Britain, Russia and the Road to the First World War

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A01=Marina Soroka
Alexander III
anglo-russian
Anglo-Russian Convention
Anglo-Russian Rapprochement
Anglo-Russian Understanding
Au Service
Author_Marina Soroka
Baghdad Railway
Balkan States
cambon
Category=JPS
Category=NHWR5
Chesham House
Count Benckendorff
Demarcation Line
diplomatic history
edward
Edward VII
Empress Maria Feodorovna
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
European power balance
feodorovna
foreign
imperial rivalries
international relations theory
maria
Maria Feodorovna
Napoleon III
Nicholas II
Novoye Vremya
office
paul
Paul Cambon
Persian Government
pre-World War I diplomacy research
Russo German Negotiations
Russo German Rapprochement
Russo German Relations
Russo-Japanese conflict
service
Spring Rice
Straits Issue
Trans-Persian Railway
Triple Entente formation
vii
William II

Product details

  • ISBN 9781409422464
  • Weight: 748g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Apr 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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For much of the later nineteenth-century Britain regarded Russia as its main international rival, particularly as regarded the security of its colonial possessions in India. Yet, by 1907 Russia's political revolution, financial collapse and military defeat by Japan, transformed the situation, resulting in an Anglo-Russian rapprochement. As this book makes clear, whilst international affairs lay at the root of this new relationship, personal factors also played an important role in reversing many years of mutual animosity and suspicion. In particular the study explores the influence of the liberal anglophile Count Aleksandr Benckendorff, the Russian ambassador in London between 1903 and 1916. By 1905, Russia's multiple weaknesses required a prolonged period of external peace by eliminating frictions with the principal rival powers, Britain and Germany, while France and Britain realised that a British rapprochement with Russia would be necessary to counter Germany's power. Benckendorff, as one of the most important figures in the Russian diplomatic service, persuaded Nicholas II and his Foreign Minister, V.N. Lamsdorff, to drop their objections to various long-standing British demands in order to pave the way for a Triple Entente. Although the overarching Russian strategy was conceived as 'balancing' the imperial rivalries of Britain and Germany, numerous factors - not least Benckendorff's energetic pro-British stance - upset the scales and resulted in a stand-off with the Central Powers. Demonstrating how Benckendorff's fear of losing Britain's friendship made him oppose all Russia's efforts at improving Russo-German relations, this book underlines the pro-Entente policy’s role in setting Russia on the road to war. For when the Sarajevo crisis struck; there was now no hope of appealing to German goodwill to help defuse the situation. Instead Russia's status within the Entente depended on a show of determination and strength, which lead inexorably to a disaster o
Marina Soroka, University of Western Ontario, Canada

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