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Doing the Détente Hustle
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# : |
10040 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1986 |
2,703 Words |
| Author
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Yossef Bodansky Yossef Bodansky is a Soviet policy specialist and a senior
analyst with Mid-Atlantic Research Associates, in Washington,
D.C. |
As relations begin to thaw between Washington and Moscow, and détente becomes a born-again word in the dictionaries of analysts, renewed attention must be focused on the manner in which each country acts in the political arena.
During the 1970s, the Soviets defined détente as a period in which the unceasing war between two opposing systems --socialism and capitalism--continues as fiercely as ever before, but within more constrained modes of behavior agreed upon by both sides. Thus, according to Soviet policy, the existence of détente--whose restrictions were intended to prevent a rapidly intensifying clash between the antagonists from escalating out of control--is merely a stepping stone in the right direction in the pursuit of their ultimate goal--eradication of capitalism from the face of the earth, in accordance with the tenets of Marxism-Leninism.
Conversely, the West considers the mere attainment of an era of détente to be a goal in its own right, under a period of détente, the West lets down its guards against the Soviet Union and starts to examine pieces of information, such as Soviet military moves, not in relation to American security in general, but in terms of their impact on the coveted state of détente.
By viewing the political world in this light, the West deprives itself of the capability to establish a clear intelligence picture of an accumulating threat. With their commitment to the détente, which they created and have presented to their citizens as one of their prime achievements, Western leaders are also constrained to acknowledge the reality of the failure of détente, as demonstrated by Soviet aggression in
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