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URL: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-american-studies/article/jerry-dont-go-domestic-opposition-to-the-1975-helsinki-final-act/8016F0C1A23B4889AC13DBFEE36D4E38

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“Jerry, Don't Go”: Domestic Opposition to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

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SARAH B. SNYDER
Affiliation:
Yale University.

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Abstract

Though now seen as a key turning point in the Cold War, the 1975 Helsinki Final Act provoked considerable opposition in the United States. The principal line of criticism was that the United States had given away too much in the negotiations and had required little of the Soviets. The Helsinki Final Act initially was unpopular domestically with Eastern European ethnic groups as well as members of Congress due to concerns about its implications for Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania and the Soviet presence in Eastern Europe. At the root of many of these complaints was a larger critique of United States President Gerald Ford's policy of détente with the Soviet Union. Understanding the sources of opposition to the Helsinki Final Act in the United States illuminates the potential conflict between foreign policy formulation and domestic politics, and it reflects the Ford administration's inability to explain his support for the agreement to the American public. Furthermore, the controversy engendered by the Helsinki Final Act illustrates how contentious Cold War politics remained even in an era of supposed détente with the Soviet Union and demonstrates the extent to which the pact's long-term benefits were unforeseen by participants at the time. The Ford administration was never able to counter condemnation of the Helsinki Final Act sufficiently, enhancing existing skepticism about his leadership and policy toward the Soviet Union.


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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

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“Jerry, Don't Go”: Domestic Opposition to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act

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“Jerry, Don't Go”: Domestic Opposition to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act

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“Jerry, Don't Go”: Domestic Opposition to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act

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