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How Finland Survived Stalin. From Winter War to Cold War

Publisher
Yale University Press
Author
Kimmo Rentola
Translator
Richard Robinson
A dramatic and timely account of Stalin’s failed invasion of Finland in 1939, and the decade of wars and fraught relations that followed In November 1939, Stalin directed his military leaders to launch an invasion of Finland. In what became known as the Winter War, the full might of the Soviet army was pitted against this small Nordic republic. Yet despite their vastly superior military strength, the Soviets suffered heavy losses and failed to mount Stalin’s intended full-scale invasion. How did Finland evade Stalin’s crosshairs―not once, but three times more? In this groundbreaking account, Kimmo Rentola traces the epochal shifts in Soviet-Finnish relations. From the Winter War to Finland’s exit from World War II in 1944, a possible Soviet-backed coup in 1948, and Moscow’s designation of Finland as an enemy state in 1950, Finland was forced to navigate Stalin’s outsize political and territorial demands. Rentola presents a dramatic reconstruction of Finland’s unlikely survival at a time when the nation’s very existence was at stake.

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    Specification

    SKU
    9780300273618
    Published At
    2023
    Dimensions
    243x163x29
    Pages
    256
    EAN
    9780300273618
    Language
    Format
    Created At (custom)
    28.12.2023
    ISBN
    9780300273618

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