See als11 counterrevolution; of- fense-defense balance
former Soviet Union, 344-49; interests of, 347; revolutions in, 347-49
Fox, Charles James, 58, 85
France: alliance with Austria, 48-49, 59; alliance with Spain (Family Compact of 1761), 48-49, 6o; Anti-Sedition and Alien acts, 88; and ar- mies revolutionnaires, 92; and Army of Italy, 105-6; and Army of the North, 75, So, 86, 90; and Brumaire coup, 1 16-17; and Caribbean possessions, 86, 98; and Committee on Gen- eral Security, 91; and Committee on Public Safety (CPS), 91?
former Soviet Union, 344-49; interests of, 347; revolutions in, 347-49
Fox, Charles James, 58, 85
France: alliance with Austria, 48-49, 59; alliance with Spain (Family Compact of 1761), 48-49, 6o; Anti-Sedition and Alien acts, 88; and ar- mies revolutionnaires, 92; and Army of Italy, 105-6; and Army of the North, 75, So, 86, 90; and Brumaire coup, 1 16-17; and Caribbean possessions, 86, 98; and Committee on Gen- eral Security, 91; and Committee on Public Safety (CPS), 91?
Revolution and War_nodrm
B.
On the "new thinking" that inspired these reforms, see Thomas Risse?
Kappen, "Ideas Do Not Float Freely: Transnational Coalitions, Domestic Structures, and the End of the Cold War," International Organization 48, no.
2 (1994).
? ? ? Conclusion
in 1917, for example), they will be strongly inclined to seek gains for them- selves and to deny potential gains to others. By the time the Soviet Union disintegrated, however, most of the other great powers had been close po- litical and military allies for nearly four decades. Because these states did not regard each other as potential security threats, the normal concern with relative position was muted. Instead of debating whether or not to inter- vene-as great powers did after every revolution we have examined-the Western powers have tried to support the new regimes by providing aid and advice. In addition, because the Cold War inhibited the development of extensive economic or political ties between East and West, foreign powers did not have major interests in the Soviet Union (unlike Britain and France in 1917 Russia or the United States in Iran, for example) and could take a more detached view of events there.
For all of these reasons, therefore, postrevolutionary relations between the former Soviet Union and the other major powers have been unusually tranquil. Circumsftances continue to evolve rapidly, however, and relations could easily deteriorate if Russian elites become convinced that the West ei- ther is responsible for their plight or is taking excessive advantage of it. 19 This danger suggests that Western diplomacy must strike a balance between acknowledging tlh. e legitimate interests of the new Eurasian states (espe- cially Russia) and turning a blind eye to internal abuses or resurgent expan- sionism. To date, ! however, the international consequences of the revolutions of 1989-92 have been uncharacteristically benign.
Unfortunately, relations within the former Soviet Union have been more conflictive, and for reasons that are consistent with balance-of-threat theory. First, the collapse of the USSR created an unstable and uncertain balance of power among the constituent republics (or between competing ethnic or na- tional groups within them). As illustrated by the recent wars-between Ar- menia and Azerbaijan and between Russia and the breakaway province of Chechnya-uncertainties about the true balance of power can encourage both sides in such a dispute to go to war confident of success. 20
19 AttheDecember1994summitoftheConferenceonSecurityandCooperationinEurope, for example, Russian president Boris Yeltsin charged the West with "sowing the seeds of mis- trust" and complained of excessive U. S. influence, saying that "it is a dangerous illusion to suppose that the destinies of continents . . . can somehow be managed from some single cap- ital. " "Yeltsin Says NATO Is Trying to Split Continent Again," New York Times, December 6, 1994- At, A4.
20 Although Azerbaijan had reason to believe it was stronger (its gross national product was roughly 6o percent bigger than Armenia's and its population and armed forces more than twice as large), the Armenians turned out to be far more capable on the battlefield. See The Military Balance 1 9 93-94 (London: International Institute of Strategic Studies, 1993). Sim- ilarly, the Chechens were extremely confident that they could defy Russian pressure despite the enormous odds against them, and their resistance was unexpectedly effective.
? ? [3471
? ? Revolution and War
Second, just as revolutionary states usually adopt policies that differ from those of the old regime, the newly independent republics of the former So- viet Union are now free to pursue interests that were forgotten, suppressed, or irrelevant under Soviet domination. Thus, Ukraine has sought to regain control of Crimea; Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought over ethnic en-
claves within their respective territories; and a number of ethnic and na- tional groups have advanced claims for independence from their respective republics. Disputes over how to divide the assets of the former USSR have been frequent as well, and the Soviet legacy of interdependence has compli- cated matters by making each government's situation dependent on policies adopted elsewhere. 21 In short, where Western perceptions of Russian inten- tions have improved since the collapse of Communism, a number of former Soviet republics now view each other with considerable suspicion.
Third, because the newly independent republics face the same problems of legitimacy and order that revolutionary states often confront, the tempta- tion to mobilize support by invoking nationalism has been difficult to resist. Unfortunately, such efforts often involve playing up both real and imagined grievances against others, and because different groups within the former Soviet Union are now free to teach their own versions of history, the danger has increas? d that past quarrels will fuel future conflicts. 22 Needless to say, these are ideal conditions for spiraling. When conflicts of interest arise, each side will be more likely to see its own actions as entirely justified while viewing the actions of others as unwarranted aggression.
These problems will be compounded by the intermingling of ethnic or na- tional groups within and across existing political boundaries, which creates the possibility that isolated ethnic minorities will see themselves as vulner- able to persecution by majorities who regard them as potentially disloyal "fifth columns. "23 When national or ethnic groups are scattered within dif- ferent political units, one community may worry that a nationalist resur- gence in another republic could trigger a sympathetic response from
conationals within its own borders. Thus, nationalist -Ideologies can create fears of contagion similar to those produced by a transnational revolution- ary ideology.
Afinal source of conflict is Russia's growing effort to reassert its influence within the "near abroad," either to protect ethnic Russian populationS, to re-
21 See Dawisha and Parrott, Russia and the New States ofEurasia, 197--98.
22 Onthisgeneralphenomenon,seeVanEvera,CausesofWar,vol. 2:NationalMisperceptions and the Roots oJWar (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, forthcoming), chap. 11; and E. H. Dance, History the Betrayer: A Study in Bias (London: Hutchinson, 1960).
23 See Barry Posen, "The Security Dilemma and Ethnic Conflict," Survival 35, no. 1 (1993); and Stephen Van Evera, "Managing the Eastern Crisis: Preventing War in the Former Soviet Empire," Security Studies 1, no. 1 (1992); and "Hypotheses on Nationalism and War," Interna- tional Security 18, no. 4 (1994).
? ? ? Conclusion
tain access to valuable resources, or to stabilize the situation along its lengthy border. 24 Increased Russian influence might deter or dampen vio- lence in those areas in the long run, but its immediate impact has been to alarm its neighbors and to reawaken Western concerns. Relations within the former Soviet Union and relations with other powers are thus inextricably linked, and it will be much more difficult for Russia to maintain amicable re- lations with the rest of the world if the level of conflict within its former em- pire is on the rise.
In sum, relations among the newly independent states of Eurasia are characterized by uncertain balances of power, serious conflicts of interest, exaggerated perceptions of hostility, and fears of nationalist contagion. Not surprisingly, therefore, relations within the former Soviet Union have been (and are likely to remain) much less tranquil than relations between Russia and the other major powers.
Thus, balance-of-threat theory does shed light on the likely consquences of the Soviet collapse and helps identify where the probable axes of conflict will be found. These events also underscore the value of a systemic ap- proach, as the absence of great-power conflict in their aftermath is not due solely to the character of the new regimes: it is also due to the benign inter- national context in which the collapse of the Soviet empire took place and the fact the the "revolutions" of 1 989-92 brought these regimes into greater
ideological conformity with the West. Therefore, the events of 1989-92 rein- force a central contention of this entire book: one cannot understand the in- ternational implications of revolutionary change by looking solely at the revolutionary state; one must also consider the configurations of power and interest in the system as a whole.
THE FUTURE OF REVOLUTION
For some writers, the grand ideological struggles that have rent modern society for nearly four centuries are now fading away, to be replaced by more limited (and for the most part, peaceful) disputes over national inter- ests and an increasingly tranquil world order. This perspective sees mass revolution as inextricably linked to the process of modernization-to the spread of market forces and the transition from hierarchical forms of gov- ernment to political orders based m1 equality, mass participation, and indi- vidual rights. With the collapse of Communism and the apparent triumph of modem liberal capitalism, so the argument runs, the great ideological
24 See Alexei G. Arbatov, "Russian Foreign Policy Priorities for the 1990s," in Russian Secu- rity after the Cold War: Seven Views from Moscow, ed. Teresa Pelton Johnson and Steven E. Miller (Cambridge, Mass. : Center for Science and International Affairs, 1994), 13-20; and Vladimir P. Lukin, "Our Security Predicament," Foreign Policy 88 (fall 1992).
[3491
? Revolution and War
struggles of the past are behind us and humankind has reached the "end of histor. y"25 If this view is correct, then my theory explains a phenomenon that may not trouble us any longer. H might be correct but irrelevant, and the lessons drawn from this study of little enduring value.
Because revolutions are so dangerous and destructive, we might prefer a world in which Marx's "locomotive of history" no longer ran. Unfortu- nately, there are good reasons to question this optimistic expectation.
First, even if mass revolution were strictly a modern phenomenon, the process of modernization is not yet complete. A mass revolution may be un- likely in any of the advanced industrial powers, but it remains a possibility in many other parts of the world. The Iranian Revolution occurred less than two decades ago (a rather short period by historical standards), and it takes little imagination to see revolutionary potential in places such as Egypt, India, Pakistan, China, parts of Latin America, and much of sub-Saharan Africa. The collapse of Communism may have discredited Marxism, but other alternatives-ranging from liberalism to radical nationalism to reli- gious fundamentalism-are available to take its place.
Second, the belief that the current hegemony of liberal capitalism will bring an end to ideological conflicts and eliminate the allure of revolution- ary transformation overlooks several matters: the possibility of unintended consequences, the alienating effects of liberal capitalism itself, and the human capacity to create new and appealing visions of a preferable social order. As Kenneth Jowitt persuasively argues, all social orders alienate some of their members, and the amoral, acquisitive individualism of liberal capi- talist society will create space for new ideologies emphasizing transcendant moral values and communitarian ideals. Instead of ideological homogene- ity, therefore, Jowitt predicts that the end of the Cold War will foster a pe- riod of ideological ferment in which new ideologies arise to challenge the hegemony of liberal-capitalist individualism. 26
Thus, the liberal-capitalist order may not always be seen as universally or eternally preferable, and it is too soon to dismiss the possibility that pre- sent discontents will foster the emergence of new dissident ideologies. In- deed, these possibilities are already evident in the rise of religious fundamentalism (whose underlying principles challenge liberalism's no- tions of tolerance), the growing pressure for cultural diversity (where lib-
25 Exponents of this view include Francis Fukuyama, The End ofHistory and the Last Man (New York: Basic Books, 1992); Theodore S. Hamerow, From the Finland Station: The Grllying of Revolution in the Twentieth Century (New York: Basic Books, 1990); and John Mueller, Retreat
from Doomsdlly: The Obsolescence ofMajor War (New York: Basic Books, HJB9); and Quiet Cata- clysm: Reflections on the Recent Transformation of World Politics (New York: HarperCollins, 199. 5).
26 See Kenneth Jowitt, New World Disorder: The Leninist Extinction (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991).
? ? ? Conclusion
eralism's emphasis on individual rights confronts claims for the collective rights of particular groups}, and the emergence of the Greens, the militia movement in America, or neo-fascism in Europe. My point is not that any of these movements will spawn the next great revolutionary ideology, but simply that new challengers will emerge, maybe sooner than we think. If their adherents achieve political power in some existing state-especially if through violent means-the dynamics I have identified are likely to come into play. Indeed, the scope and speed of mass communications could make it easier for dissident social movements to spread their principles across existing borders and amplify the normal fear of contagion. Instead of a relatively stable world of well-ordered national states, in short, we may be entering a period of renewed ideological ferment and increased transna- tional turbulence. 27
If this argument is correct, then we are unlikely to enjoy the tranquility of a world in which violent revolution is a thing of the past. Armed with a bet- ter understanding of the connection between revolution and war, however, we may still avoid some of the tragic results of earlier revolutions. That hope is both the purpose and the paradox of social science: by gaining a bet- ter grasp of the causal forces that shape social phenomena, we may be able to manipulate them so as to render our own theories invalid. Given the re- grettable international consequences that accompany most revolutions, that would be a small price to pay.
27 See Sidney Tarrow, Power in Movement: Social Movements, Collective Action, and Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 193--98. Tarrow also suggests that the impact of these movements may "first be ferocious, uncontrolled, and widely diffused, but later ephemeral. "
? ? ? Abadan, 241
Abercrombie, Ralph, n6n
accommodation, 2, 204, 342; American revolu-
tion and, 281; by England of Soviet Union, 176, 178; Iraruian revolution and, 256, 259; Mexican revolution and, 296; Russian civil vvar and, 158-60, 163-64, 20)-4, 207
Acheson, Dean, )5, )1), )15-18, )22 Adams, John, 2710, 276-77, 285n, 329 Adams, John Quincy, 285n Afghanistan. See Soviet Union Africa, sub-Saharan, 350
Aland Islands, 167
Albania, 300
Algeria, Islamic Salvation Front in, 247, 248n.
See also Iranian revolution Algiers accord, 238
Allende, Salvador, 336n Alsace, 56, 6o, 63, 69, 120 Amal, 249
Amanullah, Emir, 18o-81
American Independence, War of, 269--71, 280, 283; France and, 47, 53
American revolution, 13n, 16, 26g-87, 3 10, 327, 330, 33;m, 344; Barbary states and, 28o, 284; comparison vvith other revolutions, 283, 287; Continental Congress of, 270; England and, 27r>-'J2, 280, 31. 7-28, 332; Founding Fathers and, 270, 2710, 281-83, 285-86; France and, 27r>-'JI, 280, 327-28, 332; Indian tribes and, 271, 284; Latin America and, 281; Model Treaty and, 270, 283; Spain and, 27o-71, 280. See also American Independence, War of; United States
Amiens, n7
Amiens, Peace of, 278 al-Amin, Sayyid Ibrahim, 245
Amur, 152
Anatolia, 299-303, 307
[3531
Anglo-French convention, 150
Anglo-Persian treaty (1919), 179-Bo Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907, 179 Anglo-Soviet trade agreement (1921), 175-79,
188, 195, 204
Angola, 336n
Ankara, 3o6
Antoinette, Marie; 58, 96
Arbe02, Jacobo, 35, 336n
Archangel, 134, 136-37, 141, 146 Armenia, 166, 182, 301, 304, 329, 347-48 Armstrong, David, 7
Articles of Confederation, 271-'72, 283
Artois, comte d', 54, 58, 6m, 64. See also Louis XVIII
ai-Assad, Hafez, 249
Auckland, Lord. See William Eden
Austria: mobilization of forces (1792), 72; for- mal convention vvith Prussia (1791), 63, 65;
and War of the First Coalition, 72, 74-75, 77-7? 8o, 82, 89-91, 96-g7, 101, 104-B; and War of the Second Coalition, no-n, 1 1 3-14,
Baath regime, 237-39, 261
Babeuf, Fram;ois-Noel (Gracchus), 109n Baden, 89
Bahonar, Muhammed, 217
Bahrain, 244, 261
n7
Austria-Hungary, 154, 300
Austrian Netherlands, 71, 74-75, Bo, 119 Austro-Prussian alliance, 70, 73, 120 Avignon, 56, 6o, 70
Azerbaijan, 166, 180, 182, 304, 347-48 Aziz, Tariq, 239
.
See also specific revolutions
Index
? Bakmetev, Boris, 145n
Bakhtiar, Shahpour, 212, 235-36, 240 al-Bakr, Ahmad, 238n
balance of power, 19, 21-22, 32, 38 43-44, 46,
327, 333-34, 337; American revolution and, 270, 271n, 275, 283-84, 286, 333-34, 337; Chi- nese revolution and, 312, 323, 325-26, 333-34; Eastern European revolutions and, 345; former Soviet Union and, 347, 349; French revolution and, 73, 1 1S-2o, 122, 128, 312, 333; Iranian revolution and, 210, 25o-54, 267, 312, 333; Mexican revolution and, 2? -97, 333-34, 337; Russian revolution and, 129, 143, 152-53, 17? 1, 173? 2o2-o5, 2o8, 312, 333; theory of, vii-viii, 3-4, 6, 19, 339-40; Turkish revolution and, 333-34, 337
balance of threat, viii, 18, 43, 46, 1o8, 331, 333-40, 342, 344; Chinese revolution and, 312-19, 323, 326; Eastern European revolu- tions and, 344-45; former Soviet Union and, 347, 349; French revolution and, 11S-28; Iranian revolution and, 210, 25o-68; Russian revolution and, 17? 5, 179, 182, 201-9
Balfour, Arthur, 13? , 135n, 143n, 145n, 153n Balkanwars (1912-1913), 300
Baltic states, 159, 167, 169, 173, 185-{)1, 195, 197 Bani-Sadr, Abolhassan, 216--17, 224-26, 23o-31,
235, 256-5- 7, 263-64
Barbary pirates, 271-72, 283
Barere, Bertramd de, 9?
Barras, Paul, Vicomte de, 107
Barrett, David, 315n
Barthelemy, Frran,. ois, 1o8
Basel, Treaty of, 104
Bastille, storming of, 53
Bavaria, 48; Soviet government in, 165, 167,
187, 205, 335 .
Bavarian-Belgian exchange, 118
Bay of Pigs, U. S. invasion of, 41
Bazargan, Mefndi, 216, 223-26, 230, 238, 254,
256-5- 7, 263
Beethoven, Ludwig von, 58
Beheshti, Ayatollah Muhammed, 216--17, 259n Belarus, 345n
Belgium, 41n, 48, 69, 71-72, 83, 89, 90n, 91, 95n,
97, 101, 104-Q7, 111 Berlin, Treaty of, 105 Blake, William, 58
? Blanning,T. C. W. ,71
Boissy d'Anglas, Fran? ois-Antoine, 101 Bolivia, 24, 38n
Bolshevik party, 22n, 26, 129-37, 139-40, 142,
144, 146-5- 0, 152, 154? 156-5- 7? t6o, t62-66, 168, 170, 173-'J5, 178, 186, 201-3, 2o6, 284, 297? 309-10, 329-30, 335? 338, 342; Four- teenth Party Congress of, 191; Fifteenth Party Congress of, 200; coup d'etat by, 130, 138, 141; Decree of Peace, 131; intentions of, 156-5- 7. See also Russia; Russian revolution; Soviet Union
Bolshevism, 152-55, 159, 167, 171, 179, 190-91, 204, 208. Seealsoideology: of Russian revo- lution
"Bolshevization," 19?
Bonapart? Lucien, 117
Bonaparte, Napoleon, toon, 103, 105-7, 112-13,
117, 120, 278-80, z86; and beginning of
Napoleonic era, 117
Borodin, Michael, 197-98
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 300
Brandler, Heinrich, 189
Brest-Litvosk, Treaty of, 11, 135, 142, 144, 158,
t8on, 203, 205, 300
Brezhne? Leonid, 230, 252
Briand, Aristide, 189
Brissot de Warville, Jean-Pierre, 65-67, 75, 76n,
78n, 8o, 8?
Brown, Harold, 225
Brumaire coup, 116-1- 7
Brunswick, duke of, 72, 77 Brunswick Manifesto, 76, 120 Bryan, William Jennings, 295 Brzezinski, Zbigniew, 216, 225, 25m Buchanan, George, 135
Buckler, William H. , 16o
Bukharin, Nikolai, 13m, 132, 189-91, 200 Bull, Hedley, 7
Bullitt, William, 161-63, 168n, 204 Bundy, William P. , 324n
Burgat, Fran? ois, 247
Burges, James, 59
Burke, Edmund, 8, 5S-59, 82, 117 Byelorussia, 173
Calvert, Peter, 7, 13
Cambaceres, Jean-Jacques, 101
Cambodia, Khmer Rouge in, 41n, 326
Campo Formio, Treaty of, 1o6, 109-11, 124, 128
Canton (Guangzhou), 197-98
Carden, Lionel (Sir), 292n
Cardenas, Lazaro, 292
Carnot, Lazar? 78n, 93n, 95, 101n, 1o8 Carranza, Venustiano, 288-{)8
Carrizal, 290, 296
Carter, Jimmy, 224-25, 228, 251, 254, 256
Carter doctrine, 251, 258n
Castro, Fidel, 9-10, 26-2- 7, 35 CatherineII,Empress(ofRussia),49,59,61-62,
71, 8? 11on, 119n, 121
Central Powers, 133-34, 137-38, 141, 143-47,
149, 153-54, 300, 310
Ceylon, 107, 117
Chanak, 305
Charles, Archduke, 115-16
Charles rv, King (of Spain), 121 Charles V, Emperor (of Austria), 105 Chauvelin, Bernard, 85-86, B9n Chechnya, 347
Chesapeake incident, 279
Index
? ? [3541
? ? Canada, 149, 271, 274-'J5, 28o
? Index
Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi), 197? 9, 312-13, 316, 332
Chicherin, Gyorgy V. , 142, 157, 159, 162n, 164-65, 169, 1? ? n, 181, 183, 188, 196, 304
Chile, 41n, 336n
China, People's Republic of (PRC), 34-35, 37, 40, 350; civil war in, 313-14; Communist Party (CCP), 197--99, 31o-18, 32m, 322-23, 327; Cultural Revolution in, 324-25; detona- tion of nuclear weapons by, 324; Great Leap Forward in, 324; and India, war with, 326; and Japan, 325; neutrality of, 325; and Pak- istan, 326; populallion of, 329; Red Army of, 322; Socialist Youth Corps in, 198n; Soviet Union, alliance with, 318, 326; and the Third World, 325; and United States, rapproche- ment with, 326; and Vietnam, 326; and West- em Europe, 325. See also Chinese revolution; specific revolutions
China Hands, 37
China lobby, 322, 334
Chinese Eastern Railway, 140n, 141, 151-52,
183, 185
Chinese revolution, ? 4, 16, 269, 31o-3o; Cold War and, 310, 314, 318; compared with other revolutions, 310, 312, 327; deaths in, 2m; Great Britain and, 312, 31? n, 338; Japan and, 311-12, 316-17, 321; KoreanWarand, 310, 319-23, 325-29, 332, 344; Soviet Union and, 310, 312-15, 317-18, 326, 328-29; United States and, 2, 310, 312-26, 329, 336, 338, 344; Vietnam and, 324-25
Chongqing incident, 316
Christopher, Warren, 251n, 263
Churchill, Winston, 154-57, 179, 204, 2o6, 305
Cisalpine Republic, 112, 114, 117
Claviere, Etienne, 82n
Clay, Henry, 28on
revolution and, 262-63, 338; Korean War and, 322; Russian revolution and, 163, 204, 338; Turkish revolution and, 309
Communism, 35, 40, 193, 335; collapseof, 349-50 Conference on Security and Cooperation in
Europe, 347il
Congress of the Peoples of the East, 182 Congress of Toilers of the Far East, 182 Connolly, John, 251n
Constantine, King, 303
contagion, 30, 39-47, 269, 329, 333-36, 338-40, 343, 351; American revolution and, 281, 284--S5, 335n; Chinese revolution and, 318, 324-25, 334; Eastern European revolutions and, 344-46; former Soviet Union and, 348-49; French revolution and, 73--74, 81, 90, 94, 118, 121-27, 249, 334-35; French revolu- tionary, English fear of, 83, 85--S6, 8H9, 335; Iranian revolution and, 210, 240, 242-43, 246-49, 258-63, 265, 267-68, 334-35; Mexican revolution and, 297, 335n; Russian revolution and, 131-32, 144-45, 152, 154-55, 165, 174, 177, 183, 191, 205--S, 249, 334-35; Turkish revolution and, 309, 335n. See also export of revolution; offense-defense bal- ance; revolution: optimism of
containment, policy of, 343-44 contra war, 10, 336n Convention of Reichenbach, 59 Cordeliers club, 55
Cossacks, 133-34, 141, 14? 152, 184 Council of Action, 176-78 counterrevolution, 31-32, 42-47, 269, 334,
336-38, 340, 343; American revolution and, 270, 272, 27? 281, 285--S6; Chinese revolution and, 316-17, 334, 336; Eastern European revolutions and, 346; French revo- lution and, 55, 61-66, 68-69, 75, 78, 81, 9? 2, 94, 98-100, 104, 108, 115-16, 12o-21, 123-27, 333-34, 336, 338, 343n; Iranian revo- lution and, 210, 225, 255-56, 258, 261, 334, 336, 338, 343n; Mexican revolution and, 297; Russian revolution and, 166-67, 171, 197, 200, 2o6--S, 334, 336, 338. See also foreign in- tervention; offense-defense balance
Crimea, 348
critical theory, 4-5, 34o-42
Cuba, 9, 27, 35, 40, 250, 298
Cuban revolution, 14, 38n, 42, 336; deaths in,
2m; U. S. response to, 2, 42
Cuno, Wilhelm, 189
Curzon, Lord, 14? n, 149, 154, 179 Czechoslovakia, 155, 336n
Czechoslovak Legion, 137-42, 144-47, 15o-52
Danton, Georges, 76n, 79, 8? n, 93, 94n, 96, 9? 9
Dardanelles, 300
Al-Dawa al-Islamiya (Islamic Call), 238-39, 242, 200
Clemenceau, Georges, 137, 150, 155, 2o6 Clinton, George, 274ft
Clinton, William, 229
Cloots, Jean-Baptiste (Anacharsis), 57, 66, 94,
128
Clubb, Edmund, 315n
Cobenzl, Louis, 110
Cold War, vii, 2, 336, 350
collective action problems, in revolution, 23, 29 Collot d'Herbois, Jean Marie, 87il
Columbus, New Mexico, Mexican raid on, 290 Comintem, 164-65, 187, 191, 197, 208; First
Congress, 176n, 192; Second Congress, 170, 179, 192, 205; Third Congress, 188, 192, 194, 205; Fourth Congress, 193? 4; Fifth Con- gress, 193? 4; Executive Committee of (ECCI), 192? 4, 197, 199; transformation of, 192? 4, 201; Twenty-one Points of, 192? 3
communication 32, 45, 328, 344, 351; American revolution and, 270, 285; Chinese revolution and, 322; Eastern European revolutions and, 345-46; French revolution and, 338; Iranian
l355l
?
? Dawes plan, 195
Al-Dawlah, Vusuq, 179
Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen,
54, 56, 6o, 273n
Deforgues, FrM? ois, 96-9- 7 Delacroix, Charles, 107 Delessart, Antoine, 7f>-J? l Denikin, Anton, 148-49, 158, 166 Denmark, 96, 190
Desmoulins, Camille, 49n
Diaz, Porfirio, 287-88, 292
Dodecanese Islands, 300
domestic politics, of revolutionary states, 3,
! riO, to8, 122, 334, 339; American revolution and, 28o-82, 284, 286; Chinese revolution and, 323; French revolution and, 64, 72-73, 334; Iranian revolution and, 258-59, 266-67, 284, 334
Dorchester, LoKd, 274n
Ducos, Roger, u7
Dulles, John Foster, 324
Dumas, Roland, 236
Dumoriez, Charles-Fran? ois, 71-72, 76-'78, So,
83, 87, 90-91, 94n; and attempt to isolate
Austrians, 71--'72
Dundas, Henry. 84, 88
Eastern Europe: Communist governments in, 344-45; post-Cold War Western support of, 347
Eastern European revolutions (1989-1992), 344-49; Cold War and, 347; comparison with other revolutions, 345; former Soviet Union and, 344-47; Marxism-Leninism and, 346; nuclear weapons and, 346; Soviet Union, collapse of, and, 344-45, 347; and super- power competition, 346-47; United States and, 345; Warsaw Pact and, 344
East Germany, 336n
Eden, William (Lord Auckland), 59, 84, 88 Egypt, 223, 229n, 237, 246, 248, 350 Eisenhower, Dwight D. , 35
elite revolution, 12-13, 20, 21n, 2! r30, 43, 344;
American revolution and, 283; Eastern Eu- ropean revolutions and, 345-46; Turkish revolution and, 299, 309? See also mass revo- lution
emigres. See exiles
England: Conservatives in, 166, 176-S-'J ,
195? 6, 204; French West Indies, blockade on, 274; "Iranjan Purchasing Office" in, 234; Labour Party in, 190, 195; and the Russo- Polish war, 169, 203; Socialist Party in, 165; Soviet espionage in, 196; and War of the First Coalition, 82? 1, 95, 97? 8, 104-oS; and War of the Second Coalition, 110, 112-14, 117; and Whig Party, 86. Seealsospecific revo- lutions
English revolution, 14 Enzeli, 180
Estonia, 148, 150, 152-53, 166; Soviet treaty with, 167
Ethiopia, 8; revolution in, 14, 336n
exiles, 31, 36-37, 4<>-42, 45, 47, 334; Chinese revolution and, 322; French revolution and, 54-55. 57? 59, 61-62, 64-65, 68-69, 71, 73-'74? 82, 84, 871\, 88-,-89 91, 99? 104, 107-8, 112,
115, 12o-2- 1, 123-24, 126-28, 334; Iranian rev- olution and, 226, 235, 240, 256, 334, 336; Mexican revolution and, 289; Russian revo- lution and, 163, 195, 207, 334
export of revolution: American revolution and, 281, 284-85; Chinese revolution and, 324-25; French revolution and, 122-26; Iranian revo- lution and, 214, 223, 239, 243, 258, 262, 266; Russian revolution and, 195, 199? See also contagion; offense-defense balance; revolu- tion: optimism of
Fadlallah, Ayatollah Said Muhammed, 246n Fahd, Crown Prince (of Saudi Arabia), 253 Fallen Timbers, Battle of, 275n
Fao Peninsula, 242, 245
Ferdinand, King (of Naples), 114
Feuillants, 55, 64-65, 68-'Jt, 75--'76
Fichte, Johann, 58
Fifteenth I<hordad Foundation, 2671\
Finland, 155n, 167, 335
First Coalition, collapse of, 103-8. See also spe-
cific countries
First Coalition, War of the, 46, 74-88, 119, 335, 343; Austro-Prussian invasion and, 76, 77, 240; causes of, 62--'74; conduct of, B9-109
Flanders, 63
Fletcher, Henry, 291, 298
Florida, 271, 275, 278
Floridablanca, Count, 58n
Foch, Ferdinand, 154-55, 157, t? , 204 Foreign intervention, 336; Chinese revolution
and, 343; French revolution and, 64, 343; Iranian revolution and, 343; Russian civil war and, 149-58, 168; Russian revolution and, 343-44.
See als11 counterrevolution; of- fense-defense balance
former Soviet Union, 344-49; interests of, 347; revolutions in, 347-49
Fox, Charles James, 58, 85
France: alliance with Austria, 48-49, 59; alliance with Spain (Family Compact of 1761), 48-49, 6o; Anti-Sedition and Alien acts, 88; and ar- mies revolutionnaires, 92; and Army of Italy, 105-6; and Army of the North, 75, So, 86, 90; and Brumaire coup, 1 16-17; and Caribbean possessions, 86, 98; and Committee on Gen- eral Security, 91; and Committee on Public Safety (CPS), 91? 9, 101, 1o8, 119, 121; and Conspiracy of the Equals, 109n; Constituent Assembly of, 56; and Constitution of 1791, 6on, 63n; and Constitution of the Year I (1793), 92n, too; and Constitution of the Year
Index
? ? ? ? ? Index
France (cont. )
III (1795), 99-100; and declaration of war (1792), 72; and Decree on Liberty, 81, 83, 84n, 86--87, 93, 12o-2. 2, 127, 341-42; and Directory, 10o-101, 104-11, . 114, 117, 128; and Directory, foreign policy of; 101-3, 276, 278; and Egypt, expedition to, 1 12-13, 1 17, 120; and first par- tition of Poland (1772), 47; and Florea) coup, 107? , 124; and founding of the First Repub- lic ("Second Revolution"), 75-77, 82; and Fructidor coup, no; and les grandes limites,
101-2, 1 1 1, 120; and levee en masse, 92, 99n, 126; and Great Terror, 99; and Law of 14 Frimaire, Year II, 92; and Law of the General Maximum, 92; and Law on Suspects, 92; Legislative Assembly of, 56; and Low Coun- tries, 47; military capabilities of, 67; National Assembly of, 53, 55, 6o-61, 63? 6, 68-76, 78, 94, 99, 1 19-20, 122, 124, 126-27, 333; National Convention of, 76, 79"-81, 83-87, 89-96, 98, 99n, 1oo-101, 104, 1o8, 121; National Guards ifed&es) of, 54, 56, 75; and Navigation Act, 95; and Ottoman Empire, 47; and Polish Succes- sion of 1764, 47; "sister republics" of, 1o6, 108, 111, 115, 124n, 125, 336n; and support of Iraq by, 235; and Sweden, 47; and Thermido- rian regime, 99-111; and threats to Austria, 71-72; and White Terror, 99, 115, 120, 284. See also French revolution; specific revolutions
Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, 101, 1 18-19 Francis, David, 140, 146
Frederick William, 48-49, 57, 59, 61, 63, 70-71,
73, 77, 97, 104, 1 19, 121
French revolution, 7? , 14, 16, 46-128, 209, 210, 241, 243, 28o, 287, 298, 310, 327, 329; and an- cien regime, 54, 57, 120; Austria and, 46 48-49, 5? 2, 65-'J1, 7J, 332-33; Catholic Church and, 50, 54, 62, 120; cause of, 53; deaths in, 2m; England and, 8, 47-49, 52, 5? 2, 64, 67, 71, 73, 81, ? , 119, 121-22, 124, 127-28, 332, 336; and expansionism, 77-81,
1 1o-13; foreign response to, 2, 57? 2, 71, 2o6; Germany and, 56, 63, 70-71, 96, 101, 104-5, 115, 12o-21; and "Great Fear," 54; Holland and, 47, 49, 69, 71, 7J, 85, 87, 89-9o, 94? 5, 103-4, 1o8, 1n-12, 116, 119, 124-25, 336; Holy Roman Empire and, 69, 89, 101, 104, 127; Italy and, 41n, 96, 104? , 1o8, 11on, 111-1? 115, 125; Low CoUI! ltries and, 82, 87, 98, 110, 121-22; Netherlands and, 48, 6o, 62, 78, 88, n6n; Poland and, 49, 59, 61? 3, 70, 73-74, 77, 9? 7, 101, 104-5; Prussia and, 46-49, 5? 2, 65-'J? 86, 88n, 90, 118-1? 121-22, 124-2? 332-33; Rhenish princes and, 6o-62; Russia and, 49, 58-59, 61, 67, 69-'Jo, 73-74, 88n, 97, 105, 120, 124, 127, 332; Spain and, 58, 6o-62, 6? 71, 74, 89, 91, 9? 10+ 1o6-8, 124; Sweden and, 49, 58-59, 61? 2, 67, 69, 74, 96, 124; Switzerland and, 71, 96, 1 1 1-12, 115-16; United States and, 96. Seealso France
fundamentalism, 350. See also Islamic funda- mentalism
Furet, Fran? ois, 50n, 52n
Gallipoli, 305
Genet, Edward Charles, 273-75, 282
Geneva, 86, 88n
Genoa, 188, 204
Genscher, Hans-Dietrich 236
geography, 19n, 329; American revolution and,
286--87, 329; Mexican revolution and, 329 George III, King (of England), Sm, 83 George V, King (of England), 172
Georgia, 166, 182, 304, 329
Germany, 300; Communist groups in (German Communist Party [KPD)), 187, 189-90, 193, 335-36; KPD, "March action" by, 187-88; In- dependent Socialist Party in, 187; Reichs- wehr in, 335-36; Social Democratic Party in, 185, 196; Spartacist movement in, 159, 167, 187. See also Prussia; specific revolutions
Ghorbanifar, Manucher, 227, 264
Gilan, Republic of, 18o
Girondins, 64-71, 73-76, 78-So, 85n, 89-90,
92, 94n, 99, 112, 120, 122-23, 125, 333, 335,
340
Glen Springs, Texas, incident, 290 Gorbachev, Mikhail, 232111, 233 Gordji, Vahid, 235-36, 257 Gower, Lord, 61
Great Britain. See England
Greece, 41n, 155n, 182, 190, 3oo-301; and
Byzantine Empire, 301
Greenville, Treaty of, 275
Gregoire, Henri, 67, 79
Grenada: New Jewel Movement in, 2, 336n;
U. S. invasion of, 41n, 343n
Grenville, Lord, 59, 82-83, 84n, 86, 1 14-16, 1 19,
121
Groener, Wilhelm, 186
Gromyko, Andrei, 23m, 232
Guatemala, U. S. -sponsored coup in, 35-36,
41n, 336n
Guevara, Che, 24, 38
Gulf Cooperation Council, 244? See also Persian
Gulf states
Gulf War (1991), 229
Guomindang (GMD), 197? 9; Chinese revolu- tion and, 311-14, 316-17, 322-23, 332; Great Northern Campaign of, 198; Soviet friend- ship treaty with, 314
Gustav Adolphus, King (of Sweden), 121
hajj, 244-45
Hamilton, Alexander, 272-74, 277, 281, 283, 286 Hanover, 89
Hapsburgs, 48, 128
Harbin, 141, 152
Harington, Charles ("Tim"), 305
Hashemi, Mehdi, 219
[3571
? Hebert, Jacques-Rene, 93
Hebertists, 93, 96, 98, 99n
Helder Peninsula, 1 1 6
Herault de Sechelles, Marie-Joseph, 94Il Hesse-CastG! I, 89
Hesse-Darmstadt, 89
Hezbollah, 245-46, 249, 262
Hicks, W. L. , 146
Hoche, Louis-Lazare, 107
Holland: Dutch Patriot Party and, 83, 87. See
also French revolution
Holy Roman Empire. See French revolution Hoover-Nansen plan, 162-{;4, 166 Horvath, Dmitri, 141, 152
House, Edward, 138, 290n, 298
Howe, Geoffrey, 234
Huang Hua, 3 1 5 n
Huerta, Victoriano, 288, 292-93, 295 Hungary, 158, 190, 336n; Soviet republic in,
165, 175, 205, 335
Hussein, Saddarn, 219, 232, 238, 240, 258n, 263;
miscalculations by, 240, 253
identity, 34o-42. See also critical theory ideology, 3, 5-9, 14, 22-30, 33-34, 38-43, 45-46,
329, 334-35, 338-39, 341-42, 344, 35o; of American rrevolution, 29, 270, 276, 28o-86, 329; of Chinese revolution, 29, 31o-12, 314-16, 323, 325-27, 340; of Eastern Euro- pean revolutions, 345-46, 349; of former So- viet Union, 348-49; of French revolution, 28, 4! r53' 62, 72, 7! r8o, B! r90, 95, 1Q9, 122-23, 126-28, 284, 297; of Iranian revolution, 8, 28-29, 213-16, 220, 223, 237-38, 241-42, 245-47, 253-54, 259n, 261, 264-{i7, 284, 297' 335, 340; of Mexican revolution, 297, 299, 329; of Russian revolution, 28-29, 13o-33,
142, 145, 15? . -53, 158-6o, 164-{;6, 171-J2, 174-? 5, 178-J? 181-82, 184-94, 201-3, 205, 2o8-9, 284, 297, 340; of Turkish revolution, 299, )09, 329
India, 112-13, 136, 142, 149, 154, 178, 326, 350 indulgents, 93, 98
intentions, perceptions of, 4, 6, 19, 30, 32-35, 37,
41, 43, 46, 328, 333-34, 336, 33! r40, 343; American revolution and, 270, 279, 284-86, 334; Chinese revolution and, 314-20, 322, 324, 326-27; former Soviet Union and, 348-49; French revolution and, 62, 69, 7J, 79, 88,
12o-22, 128, 338; Iranian revolution and, 210, 226, 238, 243, 253-59, 267-{;8, 338; Mexican revolution and, 287, 2? , 298-99; Russian rev- olution and, 129, 143-44, 147, 155, 164, 170, 172, 175, 178-? 9, 19Q-91, 201-2, 204, 207-9, 338; Turkish revolution and, 29! r300, 307-10
Inter-Allied Railway Agreement, 151 International Workers of the World, 297 intervention, counterrevolutionary, 2, 41-42,
342-43
Ionian Islands, 1 1 3
Iran, 8, 1 1, 34, 41n, 344; 1953 coup in, 224, 336n; Arab allies and, 249; foreign policy of under shah 222-24; France and, normalization of re- lations, 235; Islamic Mujahedin in, 217-18, 235-36, 252, 256-57; Islamic Republic, aims of, 223-24; Islamic Republic, Constitution oi, 223, 25! r6o, 267; Islamic Republic Party in, 216-18, 259n; Majlis in, 217-18, 234; National Front Party in, 212; non-aligned status in, 223-24; Provisional Government in, 216; Rev- olutionary Courts in, 225, 254, 256; Revolu- tionary Guards in, 217-18, 241, 245, 200, 262, 265; Soviet Union, 1921 treaty of friendship with, 222, 231; Soviet Union, economic agree-
ments with, 232; Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in, 212; Tudeh Party in, 218, 23o-31, 252, 257? See also Iranian revolution
Iran-contra Affair, 219, 227-28, 242, 251, 256, 263-{;4
Iranian revolution, 14, 16, 37, 21o-{i8, 287, 310, 327, 329, 350; Algeria and, 229n, 246, 248-50; "Assembly of Experts" and, 216; China and, 237; deaths in, 2m; France and, 234-36, 257, 266; Great Britain and, 233-34, 236, 257, 266; Eastern Europe and, 237; eco- nomic sanctions and, 228, 233-34, 236-37; European Community and, 237; hajj and, 244-45, 26o-{i1, 266; Islamic fundamental- ism and, 210, 213-17, 219-24, 23o-31, 237, 239, 245, 247-49, 253, 200, 262, 266-{;8, 297; Japan and, 237; Kuwait and, 226, 228, 244-45, 258, 261, 265, 335; Libya and, 233,
230, 249, 254; oil and, 224, 228, 233, 237, 250, 253; Persian Gulf states and, 243-45, 250, 254, 256, 258, 261, 335, 344; pragmatists in,
2 1 8-22, 227-28, 2)4, 242, 255-56, 259, 266n, 267; radicals in, 2]8-22, 227, 229, 255-56; Revolutionary Council and, 216; Saudi Ara- bia and, 219, 223, 226, 228, 243-45, 253, 258, 265-{;6, 335; role of clerics in, 211-12, 216-18, 225-26, 230, 240, 246, 256, 263, 267, 284, 3Q! r10; Soviet Union and, 224, 227, 23o-34, 237, 243, 249-52, 254, 257, 263, 267; Sudan and, 229n, 246-47, 254, 26m; Syria and, 223, 230, 246, 249, 253-54, 262; United States and, 2, 21 1-12, 219, 221, 224-30, 233-34, 245, 24! r58, 265-67, 332, 336, 342, 347; and U. S. embassy, seizure of, 216-17, 225-26, 229n, 230, 233-34, 236-37, 249, 252, 255-56, 263; West Germany and, 236-37. See
also Iran
Iran-Iraq War, 8, 41, 219, 226, 228, 231-32, 234,
245n, 24! r50, 257, 26o-61, 265, 330, 332,
343n; ceasefire in, 243; counterinvasion of Iraq by Iran, 241-42, 262, 266; invasion of Iran by Iraq, 238-40, 253, 256, 258, 262, 333, 338, 344; United States in, 342, 355; as war of attrition, 242-43
Iraq, 226-27, 229, 231, 240, 245, 249, 253-55, 257-58, 335; Baath regime in, 237-39, 254,
Index
? ? Index
Iraq (cont. )
26o-61, 265; invasion of Kuwait and, 245, 249; Kurdish insurgency in, 223, 231, 238-39, 249, 257; oil pipelines of, 249; Shiites in, 238, 240,242,26o-63,336 .
Ireland, 85, 107-8, 113, 124n, 125, 128, 176 Islam, 210
Islamic Call. See AI-Dawa al-lslamiya Islamic fundamentalism, 11, 26, 245-50, 26o,
262, 335? See also Iranian revolution Islamic Jihad, 245-46
Islamic Mujahedin, 256
Islamic Republic of Iran. See Iran Ismit, 305
Isnard, Maximin, 6&-67
Israel, 219, 223, 226, 238, 249, 253-54, 262, 265-66; invasion of Lebanon by, 246; Iran- contra Affair and, 227
Istanbul, 305-6
Italy. See specific revolutions
Jacobins, 28, 40, 51, 55-56, 65-66, 72, 75-76, 7? , 102, 105, 1Q9-10, 115, 117, 124, 127, 276, 284, 309-10, 335; dictatorship of, 91r-99; resurgence of, 103, 111
Jagow, Gottlieb von, 293n
Japan. See specific revolutions
Jay, John, 275
Jay Treaty, 275-76, 283, 286
Jefferson, Thomas, 58, 272-74, 276-79, 281;
"Empire of Liberty" vision of, 281; and strat-
egy of "peaceable coercion," 279
Jemappes, French victory at, So, 83, 119
Joffe, Adolf, 131-32, 157
Jordan, 226
Jordan, Hamilton, 263n
Joseph II, Emperor (of Austria), 48, 58 Jourdan, Jean-Baptiste, 102
Jowitt, Kenneth, 350
Kalinin, Mikhail, 170 Kamenev, Lev, n77-78 Kant, Immanuel, 58
Kapp putsch, 174, 187, 205 Karelia, 142
Kars, Treaty of, 182, 306
Kaunitz, Prince Wenzel Anton von, 63n, 69-70,
73n, 74, 75n, 119
Kautsky, Karl, 26
Kazakhstan, 345n
Kemal, Mustaf& Pasha (Ataturk), 181-82, 299,
301-10, 329
Kennan, George F. , 8n, 146
Kennedy, John F. , 324
? Kerensky, Alexander, 130
Kerr, Philip, 16m
Khalkhali, Ayatollah Sadeq, 21? Khamenei, Said Ali, 218, 221, 232, 236n, 249,
265
Khan, Mirza Kuchik, 180
Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollah, 8, 24n, 217-19, 223-25, 228, 23D-33, 238-39, 241-43, 245, 248, 253-54, 256, 258-6o, 26fr. 68, 283, 297; death of, 221, 229, 236, 265; exile in Iraq, 212, 234,263;revolutionaryprogramof,212-16, 335; view of Soviet Union of, 214; view of Salman Rushdie of, 220-21, 229; view of United States of, 214, 216. See also Iran; Iran- ian revolution
Khorramshahr, 241
Khuzistan, 239-40, 243, 260, 262
Kim, Kyung-Won, 7
Kim II Sung, 319n
Kolchak, Alexander, 147-53, 158, 163, 173 Korea, . S, 320, 325
Korean War, 310, 319-23; China, intervention of in Korea, 8, 35, 320, 328; deaths in, 326n; North Korean attack in, 319; Soviet Union and, 321; U;N. armistice in, 323; U. S. inter- vention in, 319, 321. See also Chinese revolu- tion
Kornilov revolt, 174
Krasin, Leonid, 176-'78 Kuwait. See Iranian revolution
Lafayette, Marquis de, 54-56, 68, 75
Lansing, Robert, 138, 154, 157, 204, 289n, 291,
298
La Revelliere-Lepeaux, Louis-Marie, 107, 112 Latin America, 350
Latvia, 150, 152-53
Lausanne, 204
Lausanne Conference (1923), 3o6
League of Nations, 195, 201
learning. See socialization
Lebanon, 249; Christians in, 235; civil war in,
246; kidnappings in, 227-29, 235-36, 257, 264; Shiites in, 22&-2- 7, 235, 245-46, 249, 26o, 262, 264
Lebrun, Pierre Helene-Marie, 76, 79, 8m, 83n, 84-88, 89n, 9? 1o8, 121, 127
Lenin, V. 1. , 1on, 11, 220, 240, 2&--27, 33n, 1JD-J2, 1)5, 138n, 142-45, 153-54, 158-59, 161, 162n, 165, 167l11, 169-? 0, 172-74, 176, 181, 186-89, 192--<. JJ, 205, 283, 311; death of, 194; New Economic Policy of, 204. See also Russian revolution
Leopold II, Emperor (of Austria), 56n, 58, 6o-61, 63-64, 69, 73-'J4, 118-19, 121, 343; death of, 71
Levi, Paul, 187
liberalism, 350
Libya, 300. Seealso Iranian revolution Liebknecht, Karl, 159
Liege, 72, 104, 119
Ligurian Republic, 1 12, 117
Lind, John, 295
Lithuania, 150, 152-53, 196 Litvinov, Maxim, 159-60, 200
? [359]
Lefebvre, Georges, 57
? Lloyd George, David, 149, 153n, 154-58, t62-6J, 166, t69, 175-J9, t88, 20J-4, 2o6, J01, J05, J0']-8
Locarno treaty (1925), 195
Lockhart, R. Bruce, 135-36
London conference (1921), 303, 3o8n
Long, Boaz, 291
Louis XVI, 16, 53-55, 58, 6o-63, 65-66, 70, 72,
75-76, 118-19, 336, 341, 343; Constitution of 1791 and, 56, 64, 68; War of the First Coali- tion and, 68. See also French revolution
Louis XVIII, 126. See also Artois, comte d' Louisiana Territory, U. S. acquisition of, 278,
283n, 286
Low Countries. See French revolution Luxemburg, Rosa, 159
Lyons, ? artyn, to3
? acArthur, Douglas, 318n, 322 ? achiavelli, Niccolo, 3m ? ackesy, Piers, 114
? adero, Francisco, 287-88 ? adison, Jame? 272-JJ, 28o ? ailhe, Jean Baptiste, 66-67 ? ajnoon Islands, 242 ? almesbury, Lord, 107
? alta, 113
? anchu dynasty, collapse of, 312
? anchuria, 183, 313, 317; Soviet occupation of, 314
? ao Tse-tung, 27, 34, 38, 3 14-20, 322-23, 325, 327-29; revolutionary ideology of, Jto-312, 315; view of nuclear weapons of, 324-25 . See also Chinese revolution
? aoz, Zev,e 13
? aritsa River, 305
? arshall, George C. , 313, 315-16, 32m ? artinique, 107
? arxism-Lerunism, 8, 14, 26, 28, 131, 145, 327,
346, 350. See also Russian revolution
mass revolution, 12-13, 20, 21n, 29-30, 43, 344?
See also elite revolution.
? atthews, James Tilly, 96, 127
? atsu, 323-24
? aumee rapids, 275
? cFarlane, Robert C. , 227
? earsheimer, John, 340
? erlin de Douai, Phillipe-Antoine, 101 ? exican revolution, 14, 16, 139, 269, 287-99,
310, 327-28, 330, 344; comparison with other revolutions, 287, 297-98; deaths in, 2m; England and, 291-96, 332, 338; France and, 293; Germany and, 289, 291-94, 296, 298, 332; United States and, 2, 287-99, 328-29, 332, 338, 343? See also Mexico.
? exico, J4, 190; civil war in, 28,8 295, 33? ; Con- stitution of (1917), 291, 29? ; Constitutionalist movemenft in, 288, 328, 33? ; foreign in- vestors in, 291-92, 297; murder of U. S. mining engineers in, 290. See also Mexican revolution
? ill, John Stuart, 15
Miners' Federation, 176
Minsk, 168
Mirabeau, Honore-Gabriel Riquetti, comte de,
6on
misinformation, 3o-32, 47, 328, 333, 33&-JB, 344; Chinese revolution and, 322-23; Eastern European revolutions and, 346; French revo- lution and, 74, 89, 12&-28, 338; Iranian revo- lution and, 210, 262-64, 268, 338; Mexican revolution and, 295-96; Russian revolution and, 145-46, 155-56, 174, 179, 20']-8, J38; Turkish revolution and, JoB-(). See also un- certainty
? ississippi Valley, 271, 283 ? itterand, Francois, 235
? odena, 89
Mohtashemi, Ali Akbar, 218, 229n Monge, Gaspard, 86n
? ongolia, Outer, 183-85
? onroe, }ames, 278
? ontagnards, 76, 79-Bo, 9? 9? , 96, 1Q9, 340 Montazeri, Husayn Ali, 218, 242n Montesquieu, Charles de Secondat, 51 ? oreau, Jean-Victor, 102
Morocco, 195
? ortefontaine, Convention of (18oo), 277 ? ossadegh, Muhammed, 336n
Mosul, 301, 3o6
? urley, J. T. , 78, 8o
Musavi, Mir-Husayn, 218, 232,. 265 Muslims, 131
Naples, 89
Nasser, Carnal Abdel, 237
nationalism, 29, 350; Eastern European revolu-
tions and, 345; former Soviet Union and, 348; revolutionary ideology of, 14; Turkish revolution and, 299, 309
Near East, 136, 154
neo-Fascism in Europe, 351
neorealism, 3-5, 19, 210, 264-65, 267, 28o-83,
340; Chinese revolution and, 310, 318, 323, 324; Eastern European revolutions and, 349? Seealso realism
Netherlands. See French revolution
New Mexico, 294
New Orleans, 275
Nicaragua, 9-10, 27, 34, 40, 41, 250, 298 Nicaraguan revolution, 14, ? ' 336n; deaths
in, 2m; U. S. response to, 2 Nicholas II, Tsar (of Russia), 201, 335 Nicolaevsk, 152
Nile, Battleof, 113
Nimeiri, Jifar, 247
Nixon, Richard, 326
Noel, Phillipe, 96
Nootka Sound dispute, 6o-61 North, Douglass C. , 25
North, Oliver, 227, 256n, 264
Index
? ? ? ? Index
North Korea, 237, 250, 336n; attempt by to ex- port revolution, 319n
Norway, 167
Noulens,Joseph, 136-37
Obregon, Alvaro, 292
Ochakov affair, 85
offense-defense balance, 4, 16, 19, 37-41, 46-47,
269, 328-29, 333-37, 339; American revolu- tion and, 270, 281, 285-86, 328-29, 337; Chi- nese revolution and, 319, 321-23, 327-28, 334; Eastern European revolutions and, 346; French revolution and, 73-74, 119, 122-26, 128, 334; Iranian revolution and, 259-"<i2, 334; Mexican revolution and, 297-98, 328-29, 337; Russian revolution and, 170, 172-74, 205-7, 209, 334; Turkish revolution and, 307, 310, 328-29, 337; War of the First Coalition and, 66-68; See also contagion; counterrevolution; export of revolution; for- eign intervention; revolution: optimism of
Ortega, Daniel, 24n
Ortega, Humberto, 25
Ottoman Empire, 49, 96, 113, 120, '181, 299-303,
31>6-7, 309, 341. See also Turkey; Turkish rev-
olution; specific revolutions Ovaisi, Ghulam, 235
Padua Circular, 64? 5, 69, 73, 120, 127 Pahlavi, Shah Muhammad Reza, 213-14, 216,
222-23, 225, 2J1, 23J, 235, 25? 25? 261, 332, 334; fall of, 211-12, 230, 250, 253, 263, 266, 335; opposition to, 21m; pan-Arabism and, 237-38; Soviet Union and, 222; United States and, 216, 222-23, 225, 255
Pahlavi family, 235, 341
Paine, Thomas, 32n
Pakistan, 326, 350
Palestine Liberation Organization, 230 Palitana, 3o8
Panikkar, K. M. , 322
Paris, Treaty of, 271
Paris Commune, 76; second, 92
Paris Peace Conference, 160, 167, 182, 203,
301-3. See also Versailles, Treaty of Parra! , 290, 296
Parthanopean Republic, 114
Pasha, Enver, 307
Pastor, Robert, 10
Paul I, Tsar (of ! Russia), 11on, 114
Pelaez, Manuel, 291
Peng Dehuai, 32m
People's Republic of China (PRC). See China,
People's Republic of
Pershing, John J. , 290
Persia, relations of with Soviet Union, 179--82,
185, 196, 202, 204. See also Iran
Persian Gulf, 223, 225; U. S. naval escort in, 228,
Persian Gulf states: Gulf Cooperation Council and, 244, 258, 261? 2; Iraq and, 245; Shiite population in, 243-44, 260. See also Iranian revolution
Petrograd, 135
Pichegru, Jean-Charles, 105n
Pichon, Stephen, t6on
Piedmont, 111
Pillnitz, Declaration of, 64? 5, 69, 7J, 120, 127 Pilsudski, Joseph, 168, 171, 173, 197, 203 Pinckney, Edward, 274n
Pinckney's Treaty, 275, 286
Pitt, William, 58-59, 61? 2, 82n, 83-86, 88, 91,
98n, 105, 110, 114n, 116-17, 119, 121
Plan ofSanDiego, 290n
Poincare, Rene, 189
Poland, 8, 11, 336; Constitution of 1791, 172; in-
vasion of Russia by, 168; Russo-Polish War and, 167-75, 202, 327, 335; Socialist Party in, 171. See also French revolution; Russian rev- olution; Russo-Polish War
Portugal, 89
Prinkipo proposal, 1? 1, 163, 204 prisoners of war, German and Austrian,
136-37, 142, 146, 207
propaganda, 335; Iranian revolution and, 225, 244, 26? 1; Jacobin, 76; Russian revolution and, 145, 164? 6, t76-'79, 195, 204-5
Provence, comte de, 54
Prussia: formal convention of with Austria (1791), 63, 65; mobilization of forces by (1792), 72; territorial ambitions of, 62? 3, n War of the First Coalition and, 74, 77-78, 79n, 82, 89n, 9t, 96"""97, 101, 103-4, to8; War of the Second Coalition and, 1 10, 1 13-14. See also French revolution; Germany
(2otbzadeh, Sadeq, 23tn, 251n, 264 Quasi-War of 1797-tSoo, 275-77, 284, 337n Quemoy, 323-24, 325n
Quiberon, raid, 104, 124, 336
Radek, Karl, 159n, 16? , 181, 193
Rafsanjani, Ali Akbar Hashemi-, 218-19, 220n, 221, 228-29, 232-34, 237, 242, 244-46, 256, 258, 265? 7
Rajai, Mohammed, 217, 235
Rajavi, Masoud, 235
Randolph, John, 28o
Rapallo agreement, 189
Rastatt, Congress of, 111
Reagan, Ronald, 8, 228, 251
realism, vii, 3, 18, 339-42; Chinese revolution
and, 326. See also neorealism
"red scare" (in United States), 40
Regan, Donald, 251
Reign of Terror, 51
Reubell, Jean-Fran?
? ? ? Conclusion
in 1917, for example), they will be strongly inclined to seek gains for them- selves and to deny potential gains to others. By the time the Soviet Union disintegrated, however, most of the other great powers had been close po- litical and military allies for nearly four decades. Because these states did not regard each other as potential security threats, the normal concern with relative position was muted. Instead of debating whether or not to inter- vene-as great powers did after every revolution we have examined-the Western powers have tried to support the new regimes by providing aid and advice. In addition, because the Cold War inhibited the development of extensive economic or political ties between East and West, foreign powers did not have major interests in the Soviet Union (unlike Britain and France in 1917 Russia or the United States in Iran, for example) and could take a more detached view of events there.
For all of these reasons, therefore, postrevolutionary relations between the former Soviet Union and the other major powers have been unusually tranquil. Circumsftances continue to evolve rapidly, however, and relations could easily deteriorate if Russian elites become convinced that the West ei- ther is responsible for their plight or is taking excessive advantage of it. 19 This danger suggests that Western diplomacy must strike a balance between acknowledging tlh. e legitimate interests of the new Eurasian states (espe- cially Russia) and turning a blind eye to internal abuses or resurgent expan- sionism. To date, ! however, the international consequences of the revolutions of 1989-92 have been uncharacteristically benign.
Unfortunately, relations within the former Soviet Union have been more conflictive, and for reasons that are consistent with balance-of-threat theory. First, the collapse of the USSR created an unstable and uncertain balance of power among the constituent republics (or between competing ethnic or na- tional groups within them). As illustrated by the recent wars-between Ar- menia and Azerbaijan and between Russia and the breakaway province of Chechnya-uncertainties about the true balance of power can encourage both sides in such a dispute to go to war confident of success. 20
19 AttheDecember1994summitoftheConferenceonSecurityandCooperationinEurope, for example, Russian president Boris Yeltsin charged the West with "sowing the seeds of mis- trust" and complained of excessive U. S. influence, saying that "it is a dangerous illusion to suppose that the destinies of continents . . . can somehow be managed from some single cap- ital. " "Yeltsin Says NATO Is Trying to Split Continent Again," New York Times, December 6, 1994- At, A4.
20 Although Azerbaijan had reason to believe it was stronger (its gross national product was roughly 6o percent bigger than Armenia's and its population and armed forces more than twice as large), the Armenians turned out to be far more capable on the battlefield. See The Military Balance 1 9 93-94 (London: International Institute of Strategic Studies, 1993). Sim- ilarly, the Chechens were extremely confident that they could defy Russian pressure despite the enormous odds against them, and their resistance was unexpectedly effective.
? ? [3471
? ? Revolution and War
Second, just as revolutionary states usually adopt policies that differ from those of the old regime, the newly independent republics of the former So- viet Union are now free to pursue interests that were forgotten, suppressed, or irrelevant under Soviet domination. Thus, Ukraine has sought to regain control of Crimea; Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought over ethnic en-
claves within their respective territories; and a number of ethnic and na- tional groups have advanced claims for independence from their respective republics. Disputes over how to divide the assets of the former USSR have been frequent as well, and the Soviet legacy of interdependence has compli- cated matters by making each government's situation dependent on policies adopted elsewhere. 21 In short, where Western perceptions of Russian inten- tions have improved since the collapse of Communism, a number of former Soviet republics now view each other with considerable suspicion.
Third, because the newly independent republics face the same problems of legitimacy and order that revolutionary states often confront, the tempta- tion to mobilize support by invoking nationalism has been difficult to resist. Unfortunately, such efforts often involve playing up both real and imagined grievances against others, and because different groups within the former Soviet Union are now free to teach their own versions of history, the danger has increas? d that past quarrels will fuel future conflicts. 22 Needless to say, these are ideal conditions for spiraling. When conflicts of interest arise, each side will be more likely to see its own actions as entirely justified while viewing the actions of others as unwarranted aggression.
These problems will be compounded by the intermingling of ethnic or na- tional groups within and across existing political boundaries, which creates the possibility that isolated ethnic minorities will see themselves as vulner- able to persecution by majorities who regard them as potentially disloyal "fifth columns. "23 When national or ethnic groups are scattered within dif- ferent political units, one community may worry that a nationalist resur- gence in another republic could trigger a sympathetic response from
conationals within its own borders. Thus, nationalist -Ideologies can create fears of contagion similar to those produced by a transnational revolution- ary ideology.
Afinal source of conflict is Russia's growing effort to reassert its influence within the "near abroad," either to protect ethnic Russian populationS, to re-
21 See Dawisha and Parrott, Russia and the New States ofEurasia, 197--98.
22 Onthisgeneralphenomenon,seeVanEvera,CausesofWar,vol. 2:NationalMisperceptions and the Roots oJWar (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, forthcoming), chap. 11; and E. H. Dance, History the Betrayer: A Study in Bias (London: Hutchinson, 1960).
23 See Barry Posen, "The Security Dilemma and Ethnic Conflict," Survival 35, no. 1 (1993); and Stephen Van Evera, "Managing the Eastern Crisis: Preventing War in the Former Soviet Empire," Security Studies 1, no. 1 (1992); and "Hypotheses on Nationalism and War," Interna- tional Security 18, no. 4 (1994).
? ? ? Conclusion
tain access to valuable resources, or to stabilize the situation along its lengthy border. 24 Increased Russian influence might deter or dampen vio- lence in those areas in the long run, but its immediate impact has been to alarm its neighbors and to reawaken Western concerns. Relations within the former Soviet Union and relations with other powers are thus inextricably linked, and it will be much more difficult for Russia to maintain amicable re- lations with the rest of the world if the level of conflict within its former em- pire is on the rise.
In sum, relations among the newly independent states of Eurasia are characterized by uncertain balances of power, serious conflicts of interest, exaggerated perceptions of hostility, and fears of nationalist contagion. Not surprisingly, therefore, relations within the former Soviet Union have been (and are likely to remain) much less tranquil than relations between Russia and the other major powers.
Thus, balance-of-threat theory does shed light on the likely consquences of the Soviet collapse and helps identify where the probable axes of conflict will be found. These events also underscore the value of a systemic ap- proach, as the absence of great-power conflict in their aftermath is not due solely to the character of the new regimes: it is also due to the benign inter- national context in which the collapse of the Soviet empire took place and the fact the the "revolutions" of 1 989-92 brought these regimes into greater
ideological conformity with the West. Therefore, the events of 1989-92 rein- force a central contention of this entire book: one cannot understand the in- ternational implications of revolutionary change by looking solely at the revolutionary state; one must also consider the configurations of power and interest in the system as a whole.
THE FUTURE OF REVOLUTION
For some writers, the grand ideological struggles that have rent modern society for nearly four centuries are now fading away, to be replaced by more limited (and for the most part, peaceful) disputes over national inter- ests and an increasingly tranquil world order. This perspective sees mass revolution as inextricably linked to the process of modernization-to the spread of market forces and the transition from hierarchical forms of gov- ernment to political orders based m1 equality, mass participation, and indi- vidual rights. With the collapse of Communism and the apparent triumph of modem liberal capitalism, so the argument runs, the great ideological
24 See Alexei G. Arbatov, "Russian Foreign Policy Priorities for the 1990s," in Russian Secu- rity after the Cold War: Seven Views from Moscow, ed. Teresa Pelton Johnson and Steven E. Miller (Cambridge, Mass. : Center for Science and International Affairs, 1994), 13-20; and Vladimir P. Lukin, "Our Security Predicament," Foreign Policy 88 (fall 1992).
[3491
? Revolution and War
struggles of the past are behind us and humankind has reached the "end of histor. y"25 If this view is correct, then my theory explains a phenomenon that may not trouble us any longer. H might be correct but irrelevant, and the lessons drawn from this study of little enduring value.
Because revolutions are so dangerous and destructive, we might prefer a world in which Marx's "locomotive of history" no longer ran. Unfortu- nately, there are good reasons to question this optimistic expectation.
First, even if mass revolution were strictly a modern phenomenon, the process of modernization is not yet complete. A mass revolution may be un- likely in any of the advanced industrial powers, but it remains a possibility in many other parts of the world. The Iranian Revolution occurred less than two decades ago (a rather short period by historical standards), and it takes little imagination to see revolutionary potential in places such as Egypt, India, Pakistan, China, parts of Latin America, and much of sub-Saharan Africa. The collapse of Communism may have discredited Marxism, but other alternatives-ranging from liberalism to radical nationalism to reli- gious fundamentalism-are available to take its place.
Second, the belief that the current hegemony of liberal capitalism will bring an end to ideological conflicts and eliminate the allure of revolution- ary transformation overlooks several matters: the possibility of unintended consequences, the alienating effects of liberal capitalism itself, and the human capacity to create new and appealing visions of a preferable social order. As Kenneth Jowitt persuasively argues, all social orders alienate some of their members, and the amoral, acquisitive individualism of liberal capi- talist society will create space for new ideologies emphasizing transcendant moral values and communitarian ideals. Instead of ideological homogene- ity, therefore, Jowitt predicts that the end of the Cold War will foster a pe- riod of ideological ferment in which new ideologies arise to challenge the hegemony of liberal-capitalist individualism. 26
Thus, the liberal-capitalist order may not always be seen as universally or eternally preferable, and it is too soon to dismiss the possibility that pre- sent discontents will foster the emergence of new dissident ideologies. In- deed, these possibilities are already evident in the rise of religious fundamentalism (whose underlying principles challenge liberalism's no- tions of tolerance), the growing pressure for cultural diversity (where lib-
25 Exponents of this view include Francis Fukuyama, The End ofHistory and the Last Man (New York: Basic Books, 1992); Theodore S. Hamerow, From the Finland Station: The Grllying of Revolution in the Twentieth Century (New York: Basic Books, 1990); and John Mueller, Retreat
from Doomsdlly: The Obsolescence ofMajor War (New York: Basic Books, HJB9); and Quiet Cata- clysm: Reflections on the Recent Transformation of World Politics (New York: HarperCollins, 199. 5).
26 See Kenneth Jowitt, New World Disorder: The Leninist Extinction (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991).
? ? ? Conclusion
eralism's emphasis on individual rights confronts claims for the collective rights of particular groups}, and the emergence of the Greens, the militia movement in America, or neo-fascism in Europe. My point is not that any of these movements will spawn the next great revolutionary ideology, but simply that new challengers will emerge, maybe sooner than we think. If their adherents achieve political power in some existing state-especially if through violent means-the dynamics I have identified are likely to come into play. Indeed, the scope and speed of mass communications could make it easier for dissident social movements to spread their principles across existing borders and amplify the normal fear of contagion. Instead of a relatively stable world of well-ordered national states, in short, we may be entering a period of renewed ideological ferment and increased transna- tional turbulence. 27
If this argument is correct, then we are unlikely to enjoy the tranquility of a world in which violent revolution is a thing of the past. Armed with a bet- ter understanding of the connection between revolution and war, however, we may still avoid some of the tragic results of earlier revolutions. That hope is both the purpose and the paradox of social science: by gaining a bet- ter grasp of the causal forces that shape social phenomena, we may be able to manipulate them so as to render our own theories invalid. Given the re- grettable international consequences that accompany most revolutions, that would be a small price to pay.
27 See Sidney Tarrow, Power in Movement: Social Movements, Collective Action, and Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 193--98. Tarrow also suggests that the impact of these movements may "first be ferocious, uncontrolled, and widely diffused, but later ephemeral. "
? ? ? Abadan, 241
Abercrombie, Ralph, n6n
accommodation, 2, 204, 342; American revolu-
tion and, 281; by England of Soviet Union, 176, 178; Iraruian revolution and, 256, 259; Mexican revolution and, 296; Russian civil vvar and, 158-60, 163-64, 20)-4, 207
Acheson, Dean, )5, )1), )15-18, )22 Adams, John, 2710, 276-77, 285n, 329 Adams, John Quincy, 285n Afghanistan. See Soviet Union Africa, sub-Saharan, 350
Aland Islands, 167
Albania, 300
Algeria, Islamic Salvation Front in, 247, 248n.
See also Iranian revolution Algiers accord, 238
Allende, Salvador, 336n Alsace, 56, 6o, 63, 69, 120 Amal, 249
Amanullah, Emir, 18o-81
American Independence, War of, 269--71, 280, 283; France and, 47, 53
American revolution, 13n, 16, 26g-87, 3 10, 327, 330, 33;m, 344; Barbary states and, 28o, 284; comparison vvith other revolutions, 283, 287; Continental Congress of, 270; England and, 27r>-'J2, 280, 31. 7-28, 332; Founding Fathers and, 270, 2710, 281-83, 285-86; France and, 27r>-'JI, 280, 327-28, 332; Indian tribes and, 271, 284; Latin America and, 281; Model Treaty and, 270, 283; Spain and, 27o-71, 280. See also American Independence, War of; United States
Amiens, n7
Amiens, Peace of, 278 al-Amin, Sayyid Ibrahim, 245
Amur, 152
Anatolia, 299-303, 307
[3531
Anglo-French convention, 150
Anglo-Persian treaty (1919), 179-Bo Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907, 179 Anglo-Soviet trade agreement (1921), 175-79,
188, 195, 204
Angola, 336n
Ankara, 3o6
Antoinette, Marie; 58, 96
Arbe02, Jacobo, 35, 336n
Archangel, 134, 136-37, 141, 146 Armenia, 166, 182, 301, 304, 329, 347-48 Armstrong, David, 7
Articles of Confederation, 271-'72, 283
Artois, comte d', 54, 58, 6m, 64. See also Louis XVIII
ai-Assad, Hafez, 249
Auckland, Lord. See William Eden
Austria: mobilization of forces (1792), 72; for- mal convention vvith Prussia (1791), 63, 65;
and War of the First Coalition, 72, 74-75, 77-7? 8o, 82, 89-91, 96-g7, 101, 104-B; and War of the Second Coalition, no-n, 1 1 3-14,
Baath regime, 237-39, 261
Babeuf, Fram;ois-Noel (Gracchus), 109n Baden, 89
Bahonar, Muhammed, 217
Bahrain, 244, 261
n7
Austria-Hungary, 154, 300
Austrian Netherlands, 71, 74-75, Bo, 119 Austro-Prussian alliance, 70, 73, 120 Avignon, 56, 6o, 70
Azerbaijan, 166, 180, 182, 304, 347-48 Aziz, Tariq, 239
.
See also specific revolutions
Index
? Bakmetev, Boris, 145n
Bakhtiar, Shahpour, 212, 235-36, 240 al-Bakr, Ahmad, 238n
balance of power, 19, 21-22, 32, 38 43-44, 46,
327, 333-34, 337; American revolution and, 270, 271n, 275, 283-84, 286, 333-34, 337; Chi- nese revolution and, 312, 323, 325-26, 333-34; Eastern European revolutions and, 345; former Soviet Union and, 347, 349; French revolution and, 73, 1 1S-2o, 122, 128, 312, 333; Iranian revolution and, 210, 25o-54, 267, 312, 333; Mexican revolution and, 2? -97, 333-34, 337; Russian revolution and, 129, 143, 152-53, 17? 1, 173? 2o2-o5, 2o8, 312, 333; theory of, vii-viii, 3-4, 6, 19, 339-40; Turkish revolution and, 333-34, 337
balance of threat, viii, 18, 43, 46, 1o8, 331, 333-40, 342, 344; Chinese revolution and, 312-19, 323, 326; Eastern European revolu- tions and, 344-45; former Soviet Union and, 347, 349; French revolution and, 11S-28; Iranian revolution and, 210, 25o-68; Russian revolution and, 17? 5, 179, 182, 201-9
Balfour, Arthur, 13? , 135n, 143n, 145n, 153n Balkanwars (1912-1913), 300
Baltic states, 159, 167, 169, 173, 185-{)1, 195, 197 Bani-Sadr, Abolhassan, 216--17, 224-26, 23o-31,
235, 256-5- 7, 263-64
Barbary pirates, 271-72, 283
Barere, Bertramd de, 9?
Barras, Paul, Vicomte de, 107
Barrett, David, 315n
Barthelemy, Frran,. ois, 1o8
Basel, Treaty of, 104
Bastille, storming of, 53
Bavaria, 48; Soviet government in, 165, 167,
187, 205, 335 .
Bavarian-Belgian exchange, 118
Bay of Pigs, U. S. invasion of, 41
Bazargan, Mefndi, 216, 223-26, 230, 238, 254,
256-5- 7, 263
Beethoven, Ludwig von, 58
Beheshti, Ayatollah Muhammed, 216--17, 259n Belarus, 345n
Belgium, 41n, 48, 69, 71-72, 83, 89, 90n, 91, 95n,
97, 101, 104-Q7, 111 Berlin, Treaty of, 105 Blake, William, 58
? Blanning,T. C. W. ,71
Boissy d'Anglas, Fran? ois-Antoine, 101 Bolivia, 24, 38n
Bolshevik party, 22n, 26, 129-37, 139-40, 142,
144, 146-5- 0, 152, 154? 156-5- 7? t6o, t62-66, 168, 170, 173-'J5, 178, 186, 201-3, 2o6, 284, 297? 309-10, 329-30, 335? 338, 342; Four- teenth Party Congress of, 191; Fifteenth Party Congress of, 200; coup d'etat by, 130, 138, 141; Decree of Peace, 131; intentions of, 156-5- 7. See also Russia; Russian revolution; Soviet Union
Bolshevism, 152-55, 159, 167, 171, 179, 190-91, 204, 208. Seealsoideology: of Russian revo- lution
"Bolshevization," 19?
Bonapart? Lucien, 117
Bonaparte, Napoleon, toon, 103, 105-7, 112-13,
117, 120, 278-80, z86; and beginning of
Napoleonic era, 117
Borodin, Michael, 197-98
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 300
Brandler, Heinrich, 189
Brest-Litvosk, Treaty of, 11, 135, 142, 144, 158,
t8on, 203, 205, 300
Brezhne? Leonid, 230, 252
Briand, Aristide, 189
Brissot de Warville, Jean-Pierre, 65-67, 75, 76n,
78n, 8o, 8?
Brown, Harold, 225
Brumaire coup, 116-1- 7
Brunswick, duke of, 72, 77 Brunswick Manifesto, 76, 120 Bryan, William Jennings, 295 Brzezinski, Zbigniew, 216, 225, 25m Buchanan, George, 135
Buckler, William H. , 16o
Bukharin, Nikolai, 13m, 132, 189-91, 200 Bull, Hedley, 7
Bullitt, William, 161-63, 168n, 204 Bundy, William P. , 324n
Burgat, Fran? ois, 247
Burges, James, 59
Burke, Edmund, 8, 5S-59, 82, 117 Byelorussia, 173
Calvert, Peter, 7, 13
Cambaceres, Jean-Jacques, 101
Cambodia, Khmer Rouge in, 41n, 326
Campo Formio, Treaty of, 1o6, 109-11, 124, 128
Canton (Guangzhou), 197-98
Carden, Lionel (Sir), 292n
Cardenas, Lazaro, 292
Carnot, Lazar? 78n, 93n, 95, 101n, 1o8 Carranza, Venustiano, 288-{)8
Carrizal, 290, 296
Carter, Jimmy, 224-25, 228, 251, 254, 256
Carter doctrine, 251, 258n
Castro, Fidel, 9-10, 26-2- 7, 35 CatherineII,Empress(ofRussia),49,59,61-62,
71, 8? 11on, 119n, 121
Central Powers, 133-34, 137-38, 141, 143-47,
149, 153-54, 300, 310
Ceylon, 107, 117
Chanak, 305
Charles, Archduke, 115-16
Charles rv, King (of Spain), 121 Charles V, Emperor (of Austria), 105 Chauvelin, Bernard, 85-86, B9n Chechnya, 347
Chesapeake incident, 279
Index
? ? [3541
? ? Canada, 149, 271, 274-'J5, 28o
? Index
Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi), 197? 9, 312-13, 316, 332
Chicherin, Gyorgy V. , 142, 157, 159, 162n, 164-65, 169, 1? ? n, 181, 183, 188, 196, 304
Chile, 41n, 336n
China, People's Republic of (PRC), 34-35, 37, 40, 350; civil war in, 313-14; Communist Party (CCP), 197--99, 31o-18, 32m, 322-23, 327; Cultural Revolution in, 324-25; detona- tion of nuclear weapons by, 324; Great Leap Forward in, 324; and India, war with, 326; and Japan, 325; neutrality of, 325; and Pak- istan, 326; populallion of, 329; Red Army of, 322; Socialist Youth Corps in, 198n; Soviet Union, alliance with, 318, 326; and the Third World, 325; and United States, rapproche- ment with, 326; and Vietnam, 326; and West- em Europe, 325. See also Chinese revolution; specific revolutions
China Hands, 37
China lobby, 322, 334
Chinese Eastern Railway, 140n, 141, 151-52,
183, 185
Chinese revolution, ? 4, 16, 269, 31o-3o; Cold War and, 310, 314, 318; compared with other revolutions, 310, 312, 327; deaths in, 2m; Great Britain and, 312, 31? n, 338; Japan and, 311-12, 316-17, 321; KoreanWarand, 310, 319-23, 325-29, 332, 344; Soviet Union and, 310, 312-15, 317-18, 326, 328-29; United States and, 2, 310, 312-26, 329, 336, 338, 344; Vietnam and, 324-25
Chongqing incident, 316
Christopher, Warren, 251n, 263
Churchill, Winston, 154-57, 179, 204, 2o6, 305
Cisalpine Republic, 112, 114, 117
Claviere, Etienne, 82n
Clay, Henry, 28on
revolution and, 262-63, 338; Korean War and, 322; Russian revolution and, 163, 204, 338; Turkish revolution and, 309
Communism, 35, 40, 193, 335; collapseof, 349-50 Conference on Security and Cooperation in
Europe, 347il
Congress of the Peoples of the East, 182 Congress of Toilers of the Far East, 182 Connolly, John, 251n
Constantine, King, 303
contagion, 30, 39-47, 269, 329, 333-36, 338-40, 343, 351; American revolution and, 281, 284--S5, 335n; Chinese revolution and, 318, 324-25, 334; Eastern European revolutions and, 344-46; former Soviet Union and, 348-49; French revolution and, 73--74, 81, 90, 94, 118, 121-27, 249, 334-35; French revolu- tionary, English fear of, 83, 85--S6, 8H9, 335; Iranian revolution and, 210, 240, 242-43, 246-49, 258-63, 265, 267-68, 334-35; Mexican revolution and, 297, 335n; Russian revolution and, 131-32, 144-45, 152, 154-55, 165, 174, 177, 183, 191, 205--S, 249, 334-35; Turkish revolution and, 309, 335n. See also export of revolution; offense-defense bal- ance; revolution: optimism of
containment, policy of, 343-44 contra war, 10, 336n Convention of Reichenbach, 59 Cordeliers club, 55
Cossacks, 133-34, 141, 14? 152, 184 Council of Action, 176-78 counterrevolution, 31-32, 42-47, 269, 334,
336-38, 340, 343; American revolution and, 270, 272, 27? 281, 285--S6; Chinese revolution and, 316-17, 334, 336; Eastern European revolutions and, 346; French revo- lution and, 55, 61-66, 68-69, 75, 78, 81, 9? 2, 94, 98-100, 104, 108, 115-16, 12o-21, 123-27, 333-34, 336, 338, 343n; Iranian revo- lution and, 210, 225, 255-56, 258, 261, 334, 336, 338, 343n; Mexican revolution and, 297; Russian revolution and, 166-67, 171, 197, 200, 2o6--S, 334, 336, 338. See also foreign in- tervention; offense-defense balance
Crimea, 348
critical theory, 4-5, 34o-42
Cuba, 9, 27, 35, 40, 250, 298
Cuban revolution, 14, 38n, 42, 336; deaths in,
2m; U. S. response to, 2, 42
Cuno, Wilhelm, 189
Curzon, Lord, 14? n, 149, 154, 179 Czechoslovakia, 155, 336n
Czechoslovak Legion, 137-42, 144-47, 15o-52
Danton, Georges, 76n, 79, 8? n, 93, 94n, 96, 9? 9
Dardanelles, 300
Al-Dawa al-Islamiya (Islamic Call), 238-39, 242, 200
Clemenceau, Georges, 137, 150, 155, 2o6 Clinton, George, 274ft
Clinton, William, 229
Cloots, Jean-Baptiste (Anacharsis), 57, 66, 94,
128
Clubb, Edmund, 315n
Cobenzl, Louis, 110
Cold War, vii, 2, 336, 350
collective action problems, in revolution, 23, 29 Collot d'Herbois, Jean Marie, 87il
Columbus, New Mexico, Mexican raid on, 290 Comintem, 164-65, 187, 191, 197, 208; First
Congress, 176n, 192; Second Congress, 170, 179, 192, 205; Third Congress, 188, 192, 194, 205; Fourth Congress, 193? 4; Fifth Con- gress, 193? 4; Executive Committee of (ECCI), 192? 4, 197, 199; transformation of, 192? 4, 201; Twenty-one Points of, 192? 3
communication 32, 45, 328, 344, 351; American revolution and, 270, 285; Chinese revolution and, 322; Eastern European revolutions and, 345-46; French revolution and, 338; Iranian
l355l
?
? Dawes plan, 195
Al-Dawlah, Vusuq, 179
Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen,
54, 56, 6o, 273n
Deforgues, FrM? ois, 96-9- 7 Delacroix, Charles, 107 Delessart, Antoine, 7f>-J? l Denikin, Anton, 148-49, 158, 166 Denmark, 96, 190
Desmoulins, Camille, 49n
Diaz, Porfirio, 287-88, 292
Dodecanese Islands, 300
domestic politics, of revolutionary states, 3,
! riO, to8, 122, 334, 339; American revolution and, 28o-82, 284, 286; Chinese revolution and, 323; French revolution and, 64, 72-73, 334; Iranian revolution and, 258-59, 266-67, 284, 334
Dorchester, LoKd, 274n
Ducos, Roger, u7
Dulles, John Foster, 324
Dumas, Roland, 236
Dumoriez, Charles-Fran? ois, 71-72, 76-'78, So,
83, 87, 90-91, 94n; and attempt to isolate
Austrians, 71--'72
Dundas, Henry. 84, 88
Eastern Europe: Communist governments in, 344-45; post-Cold War Western support of, 347
Eastern European revolutions (1989-1992), 344-49; Cold War and, 347; comparison with other revolutions, 345; former Soviet Union and, 344-47; Marxism-Leninism and, 346; nuclear weapons and, 346; Soviet Union, collapse of, and, 344-45, 347; and super- power competition, 346-47; United States and, 345; Warsaw Pact and, 344
East Germany, 336n
Eden, William (Lord Auckland), 59, 84, 88 Egypt, 223, 229n, 237, 246, 248, 350 Eisenhower, Dwight D. , 35
elite revolution, 12-13, 20, 21n, 2! r30, 43, 344;
American revolution and, 283; Eastern Eu- ropean revolutions and, 345-46; Turkish revolution and, 299, 309? See also mass revo- lution
emigres. See exiles
England: Conservatives in, 166, 176-S-'J ,
195? 6, 204; French West Indies, blockade on, 274; "Iranjan Purchasing Office" in, 234; Labour Party in, 190, 195; and the Russo- Polish war, 169, 203; Socialist Party in, 165; Soviet espionage in, 196; and War of the First Coalition, 82? 1, 95, 97? 8, 104-oS; and War of the Second Coalition, 110, 112-14, 117; and Whig Party, 86. Seealsospecific revo- lutions
English revolution, 14 Enzeli, 180
Estonia, 148, 150, 152-53, 166; Soviet treaty with, 167
Ethiopia, 8; revolution in, 14, 336n
exiles, 31, 36-37, 4<>-42, 45, 47, 334; Chinese revolution and, 322; French revolution and, 54-55. 57? 59, 61-62, 64-65, 68-69, 71, 73-'74? 82, 84, 871\, 88-,-89 91, 99? 104, 107-8, 112,
115, 12o-2- 1, 123-24, 126-28, 334; Iranian rev- olution and, 226, 235, 240, 256, 334, 336; Mexican revolution and, 289; Russian revo- lution and, 163, 195, 207, 334
export of revolution: American revolution and, 281, 284-85; Chinese revolution and, 324-25; French revolution and, 122-26; Iranian revo- lution and, 214, 223, 239, 243, 258, 262, 266; Russian revolution and, 195, 199? See also contagion; offense-defense balance; revolu- tion: optimism of
Fadlallah, Ayatollah Said Muhammed, 246n Fahd, Crown Prince (of Saudi Arabia), 253 Fallen Timbers, Battle of, 275n
Fao Peninsula, 242, 245
Ferdinand, King (of Naples), 114
Feuillants, 55, 64-65, 68-'Jt, 75--'76
Fichte, Johann, 58
Fifteenth I<hordad Foundation, 2671\
Finland, 155n, 167, 335
First Coalition, collapse of, 103-8. See also spe-
cific countries
First Coalition, War of the, 46, 74-88, 119, 335, 343; Austro-Prussian invasion and, 76, 77, 240; causes of, 62--'74; conduct of, B9-109
Flanders, 63
Fletcher, Henry, 291, 298
Florida, 271, 275, 278
Floridablanca, Count, 58n
Foch, Ferdinand, 154-55, 157, t? , 204 Foreign intervention, 336; Chinese revolution
and, 343; French revolution and, 64, 343; Iranian revolution and, 343; Russian civil war and, 149-58, 168; Russian revolution and, 343-44.
See als11 counterrevolution; of- fense-defense balance
former Soviet Union, 344-49; interests of, 347; revolutions in, 347-49
Fox, Charles James, 58, 85
France: alliance with Austria, 48-49, 59; alliance with Spain (Family Compact of 1761), 48-49, 6o; Anti-Sedition and Alien acts, 88; and ar- mies revolutionnaires, 92; and Army of Italy, 105-6; and Army of the North, 75, So, 86, 90; and Brumaire coup, 1 16-17; and Caribbean possessions, 86, 98; and Committee on Gen- eral Security, 91; and Committee on Public Safety (CPS), 91? 9, 101, 1o8, 119, 121; and Conspiracy of the Equals, 109n; Constituent Assembly of, 56; and Constitution of 1791, 6on, 63n; and Constitution of the Year I (1793), 92n, too; and Constitution of the Year
Index
? ? ? ? ? Index
France (cont. )
III (1795), 99-100; and declaration of war (1792), 72; and Decree on Liberty, 81, 83, 84n, 86--87, 93, 12o-2. 2, 127, 341-42; and Directory, 10o-101, 104-11, . 114, 117, 128; and Directory, foreign policy of; 101-3, 276, 278; and Egypt, expedition to, 1 12-13, 1 17, 120; and first par- tition of Poland (1772), 47; and Florea) coup, 107? , 124; and founding of the First Repub- lic ("Second Revolution"), 75-77, 82; and Fructidor coup, no; and les grandes limites,
101-2, 1 1 1, 120; and levee en masse, 92, 99n, 126; and Great Terror, 99; and Law of 14 Frimaire, Year II, 92; and Law of the General Maximum, 92; and Law on Suspects, 92; Legislative Assembly of, 56; and Low Coun- tries, 47; military capabilities of, 67; National Assembly of, 53, 55, 6o-61, 63? 6, 68-76, 78, 94, 99, 1 19-20, 122, 124, 126-27, 333; National Convention of, 76, 79"-81, 83-87, 89-96, 98, 99n, 1oo-101, 104, 1o8, 121; National Guards ifed&es) of, 54, 56, 75; and Navigation Act, 95; and Ottoman Empire, 47; and Polish Succes- sion of 1764, 47; "sister republics" of, 1o6, 108, 111, 115, 124n, 125, 336n; and support of Iraq by, 235; and Sweden, 47; and Thermido- rian regime, 99-111; and threats to Austria, 71-72; and White Terror, 99, 115, 120, 284. See also French revolution; specific revolutions
Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, 101, 1 18-19 Francis, David, 140, 146
Frederick William, 48-49, 57, 59, 61, 63, 70-71,
73, 77, 97, 104, 1 19, 121
French revolution, 7? , 14, 16, 46-128, 209, 210, 241, 243, 28o, 287, 298, 310, 327, 329; and an- cien regime, 54, 57, 120; Austria and, 46 48-49, 5? 2, 65-'J1, 7J, 332-33; Catholic Church and, 50, 54, 62, 120; cause of, 53; deaths in, 2m; England and, 8, 47-49, 52, 5? 2, 64, 67, 71, 73, 81, ? , 119, 121-22, 124, 127-28, 332, 336; and expansionism, 77-81,
1 1o-13; foreign response to, 2, 57? 2, 71, 2o6; Germany and, 56, 63, 70-71, 96, 101, 104-5, 115, 12o-21; and "Great Fear," 54; Holland and, 47, 49, 69, 71, 7J, 85, 87, 89-9o, 94? 5, 103-4, 1o8, 1n-12, 116, 119, 124-25, 336; Holy Roman Empire and, 69, 89, 101, 104, 127; Italy and, 41n, 96, 104? , 1o8, 11on, 111-1? 115, 125; Low CoUI! ltries and, 82, 87, 98, 110, 121-22; Netherlands and, 48, 6o, 62, 78, 88, n6n; Poland and, 49, 59, 61? 3, 70, 73-74, 77, 9? 7, 101, 104-5; Prussia and, 46-49, 5? 2, 65-'J? 86, 88n, 90, 118-1? 121-22, 124-2? 332-33; Rhenish princes and, 6o-62; Russia and, 49, 58-59, 61, 67, 69-'Jo, 73-74, 88n, 97, 105, 120, 124, 127, 332; Spain and, 58, 6o-62, 6? 71, 74, 89, 91, 9? 10+ 1o6-8, 124; Sweden and, 49, 58-59, 61? 2, 67, 69, 74, 96, 124; Switzerland and, 71, 96, 1 1 1-12, 115-16; United States and, 96. Seealso France
fundamentalism, 350. See also Islamic funda- mentalism
Furet, Fran? ois, 50n, 52n
Gallipoli, 305
Genet, Edward Charles, 273-75, 282
Geneva, 86, 88n
Genoa, 188, 204
Genscher, Hans-Dietrich 236
geography, 19n, 329; American revolution and,
286--87, 329; Mexican revolution and, 329 George III, King (of England), Sm, 83 George V, King (of England), 172
Georgia, 166, 182, 304, 329
Germany, 300; Communist groups in (German Communist Party [KPD)), 187, 189-90, 193, 335-36; KPD, "March action" by, 187-88; In- dependent Socialist Party in, 187; Reichs- wehr in, 335-36; Social Democratic Party in, 185, 196; Spartacist movement in, 159, 167, 187. See also Prussia; specific revolutions
Ghorbanifar, Manucher, 227, 264
Gilan, Republic of, 18o
Girondins, 64-71, 73-76, 78-So, 85n, 89-90,
92, 94n, 99, 112, 120, 122-23, 125, 333, 335,
340
Glen Springs, Texas, incident, 290 Gorbachev, Mikhail, 232111, 233 Gordji, Vahid, 235-36, 257 Gower, Lord, 61
Great Britain. See England
Greece, 41n, 155n, 182, 190, 3oo-301; and
Byzantine Empire, 301
Greenville, Treaty of, 275
Gregoire, Henri, 67, 79
Grenada: New Jewel Movement in, 2, 336n;
U. S. invasion of, 41n, 343n
Grenville, Lord, 59, 82-83, 84n, 86, 1 14-16, 1 19,
121
Groener, Wilhelm, 186
Gromyko, Andrei, 23m, 232
Guatemala, U. S. -sponsored coup in, 35-36,
41n, 336n
Guevara, Che, 24, 38
Gulf Cooperation Council, 244? See also Persian
Gulf states
Gulf War (1991), 229
Guomindang (GMD), 197? 9; Chinese revolu- tion and, 311-14, 316-17, 322-23, 332; Great Northern Campaign of, 198; Soviet friend- ship treaty with, 314
Gustav Adolphus, King (of Sweden), 121
hajj, 244-45
Hamilton, Alexander, 272-74, 277, 281, 283, 286 Hanover, 89
Hapsburgs, 48, 128
Harbin, 141, 152
Harington, Charles ("Tim"), 305
Hashemi, Mehdi, 219
[3571
? Hebert, Jacques-Rene, 93
Hebertists, 93, 96, 98, 99n
Helder Peninsula, 1 1 6
Herault de Sechelles, Marie-Joseph, 94Il Hesse-CastG! I, 89
Hesse-Darmstadt, 89
Hezbollah, 245-46, 249, 262
Hicks, W. L. , 146
Hoche, Louis-Lazare, 107
Holland: Dutch Patriot Party and, 83, 87. See
also French revolution
Holy Roman Empire. See French revolution Hoover-Nansen plan, 162-{;4, 166 Horvath, Dmitri, 141, 152
House, Edward, 138, 290n, 298
Howe, Geoffrey, 234
Huang Hua, 3 1 5 n
Huerta, Victoriano, 288, 292-93, 295 Hungary, 158, 190, 336n; Soviet republic in,
165, 175, 205, 335
Hussein, Saddarn, 219, 232, 238, 240, 258n, 263;
miscalculations by, 240, 253
identity, 34o-42. See also critical theory ideology, 3, 5-9, 14, 22-30, 33-34, 38-43, 45-46,
329, 334-35, 338-39, 341-42, 344, 35o; of American rrevolution, 29, 270, 276, 28o-86, 329; of Chinese revolution, 29, 31o-12, 314-16, 323, 325-27, 340; of Eastern Euro- pean revolutions, 345-46, 349; of former So- viet Union, 348-49; of French revolution, 28, 4! r53' 62, 72, 7! r8o, B! r90, 95, 1Q9, 122-23, 126-28, 284, 297; of Iranian revolution, 8, 28-29, 213-16, 220, 223, 237-38, 241-42, 245-47, 253-54, 259n, 261, 264-{i7, 284, 297' 335, 340; of Mexican revolution, 297, 299, 329; of Russian revolution, 28-29, 13o-33,
142, 145, 15? . -53, 158-6o, 164-{;6, 171-J2, 174-? 5, 178-J? 181-82, 184-94, 201-3, 205, 2o8-9, 284, 297, 340; of Turkish revolution, 299, )09, 329
India, 112-13, 136, 142, 149, 154, 178, 326, 350 indulgents, 93, 98
intentions, perceptions of, 4, 6, 19, 30, 32-35, 37,
41, 43, 46, 328, 333-34, 336, 33! r40, 343; American revolution and, 270, 279, 284-86, 334; Chinese revolution and, 314-20, 322, 324, 326-27; former Soviet Union and, 348-49; French revolution and, 62, 69, 7J, 79, 88,
12o-22, 128, 338; Iranian revolution and, 210, 226, 238, 243, 253-59, 267-{;8, 338; Mexican revolution and, 287, 2? , 298-99; Russian rev- olution and, 129, 143-44, 147, 155, 164, 170, 172, 175, 178-? 9, 19Q-91, 201-2, 204, 207-9, 338; Turkish revolution and, 29! r300, 307-10
Inter-Allied Railway Agreement, 151 International Workers of the World, 297 intervention, counterrevolutionary, 2, 41-42,
342-43
Ionian Islands, 1 1 3
Iran, 8, 1 1, 34, 41n, 344; 1953 coup in, 224, 336n; Arab allies and, 249; foreign policy of under shah 222-24; France and, normalization of re- lations, 235; Islamic Mujahedin in, 217-18, 235-36, 252, 256-57; Islamic Republic, aims of, 223-24; Islamic Republic, Constitution oi, 223, 25! r6o, 267; Islamic Republic Party in, 216-18, 259n; Majlis in, 217-18, 234; National Front Party in, 212; non-aligned status in, 223-24; Provisional Government in, 216; Rev- olutionary Courts in, 225, 254, 256; Revolu- tionary Guards in, 217-18, 241, 245, 200, 262, 265; Soviet Union, 1921 treaty of friendship with, 222, 231; Soviet Union, economic agree-
ments with, 232; Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in, 212; Tudeh Party in, 218, 23o-31, 252, 257? See also Iranian revolution
Iran-contra Affair, 219, 227-28, 242, 251, 256, 263-{;4
Iranian revolution, 14, 16, 37, 21o-{i8, 287, 310, 327, 329, 350; Algeria and, 229n, 246, 248-50; "Assembly of Experts" and, 216; China and, 237; deaths in, 2m; France and, 234-36, 257, 266; Great Britain and, 233-34, 236, 257, 266; Eastern Europe and, 237; eco- nomic sanctions and, 228, 233-34, 236-37; European Community and, 237; hajj and, 244-45, 26o-{i1, 266; Islamic fundamental- ism and, 210, 213-17, 219-24, 23o-31, 237, 239, 245, 247-49, 253, 200, 262, 266-{;8, 297; Japan and, 237; Kuwait and, 226, 228, 244-45, 258, 261, 265, 335; Libya and, 233,
230, 249, 254; oil and, 224, 228, 233, 237, 250, 253; Persian Gulf states and, 243-45, 250, 254, 256, 258, 261, 335, 344; pragmatists in,
2 1 8-22, 227-28, 2)4, 242, 255-56, 259, 266n, 267; radicals in, 2]8-22, 227, 229, 255-56; Revolutionary Council and, 216; Saudi Ara- bia and, 219, 223, 226, 228, 243-45, 253, 258, 265-{;6, 335; role of clerics in, 211-12, 216-18, 225-26, 230, 240, 246, 256, 263, 267, 284, 3Q! r10; Soviet Union and, 224, 227, 23o-34, 237, 243, 249-52, 254, 257, 263, 267; Sudan and, 229n, 246-47, 254, 26m; Syria and, 223, 230, 246, 249, 253-54, 262; United States and, 2, 21 1-12, 219, 221, 224-30, 233-34, 245, 24! r58, 265-67, 332, 336, 342, 347; and U. S. embassy, seizure of, 216-17, 225-26, 229n, 230, 233-34, 236-37, 249, 252, 255-56, 263; West Germany and, 236-37. See
also Iran
Iran-Iraq War, 8, 41, 219, 226, 228, 231-32, 234,
245n, 24! r50, 257, 26o-61, 265, 330, 332,
343n; ceasefire in, 243; counterinvasion of Iraq by Iran, 241-42, 262, 266; invasion of Iran by Iraq, 238-40, 253, 256, 258, 262, 333, 338, 344; United States in, 342, 355; as war of attrition, 242-43
Iraq, 226-27, 229, 231, 240, 245, 249, 253-55, 257-58, 335; Baath regime in, 237-39, 254,
Index
? ? Index
Iraq (cont. )
26o-61, 265; invasion of Kuwait and, 245, 249; Kurdish insurgency in, 223, 231, 238-39, 249, 257; oil pipelines of, 249; Shiites in, 238, 240,242,26o-63,336 .
Ireland, 85, 107-8, 113, 124n, 125, 128, 176 Islam, 210
Islamic Call. See AI-Dawa al-lslamiya Islamic fundamentalism, 11, 26, 245-50, 26o,
262, 335? See also Iranian revolution Islamic Jihad, 245-46
Islamic Mujahedin, 256
Islamic Republic of Iran. See Iran Ismit, 305
Isnard, Maximin, 6&-67
Israel, 219, 223, 226, 238, 249, 253-54, 262, 265-66; invasion of Lebanon by, 246; Iran- contra Affair and, 227
Istanbul, 305-6
Italy. See specific revolutions
Jacobins, 28, 40, 51, 55-56, 65-66, 72, 75-76, 7? , 102, 105, 1Q9-10, 115, 117, 124, 127, 276, 284, 309-10, 335; dictatorship of, 91r-99; resurgence of, 103, 111
Jagow, Gottlieb von, 293n
Japan. See specific revolutions
Jay, John, 275
Jay Treaty, 275-76, 283, 286
Jefferson, Thomas, 58, 272-74, 276-79, 281;
"Empire of Liberty" vision of, 281; and strat-
egy of "peaceable coercion," 279
Jemappes, French victory at, So, 83, 119
Joffe, Adolf, 131-32, 157
Jordan, 226
Jordan, Hamilton, 263n
Joseph II, Emperor (of Austria), 48, 58 Jourdan, Jean-Baptiste, 102
Jowitt, Kenneth, 350
Kalinin, Mikhail, 170 Kamenev, Lev, n77-78 Kant, Immanuel, 58
Kapp putsch, 174, 187, 205 Karelia, 142
Kars, Treaty of, 182, 306
Kaunitz, Prince Wenzel Anton von, 63n, 69-70,
73n, 74, 75n, 119
Kautsky, Karl, 26
Kazakhstan, 345n
Kemal, Mustaf& Pasha (Ataturk), 181-82, 299,
301-10, 329
Kennan, George F. , 8n, 146
Kennedy, John F. , 324
? Kerensky, Alexander, 130
Kerr, Philip, 16m
Khalkhali, Ayatollah Sadeq, 21? Khamenei, Said Ali, 218, 221, 232, 236n, 249,
265
Khan, Mirza Kuchik, 180
Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollah, 8, 24n, 217-19, 223-25, 228, 23D-33, 238-39, 241-43, 245, 248, 253-54, 256, 258-6o, 26fr. 68, 283, 297; death of, 221, 229, 236, 265; exile in Iraq, 212, 234,263;revolutionaryprogramof,212-16, 335; view of Soviet Union of, 214; view of Salman Rushdie of, 220-21, 229; view of United States of, 214, 216. See also Iran; Iran- ian revolution
Khorramshahr, 241
Khuzistan, 239-40, 243, 260, 262
Kim, Kyung-Won, 7
Kim II Sung, 319n
Kolchak, Alexander, 147-53, 158, 163, 173 Korea, . S, 320, 325
Korean War, 310, 319-23; China, intervention of in Korea, 8, 35, 320, 328; deaths in, 326n; North Korean attack in, 319; Soviet Union and, 321; U;N. armistice in, 323; U. S. inter- vention in, 319, 321. See also Chinese revolu- tion
Kornilov revolt, 174
Krasin, Leonid, 176-'78 Kuwait. See Iranian revolution
Lafayette, Marquis de, 54-56, 68, 75
Lansing, Robert, 138, 154, 157, 204, 289n, 291,
298
La Revelliere-Lepeaux, Louis-Marie, 107, 112 Latin America, 350
Latvia, 150, 152-53
Lausanne, 204
Lausanne Conference (1923), 3o6
League of Nations, 195, 201
learning. See socialization
Lebanon, 249; Christians in, 235; civil war in,
246; kidnappings in, 227-29, 235-36, 257, 264; Shiites in, 22&-2- 7, 235, 245-46, 249, 26o, 262, 264
Lebrun, Pierre Helene-Marie, 76, 79, 8m, 83n, 84-88, 89n, 9? 1o8, 121, 127
Lenin, V. 1. , 1on, 11, 220, 240, 2&--27, 33n, 1JD-J2, 1)5, 138n, 142-45, 153-54, 158-59, 161, 162n, 165, 167l11, 169-? 0, 172-74, 176, 181, 186-89, 192--<. JJ, 205, 283, 311; death of, 194; New Economic Policy of, 204. See also Russian revolution
Leopold II, Emperor (of Austria), 56n, 58, 6o-61, 63-64, 69, 73-'J4, 118-19, 121, 343; death of, 71
Levi, Paul, 187
liberalism, 350
Libya, 300. Seealso Iranian revolution Liebknecht, Karl, 159
Liege, 72, 104, 119
Ligurian Republic, 1 12, 117
Lind, John, 295
Lithuania, 150, 152-53, 196 Litvinov, Maxim, 159-60, 200
? [359]
Lefebvre, Georges, 57
? Lloyd George, David, 149, 153n, 154-58, t62-6J, 166, t69, 175-J9, t88, 20J-4, 2o6, J01, J05, J0']-8
Locarno treaty (1925), 195
Lockhart, R. Bruce, 135-36
London conference (1921), 303, 3o8n
Long, Boaz, 291
Louis XVI, 16, 53-55, 58, 6o-63, 65-66, 70, 72,
75-76, 118-19, 336, 341, 343; Constitution of 1791 and, 56, 64, 68; War of the First Coali- tion and, 68. See also French revolution
Louis XVIII, 126. See also Artois, comte d' Louisiana Territory, U. S. acquisition of, 278,
283n, 286
Low Countries. See French revolution Luxemburg, Rosa, 159
Lyons, ? artyn, to3
? acArthur, Douglas, 318n, 322 ? achiavelli, Niccolo, 3m ? ackesy, Piers, 114
? adero, Francisco, 287-88 ? adison, Jame? 272-JJ, 28o ? ailhe, Jean Baptiste, 66-67 ? ajnoon Islands, 242 ? almesbury, Lord, 107
? alta, 113
? anchu dynasty, collapse of, 312
? anchuria, 183, 313, 317; Soviet occupation of, 314
? ao Tse-tung, 27, 34, 38, 3 14-20, 322-23, 325, 327-29; revolutionary ideology of, Jto-312, 315; view of nuclear weapons of, 324-25 . See also Chinese revolution
? aoz, Zev,e 13
? aritsa River, 305
? arshall, George C. , 313, 315-16, 32m ? artinique, 107
? arxism-Lerunism, 8, 14, 26, 28, 131, 145, 327,
346, 350. See also Russian revolution
mass revolution, 12-13, 20, 21n, 29-30, 43, 344?
See also elite revolution.
? atthews, James Tilly, 96, 127
? atsu, 323-24
? aumee rapids, 275
? cFarlane, Robert C. , 227
? earsheimer, John, 340
? erlin de Douai, Phillipe-Antoine, 101 ? exican revolution, 14, 16, 139, 269, 287-99,
310, 327-28, 330, 344; comparison with other revolutions, 287, 297-98; deaths in, 2m; England and, 291-96, 332, 338; France and, 293; Germany and, 289, 291-94, 296, 298, 332; United States and, 2, 287-99, 328-29, 332, 338, 343? See also Mexico.
? exico, J4, 190; civil war in, 28,8 295, 33? ; Con- stitution of (1917), 291, 29? ; Constitutionalist movemenft in, 288, 328, 33? ; foreign in- vestors in, 291-92, 297; murder of U. S. mining engineers in, 290. See also Mexican revolution
? ill, John Stuart, 15
Miners' Federation, 176
Minsk, 168
Mirabeau, Honore-Gabriel Riquetti, comte de,
6on
misinformation, 3o-32, 47, 328, 333, 33&-JB, 344; Chinese revolution and, 322-23; Eastern European revolutions and, 346; French revo- lution and, 74, 89, 12&-28, 338; Iranian revo- lution and, 210, 262-64, 268, 338; Mexican revolution and, 295-96; Russian revolution and, 145-46, 155-56, 174, 179, 20']-8, J38; Turkish revolution and, JoB-(). See also un- certainty
? ississippi Valley, 271, 283 ? itterand, Francois, 235
? odena, 89
Mohtashemi, Ali Akbar, 218, 229n Monge, Gaspard, 86n
? ongolia, Outer, 183-85
? onroe, }ames, 278
? ontagnards, 76, 79-Bo, 9? 9? , 96, 1Q9, 340 Montazeri, Husayn Ali, 218, 242n Montesquieu, Charles de Secondat, 51 ? oreau, Jean-Victor, 102
Morocco, 195
? ortefontaine, Convention of (18oo), 277 ? ossadegh, Muhammed, 336n
Mosul, 301, 3o6
? urley, J. T. , 78, 8o
Musavi, Mir-Husayn, 218, 232,. 265 Muslims, 131
Naples, 89
Nasser, Carnal Abdel, 237
nationalism, 29, 350; Eastern European revolu-
tions and, 345; former Soviet Union and, 348; revolutionary ideology of, 14; Turkish revolution and, 299, 309
Near East, 136, 154
neo-Fascism in Europe, 351
neorealism, 3-5, 19, 210, 264-65, 267, 28o-83,
340; Chinese revolution and, 310, 318, 323, 324; Eastern European revolutions and, 349? Seealso realism
Netherlands. See French revolution
New Mexico, 294
New Orleans, 275
Nicaragua, 9-10, 27, 34, 40, 41, 250, 298 Nicaraguan revolution, 14, ? ' 336n; deaths
in, 2m; U. S. response to, 2 Nicholas II, Tsar (of Russia), 201, 335 Nicolaevsk, 152
Nile, Battleof, 113
Nimeiri, Jifar, 247
Nixon, Richard, 326
Noel, Phillipe, 96
Nootka Sound dispute, 6o-61 North, Douglass C. , 25
North, Oliver, 227, 256n, 264
Index
? ? ? ? Index
North Korea, 237, 250, 336n; attempt by to ex- port revolution, 319n
Norway, 167
Noulens,Joseph, 136-37
Obregon, Alvaro, 292
Ochakov affair, 85
offense-defense balance, 4, 16, 19, 37-41, 46-47,
269, 328-29, 333-37, 339; American revolu- tion and, 270, 281, 285-86, 328-29, 337; Chi- nese revolution and, 319, 321-23, 327-28, 334; Eastern European revolutions and, 346; French revolution and, 73-74, 119, 122-26, 128, 334; Iranian revolution and, 259-"<i2, 334; Mexican revolution and, 297-98, 328-29, 337; Russian revolution and, 170, 172-74, 205-7, 209, 334; Turkish revolution and, 307, 310, 328-29, 337; War of the First Coalition and, 66-68; See also contagion; counterrevolution; export of revolution; for- eign intervention; revolution: optimism of
Ortega, Daniel, 24n
Ortega, Humberto, 25
Ottoman Empire, 49, 96, 113, 120, '181, 299-303,
31>6-7, 309, 341. See also Turkey; Turkish rev-
olution; specific revolutions Ovaisi, Ghulam, 235
Padua Circular, 64? 5, 69, 73, 120, 127 Pahlavi, Shah Muhammad Reza, 213-14, 216,
222-23, 225, 2J1, 23J, 235, 25? 25? 261, 332, 334; fall of, 211-12, 230, 250, 253, 263, 266, 335; opposition to, 21m; pan-Arabism and, 237-38; Soviet Union and, 222; United States and, 216, 222-23, 225, 255
Pahlavi family, 235, 341
Paine, Thomas, 32n
Pakistan, 326, 350
Palestine Liberation Organization, 230 Palitana, 3o8
Panikkar, K. M. , 322
Paris, Treaty of, 271
Paris Commune, 76; second, 92
Paris Peace Conference, 160, 167, 182, 203,
301-3. See also Versailles, Treaty of Parra! , 290, 296
Parthanopean Republic, 114
Pasha, Enver, 307
Pastor, Robert, 10
Paul I, Tsar (of ! Russia), 11on, 114
Pelaez, Manuel, 291
Peng Dehuai, 32m
People's Republic of China (PRC). See China,
People's Republic of
Pershing, John J. , 290
Persia, relations of with Soviet Union, 179--82,
185, 196, 202, 204. See also Iran
Persian Gulf, 223, 225; U. S. naval escort in, 228,
Persian Gulf states: Gulf Cooperation Council and, 244, 258, 261? 2; Iraq and, 245; Shiite population in, 243-44, 260. See also Iranian revolution
Petrograd, 135
Pichegru, Jean-Charles, 105n
Pichon, Stephen, t6on
Piedmont, 111
Pillnitz, Declaration of, 64? 5, 69, 7J, 120, 127 Pilsudski, Joseph, 168, 171, 173, 197, 203 Pinckney, Edward, 274n
Pinckney's Treaty, 275, 286
Pitt, William, 58-59, 61? 2, 82n, 83-86, 88, 91,
98n, 105, 110, 114n, 116-17, 119, 121
Plan ofSanDiego, 290n
Poincare, Rene, 189
Poland, 8, 11, 336; Constitution of 1791, 172; in-
vasion of Russia by, 168; Russo-Polish War and, 167-75, 202, 327, 335; Socialist Party in, 171. See also French revolution; Russian rev- olution; Russo-Polish War
Portugal, 89
Prinkipo proposal, 1? 1, 163, 204 prisoners of war, German and Austrian,
136-37, 142, 146, 207
propaganda, 335; Iranian revolution and, 225, 244, 26? 1; Jacobin, 76; Russian revolution and, 145, 164? 6, t76-'79, 195, 204-5
Provence, comte de, 54
Prussia: formal convention of with Austria (1791), 63, 65; mobilization of forces by (1792), 72; territorial ambitions of, 62? 3, n War of the First Coalition and, 74, 77-78, 79n, 82, 89n, 9t, 96"""97, 101, 103-4, to8; War of the Second Coalition and, 1 10, 1 13-14. See also French revolution; Germany
(2otbzadeh, Sadeq, 23tn, 251n, 264 Quasi-War of 1797-tSoo, 275-77, 284, 337n Quemoy, 323-24, 325n
Quiberon, raid, 104, 124, 336
Radek, Karl, 159n, 16? , 181, 193
Rafsanjani, Ali Akbar Hashemi-, 218-19, 220n, 221, 228-29, 232-34, 237, 242, 244-46, 256, 258, 265? 7
Rajai, Mohammed, 217, 235
Rajavi, Masoud, 235
Randolph, John, 28o
Rapallo agreement, 189
Rastatt, Congress of, 111
Reagan, Ronald, 8, 228, 251
realism, vii, 3, 18, 339-42; Chinese revolution
and, 326. See also neorealism
"red scare" (in United States), 40
Regan, Donald, 251
Reign of Terror, 51
Reubell, Jean-Fran?
