
Published online:
31 October 2013
Published in print:
19 August 2008
Online ISBN:
9780300151701
Print ISBN:
9780300125245
Contents
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What Stalin Feared What Stalin Feared
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The Soviet Union Faced Real Foreign Threats The Soviet Union Faced Real Foreign Threats
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Foreign Threats Stimulated Domestic Opposition Foreign Threats Stimulated Domestic Opposition
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What Stalin Feared Most: Collusion Among Enemies What Stalin Feared Most: Collusion Among Enemies
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Repression Is Flexible, Military Power Is Sticky Repression Is Flexible, Military Power Is Sticky
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Military Force and Repression in Theory Military Force and Repression in Theory
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Evidence on Military Power Versus Repression Evidence on Military Power Versus Repression
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Notes Notes
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Published References Published References
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Cite
Harrison, Mark (ed.), 'The Dictator and Defense', in Mark Harrison (ed.), Guns and Rubles: The Defense Industry in the Stalinist State (New Haven, CT , 2008; online edn, Yale Scholarship Online, 31 Oct. 2013), https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300125245.003.0001, accessed 5 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines Soviet Union leader Joseph Stalin's choices over military power and political repression as instruments for holding political power in the face of foreign and domestic threats. It explains that Stalin wanted a large army and defense industry because he had many enemies, and used military power to counter both domestic and foreign threats. The chapter also mentions that in some years in the 1930s, Stalin responded to an unanticipated increase in perceived foreign threats by imposing a substantial excess burden of repression on Soviet society because rearmament, which was the more efficient response, was not immediately available.
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