No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
1 ‘For the first time in Soviet history, two veterans of the KGB are Politburo members. Andropov should benefit enormously from his fifteen years as head of the Secret Police. By now he must know whatever may be embarrassing in the dossiers of every member of the Central Committee, he can command obedience from fear if not from loyalty or agreement with his policies.’ Byder, Seweryn, ‘The Andropov succession’ in The New York Review of Books, 02 3 1983, p. 28 Google Scholar.
2 London, Heinemann Educational, Policy Studies Institute Series, 1982, 196 pp.
3 Hurd, Douglas, An End to Promises ‐ Sketch of a Government 1970–74, London, Collins, 1979 Google Scholar.