Lexington Books
Pages: 390
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-8384-7 • Hardback • August 2014 • $162.00 • (£125.00)
978-0-7391-8385-4 • eBook • August 2014 • $153.50 • (£119.00)
Bilyana Lilly is an international relations expert and consultant specializing in Russian foreign and domestic policy, NATO, U.S. foreign policy, and international security.
Introduction: From Measured Opposition to Assertive Confrontation
Chapter 1: An Alternative Explanation: Actors, Motivations and Influence in the Corridors of the Kremlin and Beyond
Chapter 2: Setting the Record Straight: Why Russia’s Security-Related Fears Are Exaggerated
Chapter 3: Russian BMD Policy 2000–2003: Prestige and Cooperation
Chapter 4: Russian BMD Policy and the Third NMD Site 2004–2008: Perceptions of Encirclement
Chapter 5: Russian BMD Policy and EPAA 2009–2014: The Significance of Russia’s Domestic Forces
Conclusion
Bilyana Lily . . . has written the most comprehensive study available on Russia’s Ballistic Missile Defense policies. In the course of her book Russian Foreign Policy toward Missile Defense: Actors, Motivations, and Influence, drawing on a huge array of media sources as well as interviews, she demonstrates how these policies serve as a barometer for measuring US-Russia and US-NATO relations, as well as how they illustrate the complex interplay of factions and forces among Russia’s elite.
— New Books Network
Lilly has provided readers with a most comprehensive analysis of the complex variables shaping the Russian response to the U.S. missile defense program. She enlightens us regarding both the domestic dimensions of Russian decision-making as well as Russian goals with respect to NATO and the United States. Her scholarship is especially impressive in the large number of Russian sources she used and the many interviews she has conducted with Russian officials.
— Richard Weitz, Center for Political-Military Analysis, Hudson Institute
Bilyana Lilly professionally captures the critical issues, relationships, and environment between the United States, Europe, and Russia as the United States developed and deployed its own missile defense system and planned, in conjunction with NATO, to defend Europe from the emerging Iranian missile threat. Her extensive research, remarkable interviews, and analysis provides extraordinary insight and perspective into this high profile, high stakes arena.
— General Henry A. Obering III, former director of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency, Office of the Secretary of Defense