Soviet campaign against INF (intermediate-range nuclear forces): strategy, tactics, means. Interim report
Beginning in 1979, the Soviet Union mounted a major effort to prevent the deployment of NATO's INF (intermediate-range nuclear forces), which was scheduled to begin in 1983. The campaign failed to achieve its main objective, but it remains an instructive example of the Soviet effort to manipulate domestic trends in Western countries. This Note attempts to provide some insight into Soviet tactics and operational style. It places the INF issue within the framework of Soviet security concepts, reviews Soviet efforts to influence decision-making elites in West Germany against INF and to exacerbate U.S.-European friction within NATO, and analyzes the methods used by the Soviets in their campaign to co-opt the West German peace movement. The author finds that the campaign waged by the Soviets demonstrated a remarkable organizational and political capability that enabled them and their allies to exploit large numbers of noncommunists in West Germany, and contribute to the growing polarization of West German politics.
- Research Organization:
- RAND Corp., Santa Monica, CA (USA)
- OSTI ID:
- 5390784
- Report Number(s):
- AD-A-154744/7/XAB; RAND/N-2280-AF
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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