Military Conflicts Between Communist States: Geopolitical Realities and the Realization of a Communist Peace

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12797/SH.62.2019.03.04

Keywords:

international relations, geopolitics, military conflicts, communist peace theory

Abstract

Despite historical perceptions of systemic communist-capitalist bipolarity in the Cold War world order, the international communist system was nevertheless affected by the same geopolitical realities that influenced the international system as a whole. By examining the seven cases of military conflicts between communist states from 1945 to 1991 – the Soviet invasion of Hungary (1956), the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia (1968), the Sino-Soviet border conflict (1969), the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia (1978-1989), the Chinese invasion of Vietnam (1979), the Somali invasion of Ethiopia (1977-1978), and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan (1979-1989) – this article challenges both the notions of Cold War bipolarity between communist and capitalist systems as well as the Marxist theory of peaceful coexistence between communist states.

Author Biography

  • Kacper Grass, University of Tennessee

    Absolwent nauk politycznych i iberystycznych uniwersytetu w Tennessee (licencjat) oraz nauk politycznych w Autonomous University of Barcelona (magisterium). Pracuje jako redaktor w holenderskim think tanku Factory for Innovative Policy Solutions. Równocześnie jest doktorantem nauk politycznych na uniwersytecie w Tennessee, Knoxville. Jego zainteresowania koncentrują się na stosunkach międzynarodowych badanych z zastosowaniem porównawczej analizy historycznej.

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Published

2022-03-18

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How to Cite

Military Conflicts Between Communist States: Geopolitical Realities and the Realization of a Communist Peace. (2022). Studia Historyczne, 62(3 (247), 77-98. https://doi.org/10.12797/SH.62.2019.03.04

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