Front cover image for Soviet-American relations, 1917-1920

Soviet-American relations, 1917-1920

For contents, see Author Catalog
Print Book, English, 1956-1958
Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1956-1958
History
2 volumes : illustrations, portraits, maps, facsimiles ; 25 cm
421522
Vol. I: Russia leaves the war
The immediate historical background
Personalities
First reactions
The Soviet approach to an armistice
First problems of "contact" with with the Soviet authorities
Allied deliberations in Paris
Wilson and the War Aims
Lansing and the recognition problem
The problem of anti-Bolshevik Russia
The Kalpashnikov affair
The first Brest-Litovsk crisis
The Fourteen Points
Siberia—the background
Siberia—the first exchanges
Japan asks for a free hand
The Diamandi incident
The Constituent Assembly
Brest-Litovsk and the Americans
Washington and the problem of "contacts"
Complications in Petrograd
The breakup in Petrograd
The Sisson papers
Siberia and the final Brest-Litovsk crisis
Robins and ratification
Vol. II: the decision to intervene
The Russian north
Complications in Murmansk
Siberia in March 1918
The first Japanese landing
The wraith of Allied-Soviet collaboration
The Czechoslovak Legion
Robins and Summers
Arthur Bullard and the "Compub"
Robins' departure
Envoi to Robins
The north in April and May
The Americans and the Czech uprising
Consul Poole and the future of the Czechs
Private American influences
The ripening of the Siberian question
Decision on Murmansk and Archangel
The decision on Siberia
The despatch of American forces to Russia
July and the final breakup
The end at Moscow
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