Reviews
Russia, the Near Abroad, and the West should be required reading for all Transnistrian settlement optimists, especially for those Europeans with ambitious plans for a quick resolution outside of official channels.
This book, a narrative focusing on the southwestern confines of the "Russian space," is an event unto itself; a must-read, full of inside information, for any student or scholar studying Moldova, Transnistria, and de facto statehood...
A valuable study of Russian-Western relations, which should be recommended to a broad audience.
This is the first serious attempt to narrate and interpret the history of international efforts to solve the Transdniestria problem, with the focus—completely justified—on the crisis engendered by the Kozak memorandum. Although focused on Moldova, the crisis involved major international actors—Russia, the U.S., OSCE, EU, and Council of Europe—and put Moldova for a short time in the international spotlight. The crisis and its less-than-satisfactory resolution had multiple long-lasting consequences and is fraught with lessons for those who are interested in conflict resolution theory and practice, those who study Russian diplomacy and policy-making, and those who focus on political cultures of post-Soviet countries and of southeastern Europe. There is nothing coming even close, in terms of the breadth of vision and depth of knowledge of the subject matter, among the disparate journal accounts and position papers available up to now. This book is an absolute must.
Book Details
Preface
Maps of the Region
1. Introduction: How Things All Went Bad
2. Russia and the Post–Cold War Euro-Atlantic SecurityArchitecture
3. Conflict Resolution in the Former Soviet Union: Russian Mediation
Preface
Maps of the Region
1. Introduction: How Things All Went Bad
2. Russia and the Post–Cold War Euro-Atlantic SecurityArchitecture
3. Conflict Resolution in the Former Soviet Union: Russian Mediation, Peacemaking, and Peacekeeping
4. The Soviet Collapse and the Transdniestrian Conflict
5. The Voronin Constitutional Initiative
6. The Joint Constitutional Commission: Buyers' Remorse?
7. Roadblocks over Security Issues
8. The Summer of 2003: Pressing for a Settlement
9. The Competing Negotiations
10. A Settlement Is at Hand
11. The Dénouement
12. Conflict Resolution in Moldova and East-West Relationsafter Kozak
13. Russia and the West: An Endless Dilemma?
Appendixes
A. The Mediators' Document
B. The Kozak Memorandum—September 11 Draft
C. The Kozak Memorandum—November 23 Redaction
Notes
Bibliography
Index