Russia and the Latin American Left: New Approaches to Exploring the Topic
https://doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2025-13-3-226-240
Abstract
The presence of powers from other regions in the Western Hemisphere is one of the most relevant areas of contemporary Latin American studies. The collective monograph «Moscow, the Left and the Comintern in Latin America: Historical and Contemporary Outlook» is in line with that. It explores the development of political, economic and cultural relations between the USSR and Latin American states after World War II, as well as the transformation of left-wing political movements in the region in the early 21st century. What makes the book unique is a plethora of issues considered and their presentation in the form of separate essays. The book, which consists of two parts, is based on many sources, including Russian and foreign documents and materials from archives, and contains a detailed review of the existing academic literature. In a broad panorama of the history of Latin American countries, the authors seek to determine the correlation between ideology and pragmatism in the Soviet foreign policy towards the region. Great emphasis is placed on the contacts of the Soviet party and state bodies with Latin American communist parties, their opponents and allies. The authors note that in contrast to the Comintern’s tactics, which relied on supporting armed uprisings of local communist parties in the first half of the 1930s, postwar Soviet leaders believed that military force could only be used in Latin America if a particular country had a favorable balance of socioeconomic and political factors. Analysts at the International Department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union assessed the stability of the new left-wing governments, their «class nature» and their socioeconomic programs. Soviet leaders often chose to cooperate even with military dictatorships if they thought they could reap economic and geopolitical benefits. Parts of the monograph are devoted to reconsidering landmark events for Moscow, such as the Cuban Revolution, the rule of the Popular Unity coalition in Chile, and a series of military coups. The book includes interesting essays on U.S. policy in the Western Hemisphere, which was staunchly anti-communist. The second part of the book analyzes the state of left-wing movements in the region in the early 21st century. The authors pose a question of whether or not there is currently a pink tide (i.e. turn to the left) in Latin America. What makes categorization even more challenging is the emergence of new parties and movements whose programs combine elements of social democracy, «new left» philosophy, ecological and human rights discourse. The authors use the term «pink tide 2.0» to describe this social and political dynamic. The book is an important contribution to Russian and global Latin American studies. The authors show that Russia, following the USSR, uses the emerging opportunities in its cooperation with the region without having unrealistic expectations.
About the Author
A. A. ManukhinRussian Federation
Aleksei A. Manukhin, PhD (History), Senior Research Fellow
119334, Moscow, Leninsky Avenue, 32ª
References
1. Давыдов В.М. (2021) Школа латиноамериканистики в потоке своего времени. 60 лет ИЛА РАН, Латинская Америка, № 5, с. 7–33.
2. Davydov V.M. (2021) Shkola latinoamerikanistiki v potoke svoego vremeni. 60 let ILA RAN [The School of Latin American Studies in its Time Current. 60 Years of ILA RAS], Latinskaya America, no. 5, pp. 7–33. (In Russian)
3. Ивановский З.В. (ред.) (2022) Латинская Америка: политический ландшафт на фоне турбулентности, Москва, ИЛА РАН, 586 с.
4. Iwanowski Z.W. (ed.) (2022) Latinskaya Amerika: politicheskij landshaft na fone turbulentnosti [Latin America: Political Landscape in the midst of Turbulence], Moscow, ILA RAS, 586 p. (In Russian)
5. Хейфец В.Л., Хейфец Л.С. (2018) Коминтерн и Латинская Америка: люди, структуры, решения, Москва, Политическая энциклопедия, 758 с.
6. Khejfets V.L., Khejfets L.S. (2018) Komintern i Latinskaya Amerika: lyudi, struktury, resheniya [The Comintern and Latin America: Personalities, Structures, Decisions], Moscow, Politicheskaya enciklopediya, 758 p. (In Russian)
7. Хейфец В.Л. (ред.) (2023) Москва, левые и Коминтерн в Латинской Америке: история и современность, Москва, Весь Мир, 448 с.
8. Khejfets V.L. (ed.) (2023) Moskva, levye i Komintern v Latinskoj Amerike: istoriya i sovremennost’ [Moscow, the Left, and the Comintern in Latin America: Historical and Contemporary Outlook], Moscow, Ves’ Мir, 448 p. (In Russian)
9. Щелчков А.А. (2019) Советская Россия — «Мекка» латиноамериканских революционеров. Образ страны-«мессии» в трудах латиноамериканских интеллектуалов, Диалог со временем, № 68, с. 21–36.
10. Schelchkov A.A. (2019) Sovetskaya Rossiya–«Mekka» latinoamerikanskih revolyucionerov. Obraz strany «messii» v trudah latinoamerikanskih intellektualov [Soviet Russia – a “Mecca” for Latin American Revolutionaries. The Image of a “Messiah” Country in the Works by Latin American Intellectuals], Dialogue with Time, no. 68, pp. 21–36. (In Russian)
11. Щелчков А.А. (2025) Движение «друзей СССР» в Аргентине: латиноамериканская политика ВОКС в 20–30-е годы ХХ века, Новая и новейшая история, № 2, c. 94–105.
12. Schelchkov A.A. (2025) Dvizhenie «druzej SSSR» v Argentine: latinoamerikanskaya politika VOKS v 20–30-e gody XX veka [The “Friends of the USSR” Movement in Argentina: VOKS and Soviet Cultural Diplomacy in Latin America, 1920s–1930s], Novaya i noveishaya istoriya, no. 2, pp. 94–105. (In Russian)
13. Franco J. (2002) The Decline and Fall of the Lettered City: Latin America in the Cold War, Cambridge, London, Harvard University press, 352 p.
14. Getchell M.D. (2015) Revisiting the 1954 Coup in Guatemala: The Soviet Union, the United Nations, and “Hemispheric Solidarity”, The Journal of Cold War Studies, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 73–102. DOI: 10.1162/JCWS_a_00549
15. Kirkpatrick J.J. (1987) The U.S. Action in Grenada: Its Context and Its Meaning, in Hahn W.F. (ed.) Central America and the Reagan Doctrine, Washington (D.C.), Boston, U.S. Strategic Institute, Boston University, pp. 137–152.
16. Osuna Vergara M. (2023) Que vienen los rusos: The Limits of Soviet Foreign Policy in Cuba, Chile, and Nicaragua, The Webster Review of International History, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 63–76.
17. Prieto Rozos A. (2017) Etapas en las concepciones y retos de la izquierda latinoamericana [Stages in the Concepts and Challenges of the Latin American Left], in Massón Sena C. (ed.) Las Izquierdas latinoamericanas: Multiplicidad y Experiencias durante el Siglo XX [The Latin American Left: Multiplicity and Experiences during the Twentieth Century], Santiago de Chile, Ariadna ediciones, pp. 21–33. (In Spanish)
18. Sigmund P.E. (1981) The USSR, Cuba, and the Revolution in Chile, in Donaldson R.H. (ed.) The Soviet Union and the Third World: Successes and Failures, Boulder, Westview press, pp. 26–50.
Review
For citations:
Manukhin A.A. Russia and the Latin American Left: New Approaches to Exploring the Topic. Cuadernos Iberoamericanos. 2025;13(3):226-240. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2025-13-3-226-240