Why Vietnam invaded Cambodia political culture and the causes of war

This book is the first comprehensive, scholarly analysis of the causes of the Vietnamese invasion. At its core are two separate but related histories covering the years 1930 to 1978. The first concerns the continuing difficult relations between the Vietnamese communist party and the Cambodian commun...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morris, Stephen J
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Stanford, Calif. Stanford University Press 1999
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100 1 |a Morris, Stephen J 
245 1 0 |a Why Vietnam invaded Cambodia  |b political culture and the causes of war  |c Stephen J. Morris 
260 |a Stanford, Calif.  |b Stanford University Press  |c 1999 
300 |a xiii, 315 p.  |b ill., maps  |c 24 cm 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index 
505 0 |a pt.1. The Local Genesis of the Conflict -- Roots of a Conflict: The Vietnamese Communists and the Cambodians, 1930-70 -- The Public Rise and Secret Fall of "Militant Solidarity": Vietnamese and Cambodian Communists, 1970-75 -- The Foreign Policy of Democratic Kampuchea, 1975-78 -- The Public Disintegration of "Militant Solidarity" in Indochina: Vietnam and Cambodia, 1975-78 -- pt.2. The Internationalization of a Conflict -- Vietnam and the Communist World, 1930-68 -- North Vietnam's Tilt Toward the Soviet Union, 1968-75 -- The Collapse of Vietnamese-Chinese Relations -- The Emergence of the Soviet-Vietnamese Alliance -- The Consequences of the Vietnamese Invasion -- Conclusion: History and Theory 
520 |a This book is the first comprehensive, scholarly analysis of the causes of the Vietnamese invasion. At its core are two separate but related histories covering the years 1930 to 1978. The first concerns the continuing difficult relations between the Vietnamese communist party and the Cambodian communist movement. The second records the fluctuating and often conflicted relations between the Vietnamese communist party and the two most powerful communist states, the Soviet Union and China. These two histories are encased by a theoretical introduction and a conclusion that make clear the need for a "political culture" perspective on international relations. 
650 0 |a Cambodian-Vietnamese Conflict, 1977-1991 
651 0 |a Vietnam  |x History  |y 20th century 
651 0 |a Cambodia  |x History  |y 20th century 
651 0 |a Vietnam  |x Foreign relations  |z Cambodia 
651 0 |a Cambodia  |x Foreign relations  |z Vietnam 
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