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Journal ArticleDOI

Soviet policy in East Asia

John C. Campbell, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1983 - 
- Vol. 61, Iss: 5, pp 1206
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TLDR
Since Mao's death, the Soviet Union has acquired a greater strategic stake in Asia as discussed by the authors and official Soviet statements express satisfaction about recent trends in Asian politics: the United States has been expelled from Indo-China, leaving a united Vietnam closely allied with Moscow; pro-Soviet regimes have been installed in Laos and Cambodia; political and economic ties have been established with the ASEAN-countries and with
Abstract
Since Mao's death, the Soviet Union has acquired a greater strategic stake in Asia. Official Soviet statements express satisfaction about recent trends in Asian politics: the United States has been expelled from IndoChina, leaving a united Vietnam closely allied with Moscow; pro-Soviet regimes have been installed in Laos and Cambodia; political and economic ties have been established with the ASEAN-countries and with

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Journal ArticleDOI

Russia between Europe and Asia: The Ideological Construction of Geographical Space

Mark Bassin
- 01 Jan 1991 - 
TL;DR: Gehort Russland zu Europa? Der Geograph hat die Antwort am ehesten zur Hand as mentioned in this paper, a geographical region is in the last resort an abstraction with a history which can sometimes tell us much about the past.
Journal ArticleDOI

China's Naval Nationalism: Sources, Prospects, and the U.S. Response

TL;DR: For example, the authors argued that China's maritime power will be limited by the constraints experienced by all land powers: enduring challenges to Chinese territorial security and a corresponding commitment to a large ground force capability will constrain China's naval capabilities and its potential challenge to U.S. maritime security.
Book ChapterDOI

China's economic policy and performance

TL;DR: In terms of sectoral growth strategies, China had made a significant move in the direction of the strategy that had proved so successful among its East Asian neighbors as discussed by the authors, and the question here is whether politics regularly spilled over into the economy, causing work stoppages and worse.