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Reassessing Communist International Organisations: A Comparative Analysis of COMECON and the Warsaw Pact in relation to their Cold War Competitors
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 December 2017
Abstract
This article widens the analysis of international organisations by including communist organisations, in particular the Warsaw Pact and the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON). Drawing on archival research in Moscow, Bucharest, Berlin, Geneva and Rome, this article traces the origins, the evolution and the collective actorness of both organisations. Both COMECON and the Warsaw Pact went through a process of institutionalisation, reorganisation and multilateralisation and began to share many characteristics with their Western counterparts, such as the European Economic Community and NATO. Contrary to conventional wisdom these organisations thus developed into multilateral international organisations, which the other members could use to challenge Soviet unilateralism. Comparing COMECON and the Warsaw Pact with each other and with their Western counterparts, this article shows how these Eastern European international organisations contributed to shifting the balance of power within the Soviet Bloc by empowering their members as sovereign states and themselves as collective actors.
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Footnotes
This article grew out of a joint presentation on communist international organisations at Sciences Po Paris, organised by Marieke Louis, and was further developed during two presentations at Utrecht University. The authors would like to thank the scholars at Sciences Po and Utrecht University as well as the three anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful and discerning feedback. The authors have translated all previously untranslated sources themselves.
References
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