Home 30. International Implications of the Hungarian Situation
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

30. International Implications of the Hungarian Situation

View more publications by Harvard University Press
Rift and Revolt in Hungary
This chapter is in the book Rift and Revolt in Hungary

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. FOREWORD vii
  3. AUTHOR’S PREFACE ix
  4. CONTENTS xiii
  5. 1. Summons to the Kremlin 1
  6. 2. The Historical Setting: Expansionism and Satellitism 9
  7. 3. The Communists Take Over 28
  8. THE FIRST PHASE. Hotbed of Conflicts: The Stalinist Dictatorship 1949–1953
  9. 4. Party and State 39
  10. 5. Security Police: Purges and Terror 58
  11. 6. The Army of a Satellite 70
  12. 7. Economics in Stalinist Hungary 81
  13. THE SECOND PHASE. Dual Leadership — Conflicting Policies 1953–1955
  14. 8. The Gladiators Square Off 91
  15. 9. Rivalry of Party and State 102
  16. 10. The Third Party Congress and the People’s Patriotic Front 118
  17. 11. Economic Problems of the New Course 129
  18. 12. Political Prisoners — Liability and Peril 143
  19. 13. About-face in Moscow: Nagy’s Fall 152
  20. THE THIRD PHASE. Single Leadership — Divided Party 1955–1956
  21. 14. Rákosi Sole Master — but with Strings Attached 173
  22. 15. Imre Nagy: “Withdrawal” and “Return” 185
  23. 16. The Eager Flock of an Unsuspecting Shepherd 200
  24. 17. Effect Beyond Intent — Impact of the Twentieth Party Congress 211
  25. 18. Rákosi’s Fall 221
  26. THE FOURTH PHASE. The Revolution. 1956
  27. 19. Rajk’s Body and Imre Nagy’s Return 243
  28. 20. Yugoslavia Complies—Poland Rises—Hungary Revolts 258
  29. 21. Party and Government during the Revolution 280
  30. 22. Hungarian Armed Forces during the Revolution 306
  31. 23. Revolutionaries and Revolutionary Institutions 319
  32. 24. Foreign Factors: The Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Suez 341
  33. 25. The Second Soviet Intervention — Kádár versus Nagy 358
  34. THE FIFTH PHASE. Aftermath of a Revolution. 1957–1961
  35. 26. Consolidation, Restoration, and Repression 383
  36. 27. The New “New Party” and Its Government 400
  37. 28. Means of Coercion and Control: Soviet and Domestic 427
  38. 29. Synchronizing a Satellite 448
  39. 30. International Implications of the Hungarian Situation 467
  40. Nationalism versus Communism
  41. 31. Nationalism versus Communism 493
  42. Bibliography 515
  43. Notes 521
  44. Index 575
Downloaded on 22.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.4159/harvard.9780674594708.c36/html
Scroll to top button