This book should forever change the ways we have understood the role of Russia in the First World War. -- Michael S. Neiberg, author of Dance of the Furies: Europe and the Outbreak of World War I A bold reinterpretation of the Russian Empire's entry into the First World War. McMeekin argues that Russia believed a European war to be in its interest, that it sought to humiliate Vienna, and that it hoped to conquer Constantinople and the Ottoman Straits. -- Mustafa Aksakal, author of The Ottoman Road to War in 1914 The Russian Origins of the First World War is a polemic in the best sense. Written in a lively and engaging style, it should provoke a much-needed debate on Russia's role in the Great War. -- Michael Reynolds, author of Shattering Empires: The Clash and Collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires, 1908-1918
Sean McMeekin is Assistant Professor of History at Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey.
This book should forever change the ways we have understood the
role of Russia in the First World War.
*Michael S. Neiberg, author of Dance of the Furies: Europe and
the Outbreak of World War I*
A bold reinterpretation of the Russian Empire's entry into the
First World War. McMeekin argues that Russia believed a European
war to be in its interest, that it sought to humiliate Vienna, and
that it hoped to conquer Constantinople and the Ottoman
Straits.
*Mustafa Aksakal, author of The Ottoman Road to War in
1914*
The Russian Origins of the First World War is a polemic in the best
sense. Written in a lively and engaging style, it should provoke a
much-needed debate on Russia's role in the Great War.
*Michael Reynolds, author of Shattering Empires: The Clash and
Collapse of the Ottoman and Russian Empires, 1908-1918*
Going against a century of received wisdom, Bilkent University
professor McMeekin offers a dramatic new interpretation of
WWI...Rifling the archives, analyzing battle plans, and sifting
through the machinations of high diplomacy, McMeekin reveals the
grand ambitions of czarist Russia, which wanted control of the
Black Sea straits to guarantee all-weather access to foreign
markets. Maneuvering France and England into a war against Germany
presented the best chance to acquire this longed-for prize. No
empire had more to gain from the coming conflict, and none pushed
harder to ensure its arrival. Once unleashed, however, the
conflagration leapt out of control, and imperial Russia herself
ranked among its countless victims.
*Publishers Weekly*
Casting a contrarian eye on the first major conflict of the
twentieth century, Sean McMeekin finds the roots of WWI inside
Russia, whose leaders deliberately sought--for their own ends--to
expand a brawl that the Germans wanted to keep local. The author
tracks the fallout of these antique plots right down to the present
geopolitical landscape.
*Barnes & Noble Review*
An entirely new take on the origins of World War I comes as a
surprise. If war guilt is to be assigned, this book argues, it
should go not only (or even primarily) to Germany--the
long-accepted culprit--but also to Russia...Bold reading between
the lines of history.
*Foreign Affairs*
As Sean McMeekin argues in this bold and brilliant revisionist
study, Russia was as much to blame as Germany for the outbreak of
the war. Using a wide range of archival sources, including
long-neglected tsarist documents, he argues that the Russians had
ambitions of their own (the dismantling of the Austro-Hungarian and
Ottoman empires, no less) and that they were ready for a war once
they had secured a favorable alliance with the British and the
French.
*Sunday Times*
The book is a refreshing challenge to longstanding assumptions and
shifted perspectives are always good.
*The Australian*
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