Synopses & Reviews
Drawing on East German, Soviet, and Western sources as well as years of study, travel, and military service in Germany and Eastern Europe, Major Macgregor examines East Germany's critical political-military role in the Soviet strategy to maintain control of Eastern Europe. He offers an analysis of the trends that have shaped Soviet-East German military collaboration; traces its origins in much earlier forms of Russo-German military alliance, and observes a revival of past strategic and military convergence as Moscow attempts to preserve control of an increasingly unstable Eastern Europe. The Soviet-East German military alliance has thus emerged as the backbone of the Warsaw Pact, and in the context of political uncertainty elsewhere in the Eastern bloc an enlarged military and political role in Soviet security policy for the East German state seems inevitable.
Synopsis
The German Democratic Republicâs emergence as the key political player within the Warsaw Pact has intensified debates concerning the critical East German military role in Soviet strategy for the future of Eastern Europe. Douglas Macgregor traces the origins of current collaboration to earlier forms of Russo-German military alliance. He explores the development of military cooperation since the formation of the GDR National Peopleâs Army in 1956 and discusses the importance of East Germany as a possible military model for the Warsaw Pactâs Northern Tier. German cooperation is historically as normal as one of conflict.
Table of Contents
Foreword; Preface; List of abbreviations; Introduction; 1. The legacy of success; 2. The east german rise to military prominence, 1956 1969; 3. Soviet-East German military collaboration in the post-1968 pact; 4. The Soviet-East German military alliance and Poland; 5. Conclusion; Notes; Select bibliography; Index.