Description:
How was anti-communism organized in the West? Was it all run by the CIA? The book covers the aims, arguments and associations of a range of transnational anti-communist activists during the Cold War. While the CIA were obviously important, other motives, interests and financial sources were available. The contributors of this volume open up new fields of research to explore how far
anti-communism was actually planned, coordinated and structured across Western nations. By taking a transnational approach, the book moves beyond simply reducing anti-communist activities to the interests of governments and instead focuses on the role of individuals and private networks, how they organized themselves and how they pursued their own interests.
apparently straightforward goal to oppose Soviet power, moved along many different paths simultaneously.
Review Quotes: "The volume brings together the work of a new generation of scholars of the Cold War, some of whose work is appearing in English translation for the first time. ... This edited volume sets the agenda for future research on transnationalism and the Cold War, about which much remains to be discovered." (Benjamin Tromly, European History Quarterly, Vol. 46 (4), 2016)