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Inside
the Enigma
British Officials in Russia,
1900-1939
Michael Hughes
The twentieth century has been fundamentally
shaped by changes in Russia, where disaster in the First World War was
followed by the fall of the Tsar. Nicholas II's replacement first by Kerensky's
liberal government then by the Bolsheviks, and the subsequent Civil War
and foreign intervention, led to the erection of a system of state tyranny
previously unthought of. The Bolshevik regime, with its ideological hatred
of other regimes, was a threat to the west where developments in Russia
were watched with both horror and fascination.
Britain's information about this series of
extraordinary events, and about what might be about to happen next, was
largely dependent on the small number of British officials, mainly diplomats,
posted in Russia.
Inside the Enigma gives us a view from an
unusual and privileged angle of the history of Russia between the turn
of the century and the beginning of the Second World War. The discomforts
and privations suffered by British officials were matched by their frustration.
Impenetrable Tsarist court intrigue was replaced by a wall of disinformation
and suspicion after the Bolshevik seizure of power. Nevertheless, what
they saw and reported makes remarkable reading.
304 pages June 1997
1 85285160 0 Cased £35.00
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