Lexington Books
Pages: 310
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-1-4985-2909-9 • Hardback • March 2016 • $122.00 • (£94.00)
978-1-4985-2911-2 • Paperback • July 2017 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-1-4985-2910-5 • eBook • March 2016 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Radoslav A. Yordanov is visiting scholar at the Harriman Institute of Columbia University.
Chapter 1: Rediscovering the Horn: September 1947–July 1960
Chapter 2: Enter Somalia: July 1960–October 1969
Chapter 3: Hedging Bets in Addis: February 1964–October 1969
Chapter 4: Engaging Mogadishu: October 1969–March 1976
Chapter 5: Ethiopia in Turmoil: February 1974–December 1976
Chapter 6: Bidding on Power of Diplomacy: February–July 1977
Chapter 7: Diplomacy of Power, Unleashed: August 1977–December 1978
Chapter 8: Ethiopia, the Unwieldy Ally: December 1978–March 1985
Chapter 9: The Road to Withdrawal: March 1985–May 1991
Conclusion: Empire on the Edge
The author delves deeply into available post–Cold War Russian and East European archives to present a thorough nuanced study of an aspect of Soviet policy in the developing world, namely in the strategically located Horn of Africa. Yordanov (Columbia) takes the correct approach to understanding such policies by analyzing them at local, regional, and global levels. Including useful insights on internal Soviet bureaucratic and political decision making, he also reminds us how Moscow utilized its East European allies to help implement competition at America’s expense, a gradualist approach valuing stability and predictability over direct confrontation or ideological extremes. Over time, the Americans and Soviets shifted clients between Ethiopia and Somalia showing how realpolitik was practiced in the region; it was a tug-of-war era in which Third World leaders sought to extract concessions from competing powers while not falling completely under their control. The author might have said more about how the Cold War experience set the stage for today’s regional instability. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals.
— Choice Reviews
The broadening of our perspective constitutes the most important plus of Yordanov’s intensive research. By embedding the dramatic culmination in a multi-perspective analysis of its pre-history and long-term impacts on Soviet-east African relations, the study enriches our understanding of the twisted development of Soviet Third World politics under changing international and domestic conditions. . . By underlining the varying shades and subtle distinctions that marked Soviet approaches toward single Third World countries and societies at different times, this book highlights the importance of concrete case studies and warns against premature generalizations concerning Soviet strategies.
— Slavic Review
Yordanov has provided us with a highly readable and useful survey of the Soviet Union’s, and indeed the wider socialist bloc’s, interests and activities in the Horn of Africa during the Cold War. He succeeds in providing the overdue update of Patman’s work which many have been waiting for and makes a valuable contribution to the rapidly expanding scholarship on the global Cold War. This book will be read with interest by students of the Horn of Africa, of the Cold War and of Soviet history alike.
— International Affairs
No part of sub-Saharan Africa was more deeply involved in the Cold War, and over a longer period, than the Horn. Drawing especially on the archives of the Soviet Bloc countries, Radoslav A. Yordanov is able to offer extensive new insights and information into this important arena of superpower competition.
— Christopher Clapham, Cambridge University
Radoslav A. Yordanov’s book, The Soviet Union and the Horn of Africa during the Cold War, is undoubtedly the most significant piece of scholarly research produced on this subject in the last two decades. Drawing on formerly secret documents from the countries of the former Warsaw Pact and Africa, this meticulously researched book sheds a great deal of new light on the rise and decline of Soviet involvement in the Horn of Africa, a key Cold War battleground for the superpowers and their proxies. It is a groundbreaking study.
— Robert G. Patman, University of Otago
Those who tried to track the intricacies of Soviet policy in the Horn forty years ago, as well as those interested today in the ways in which the Cold War played out in Africa, will find Radoslav A. Yordanov’s book to be a masterful assessment of thirty years of Soviet policy. The author has culled the archives of all the former Socialist states, as well as the United States and Great Britain, for evidence, and paints a careful and detailed picture of the factors that went into Soviet policy and the shifts in that policy that local political developments required. The scholarly community owes Dr. Yordanov a serious debt of gratitude for producing what will remain the definitive study of Soviet policy in the Horn of Africa.
— Roger E. Kanet, University of Miami