introduction to Part Two
                      5    Comprehending Another Political World
                      6    Formation of the Soviet Conception of Governance
                      7    The Conception‚Äôs Evolution Under Khrushchev                                 and Brezhnev
                      8    Gorbachev and the Conception‚Äôs Terminal Phase

Part Three.

            Relevance: Psychological Milieu and Current Foreign Policy             Issues

                       Introduction to Part Three
                       9      Reappraising the Cold War‚Äôs End and the                                        Empire‚Äôs Fall I: Key Pieces of the Puzzle
                       10    Reappraising the Cold War‚Äôs End and the                                        Empire‚Äôs Fall II: Fitting the Pieces Together
                       11    Empire and Democracy in Post-Soviet Russia
                       12    An Analytical Blind Spot and Its Consequences

Notes

Bibliography

Index