黑海海岸作为冷战情报的景观

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY KRITIKA-EXPLORATIONS IN RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN HISTORY Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.1353/kri.2022.0043
Erik R. Scott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

冷战期间,如果游客到科布列蒂(Kobuleti)——前苏联格鲁吉亚黑海沿岸的一个著名度假小镇——向南漫步,他们会沿着一条两旁种满棕榈树的海滨道路,或者沿着卵石滩的海岸散步,路过高层度假建筑群。在巴统的郊区,迎接他们的是一座郁郁葱葱的植物园,一直延伸到山上,展示了该地区丰富的亚热带柑橘林和地中海、南美、东亚甚至遥远的澳大利亚的外来植物。在巴统本身,他们会发现一个熙熙攘攘的国际港口,来自世界各地的集装箱船和油轮都会到访;他们会遇到在街上漫步、用外语交谈的水手。黑海海岸是苏联成就的展示之地,尤其是在后斯大林时代,黑海海岸向苏联边界以外的世界开放。然而,如果我们的旅行者继续从巴屯米向南走,他们很快就会进入一个“边境禁区”(zapretnaia pogranichnaia zona),只对经过仔细筛选的当地居民和苏联边防部队开放,这是一片受限制的土地,其地形在公开地图上没有详细描述,而是被视为机密信息。禁区是北部交通繁忙的港口和邻近的土耳其边境之间的缓冲地带,苏联边防部队的训练手册将土耳其描述为美国资助的“组织针对苏联的颠覆活动的基地”。如果我们想象中的旅行者没有被抓住
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The Black Sea Coast as a Landscape of Cold War Intelligence
In the midst of the Cold War, if visitors to Kobuleti, a popular resort town on Soviet Georgia’s Black Sea coast, wandered south, they would follow a seaside road lined with palm trees or walk along the shores of its pebble beach, passing high-rise vacation complexes. On the outskirts of Batumi, they would be greeted by a lush botanical garden reaching up into the hills and showcasing the region’s subtropical abundance with citrus groves and areas devoted to the exotic plants of the Mediterranean, South America, East Asia, and even distant Australia. In Batumi itself, they would find a bustling international port, visited by container ships and tankers from across the world; they would pass sailors strolling the streets, conversing in foreign languages. The Black Sea coast was a showcase for Soviet achievements and, especially in the postStalinist era, an opening to the world beyond Soviet borders. If our travelers continued to head south from Batumi, however, they would soon enter a “forbidden border zone” (zapretnaia pogranichnaia zona) open only to carefully screened local residents and Soviet border troops, a restricted stretch of land whose topography was not detailed in public maps but instead considered classified information. The forbidden zone served as a buffer between the heavily trafficked port to the north and the nearby border with Turkey, a country described in a training manual for the Soviet border troops as a US-funded “base for the organization of subversive activity directed against the USSR.”1 If our imaginary travelers were not seized
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: A leading journal of Russian and Eurasian history and culture, Kritika is dedicated to internationalizing the field and making it relevant to a broad interdisciplinary audience. The journal regularly publishes forums, discussions, and special issues; it regularly translates important works by Russian and European scholars into English; and it publishes in every issue in-depth, lengthy review articles, review essays, and reviews of Russian, Eurasian, and European works that are rarely, if ever, reviewed in North American Russian studies journals.
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