New evidence on the establishment of Soviet-Indonesian diplomatic relations (1949-53)
@article{Efimova2001NewEO, title={New evidence on the establishment of Soviet-Indonesian diplomatic relations (1949-53)}, author={L. M. Efimova}, journal={Indonesia and the Malay World}, year={2001}, volume={29}, pages={215 - 233} }
6 Citations
Revolution and Recognition in Post-War Asia: Restoring Missing Links in the Establishment of Indonesia–People’s Republic of China Relations, 1949–1950
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ABSTRACT This article sheds important new light on the early trajectory of contemporary Indonesia–People’s Republic of China (PRC) ties. Drawing on an extensive range of hitherto unexplored archives,…
The “Sole Legal Government of Vietnam”: The Bao Dai Factor and Soviet Attitudes toward Vietnam, 1947–1950
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Earlier historical studies often suggested that the Soviet leader Iosif Stalin, distrustful as he was of Ho Chi Minh's policies and attributing little importance to Vietnam, remained unwilling to…
De-stalinisation of soviet foreign policy towards Indonesia: reviewing the feasibility of the theory of foreign policy change
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This paper re-evaluates the changing policies of the Soviet Union towards Indonesia during the era of Joseph Stalin and Nikita Khrushchev, by applying the contemporary theory of foreign policy…
Cold War Economics: Soviet Aid to Indonesia
- EconomicsJournal of Cold War Studies
- 2008
Indonesia was one of the first developing countries to receive Soviet aid on a large scale. Declassified Soviet and East German archival sources, which illuminate the discussions and other…
Courting Diplomatic Disaster? The Difficult Integration of Vietnam into the Internationalist Communist Movement (1945––1950)
- Political Science
- 2006
This article argues that the diplomacy of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam came closer to failure than we have thought. Between 1945 and 1950, Vietnamese communists had a remarkably hard time…
Stalin and the Revival of the Communist Party of Indonesia
- Political Science
- 2005
As Indonesia was becoming independent after the Second World War, the Communist Party of Indonesia (CPI, or PKI in its Indonesian initials) came to play far less of a role in the country’s politics…
References
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