Mission to Moscow
$12.00
1 in stock
This book tells the inside story of Russia from the treason trials to the Nazi-Soviet war. Joseph E. Davies was appointed American Ambassador to the USSR on November 16, 1936, and left for his post shortly thereafter. He arrived to find the treason trial of Karl Radek approaching its climax. He remained in Moscow until the eve of the Czechoslovak crisis. Mr. Davies’ departure from Moscow did not end his activities in the field of Russian-American relations. After a year and a half as Ambassador to Brussels, he was summoned back to Washington to serve as special assistant to the State Department in charge of war emergency problems and policies. Mission to Moscow is a report to the American people on the facts which enabled Mr. Davies to predict the Nazi-Soviet Pact, the outbreak of the war, the German attack on Russia, and the amazing resistance of the Red Army. In addition to telling a new story for the fist time, Mission to Moscow tells this story in a new way. The book is made up entirely of confidential dispatches to the State Department, selections from diary and journal entries, and correspondence both official and personal.
Weight | 32 oz |
---|---|
Dimensions | 8.75 × 2 × 5.75 in |
Subtitle | 1941, A Record of Confidential Dispatches to the State Department, Current Diary and Journal Entries, Including Notes and Comments Up to October, Official and Personal Correspondence |
Author | Joseph Edward Davies |
Format | Hardcover |
Condition | Used-Good |
Publisher | Simon & Schuster |
Year Published | 1941 |
Pages | 683 |
Dust Jacket | Good |
Customer Reviews
There are no reviews yet.
Be the first to review “Mission to Moscow”