Description
About the Author
Jamil Hasanli is a member of Milli Mejlis (parliament) of the Republic of Azerbaijan.
Reviews
[Hasanli] draws on an extraordinary range of newly available documents in this detailed and nuanced examination of an under-explored front in U.S. and Soviet relations. Recommended. * CHOICE *
At the Dawn of the Cold War brings to light a great deal of important information about Soviet actions and plans in southern Azerbaijan. . . . The book provides extensive new information. -- Anar Valiyev * Journal of Cold War Studies *
This is a well-researched book about the birth and demise of the national government of the autonomous republic of Iranian Azerbaijan in 1945-46. Through his discerning and informed use of abundant Russian, Azerbaijani, Iranian, and Western documents, many of them cited for the first time here, Jamil Hasanli sheds new light on less well-understood areas of the beginning of the Cold War. . . . It adds significantly to the scholarship on the Azerbaijan crisis and makes an important contribution to our understanding of that crucial time and place. * International Journal of Middle East Studies *
In dealing with the history of the Iranian crisis of 1945-46, Jamil Hasanli raises very significant and still disputable questions concerning the origins of the Cold War as well as the motives and characteristics of Soviet foreign policy in the first years after the end of the Second World War. The book's undoubted advantage is that the author scrutinized and put into use unique documentary material from the archives of the Azerbaijan Republic, Georgia, and Russia. * Cold War History *
Fills some important gaps in our knowledge of the short-lived government of the Democratic Party of Azerbaijan, 1945-46. That long-ago crisis signaled the beginning of the cold war. . . . Of most interest and usefulness to scholars . . . will be Hasanli's account of the triangular relationship between Tabriz, Baku, and Moscow during these years. . . . In the final days of the Tabriz government, when it was fighting for its life, Hasanli's account of dogged and heroic resistance on the part of the Azeris presents a remarkably different picture from that available in most Western accounts. * Iranian Studies *
Based on a treasure trove of new documents from the Azeri and other archives, Hasanli's book is a major contribution to our understanding of the origins of the Cold War. -- Christian Friedrich Ostermann, director, Cold War International History Project, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Jamil Hasanli is the leading historian of Azerbaijan. In this ground-breaking volume, he presents the first major English-language study of the Azerbaijan crisis based on both Soviet and Western documentation. Part diplomatic chronicle, part social history, part spy drama, At the Dawn of the Cold War not only brings to light vital new Azerbaijani, Russian, and other sources that clarify in startling detail the roles of Moscow and Baku, it also provides a fascinating analysis that, among other things, underscores the impact of local events on Soviet behavior in the Cold War, and vice versa. It is an important achievement. -- Malcolm Byrne, research director, the National Security Archive at George Washington University
Book Information
ISBN 9780742540552
Author Jamil Hasanli
Format Hardback
Page Count 424
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Weight(grams) 730g
Dimensions(mm) 243mm * 161mm * 37mm