Social Defence and Soviet Military Power: An Inquiry Into the Relevance of an Alternative Defence Concept : ReportCenter for the Study of Social Conflict (C.O.M.T.), State University of Leiden, 1985 - 469 síður |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 33
Síða 118
... superpowers had to resupply their clients during the war . Soviet resupplies to Syria and Egypt began to arrive on October 9 or 10 , as did U.S. resupplies for Israel . The Soviet Union airlifted some 14,000 tons of weaponry to Egypt ...
... superpowers had to resupply their clients during the war . Soviet resupplies to Syria and Egypt began to arrive on October 9 or 10 , as did U.S. resupplies for Israel . The Soviet Union airlifted some 14,000 tons of weaponry to Egypt ...
Síða 146
... superpowers appears to be to deny access to each others ' client states . The location of military conflicts in the contemporary world - over 90 percent of all armed conflicts since 1945 have taken place outside Europe , the Soviet ...
... superpowers appears to be to deny access to each others ' client states . The location of military conflicts in the contemporary world - over 90 percent of all armed conflicts since 1945 have taken place outside Europe , the Soviet ...
Síða 180
... superpowers in the 1980s , combined with the ambitions of unstable local actors , make for a gloomy future , as ... super - powers ) : the ability now of clients or proxies to manipulate super - powers or to provoke confrontations ...
... superpowers in the 1980s , combined with the ambitions of unstable local actors , make for a gloomy future , as ... super - powers ) : the ability now of clients or proxies to manipulate super - powers or to provoke confrontations ...
Efni
Introduction | 1 |
Implications for Social Defence | 3 |
Nonviolence 7 Conceptual Clarification | 7 |
42 aðrir hlutar ekki sýndir
Common terms and phrases
active Afghanistan Africa aggression aircrafts allies American Angola armed forces armed resistance attack Austria Berlin bloc border Brezhnev British China Chinese Communist Party conflict coup crisis Cuba Cuban Czechoslovakia Democratic deportations East European East German Eastern economic Egypt Ethiopia fighters fighting FNLA foreign German guerrilla Hungarian Hungary internal invasion involvement Iran Iraq June Khrushchev Kremlin liberation Lithuanian major Middle East military intervention million Minister missiles mobilization Moscow movements MPLA Nagy naval NKVD nonviolent resistance North Korea North Yemen November nuclear threats occupation October Ogaden opponent organization partisans People's percent period Poland political population postwar President Red Army regime Republic revolution role Romania Russian situation social defence socialist Somalia South Soviet intervention Soviet leaders Soviet military Soviet troops Soviet Union Stalin strategic struggle superpowers Syria tanks territory Third World treaty uprising USSR Vietnam violence Warsaw Pact West Western Europe workers Yugoslavia