NO EASY ROW FOR A RUSSIAN HOE: IDEOLOGY AND PRAGMATISM IN NIGERIAN-SOVIET RELATION, 1960-1991

ISBN: 9781592210886
$29.95

By exploring the dynamics of the relationship between Nigeria and the USSR from the time of Nigeria's independence in 1960 to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, this book presents a revisionist examination of the important yet often misinterpreted interplay between ideology and pragmatism in Third World-superpower interaction.

“This useful book’s focus on Africa brings to light for the first time a number of important behind-the-scenes developments on both sides and "in the shadow" of the Iron Curtain. Matusevich's fresh analysis of the Cold War interaction between Nigeria and the Soviet Union has significant implications for reassessing the current international scene.”

-Sergei N. Khrushchev
Senior Research Fellow, Watson Institute forInternational Studies, Brown University

“Here is a book we have awaited for so long to disentangle the cobwebs covering our understanding of Nigerian-Soviet relations during the Cold War. Matusevich has adequately revealed the complicated history that we need to know, the actors and interests that we must consider, and the betrayal of ideologies that frustrate policies and dialogue. Generous and prodigious in data, engaging in its presentation and cogent in laying out its arguments, No Easy Row challenges a corpus of ideas on the Cold War and represents an outstanding achievement worthy of praise, attention, and emulation.”

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