ABSTRACT

The Soviet Union and Terrorism (1984) examines the extent of Soviet involvement in international terrorism, and the aims and objectives of Soviet foreign policy. It looks at the evidence of changing Soviet attitudes to terrorism from 1917 to the 1980s evidenced in official and semi-official pronouncements, and it brings together evidence from the field of terrorist operations which points to a high degree of Soviet involvement. The Soviet Union is shown to be playing a dangerous game, sponsoring activities which it cannot hope to control, and leading to effects which it cannot predict. Nevertheless, it continues to play because it gains from the political and military disruption to the countries affected by terrorist activities.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Marxist-Leninist Ideology on Terrorism

chapter 3|23 pages

Legal Aspects

chapter 4|42 pages

Historical Perspective

chapter 5|99 pages

Contemporary International Terrorism

chapter 6|6 pages

Conclusions and Observations