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Klaus
Larres and Ann Lane, eds, The Cold War: The Essential Readings,
Blackwell Essential Readings in History. Blackwell Publishers Oxford
and Massachusetts, 2001. 256 pp. ISBN 0-631-20706-6 (pbk)
Gregory Mitrovich, Undermining the Kremlin:
America's Strategy to Subvert the Soviet Bloc, 1947 - 1956.
Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London, 2000. 235 pp. ISBN
0-8014-3711-3.
John T. McNay, Acheson and Empire: The British
Accent in American Foreign Policy, University of Missouri Press,
Columbia and London, 2001. 219 pp. ISBN 0-8262-1344-8.
Fraser J. Harbutt, The Cold War Era, Blackwell
Problems in American History, Oxford and Massachusetts, 2002. 371
pp. ISBN 1-57718-6 (pbk).
'Gosh, I miss the Cold War', Bill Clinton reputedly
claimed. Clearly for reasons other than historical scholarship as
the demise of the Cold War has certainly not stemmed the ever-increasing
proliferation of books about a subject that has been exhaustively
analysed and passionately debated. Even allowing for Arthur Marwick's
legitimate observation that history is a constant re-writing and
re-interpretation, a cumulative development, do we really need yet
more student texts and a seemingly endless flow of research monographs?
Judging by the output, the answer of the publishing industry is
a resounding yes. Indeed, Ann Lane and Klaus Larres claim that the
process of accumulating knowledge and assessing the significance
of new findings in the context of previous Cold War scholarship
'is still very much in its infancy'. (p.16)
Access to new sources, the constant revision of
old sources, plus the different insights opened up by other fields,
especially at present cultural history, mean that Cold War history
is continually being enriched. Certainly there have been some significant
developments in the last two decades of Cold War historiography.
European scholarship flourished in the 1980s following the opening
of the archives. The emerging European perspective laid open a far
more elaborate pattern of relations in the international arena than
had previously been recognised. It not only challenged existing
scholarship, it revealed the valuable contribution external sources
make to a nuanced and fuller appreciation of the US foreign policy
making process.
Perhaps the most significant development has been
the opening of the Russian and East European archives that followed
the ending of the Cold War. A great deal of excitement has been
generated by the 'new' Cold War history coming out of these recently
opened archives.(1) This is reflected
by Klarres' and Lane's inclusion in their excellent collection of
classic essays, entitled simply The Cold War, of an extract
from Vladislav Zubok's and Constantine Pleshakov's jointly-authored
Inside the Kremlin's Cold War: From Stalin to Khrushchev
(Harvard University Press; Cambridge, 1996). Addressing the most
critical point of the Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Zubok
and Pleshakov use Soviet archives to delve into the influences and
events that shaped Khrushchev's thinking as the world teetered on
the edge of potential nuclear annihilation.
In 'Khrushchev and Kennedy: The taming of the
Cold War', the two authors present some fascinating revelations
about the Soviet premier, his perceptions of Kennedy and the high
hopes he had of the new president. They also disclose how valid
public fears were at the time and just how close to catastrophe
the world actually came, revealing that at the time the US Chiefs
of Staff proposed a preventative strike on the Soviet installations
in Cuba, the head of the provisional Soviet troops there, General
I. A. Pliyev, had a nuclear option at his discretion. The extract
provides a detailed exegesis of the trail of events, already explored
by American historians in relation to J.F. Kennedy, which led the
Soviet premier and the American president to seek more careful containment
and management of the East-West conflict.
While material from the Soviet archives is of
incalculable value, it should not be forgotten that much remains
to be learned from the Western side, where far too much still remains
classified. An excellent example of effective and objective use
of what is available in the newly declassified sources comes from
Gregory Mitrovich, Undermining the Kremlin: America's Strategy
to subvert the Soviet Bloc, 1947 - 1956. A notable contribution
to the Cornell Studies in Security Affairs series, the book is distinguished
by meticulous research, measured argument and penetrating analysis.
Mitrovich develops a proposition that has recently gained currency,
that liberation was implicit in the policy of containment as formulated
during the Truman era. W. L. Hixson, in his much-praised ground-breaking
cultural study Parting the Curtain: Propaganda, Culture and the
Cold War (Houndmills; New York, 1997), had previously argued
that the American aim was to avoid direct military conflict through
the application of external and internal pressures aimed at promoting
instability in the Soviet bloc.(2)
Mitrovich contends that the United States initiated offensive action
against the Soviet bloc independently of and simultaneously with
the inauguration of containment. Mitrovich is not suggesting that
American national security elites planned global economic hegemony.
Rather, he posits that the desire to create a world without competing
blocs, taken together with Soviet policies in Eastern Europe, 'required
that the cold war be a struggle for world supremacy with one system
ultimately emerging as victor . as indeed has happened.' (p. 181)
Mitrovich uses recently declassified intelligence
files to argue that the Cold War struggle, especially from 1948
to 1956, was in reality a true war with a victor and a loser. He
notes, however, that post-war US policymakers did not intend nor
foresee the long commitment that ensued. In fact, they feared that
a long-term division of the world would make economic depression
and world war inevitable, whereas an open international economic
system without competing political-economic blocs would be a guarantor
of peace and stability.
These beliefs predisposed US policy-makers to
favour the expeditious elimination of the Soviet threat, thus allowing
the construction of a global political-economic order that included
the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. In effect, what we have today.
The war was to be fought by non-military methods, psychological
warfare and covert action in particular, highly influenced, however,
by the military balance of power, which in the final analysis decided
the outcome. Ironically, it was the developing nuclear stalemate
that came to provide the sought for stability, constraining American
efforts directed toward a quick win.
Mitrovich presents an intricate outline of the
sharp bureaucratic friction and rivalry that pervaded the policy
process in Washington. Although there appears to be a consensus
from 1948 about the need for covert operations and political warfare
against the Soviet Union, there was little agreement on what should
be done or who should be in charge. The State Department, the CIA,
the Pentagon and the PSB (Psychological Strategy Board), a sub-committee
of the National Security Council, held differing views on Soviet
vulnerabilities and capabilities, leading to different policy offerings.
Naturally, this resulted in programmes that, during both the Truman
and Eisenhower administrations, lacked clear and consistent guidance
and objectives, were inadequately co-ordinated and were without
proper accountability.
Although the Eisenhower administration is credited
with slightly better organisation and success in developing political
warfare, Mitrovich identifies an inherent contradiction between
propaganda and policy. Despite calls for liberation and 'roll-back',
the Eisenhower administration was in actuality exceedingly cautious
in terms of implementation, deterred in the main by the Soviet Union's
perceived nuclear capabilities. Eventually, the Eisenhower administration
emulated the more moderate policies to which Truman had succumbed
and which the Republicans had vehemently indicted, retreat from
over-pressurising the Soviets and inadvertently provoking a nuclear
response.
Mitrovich's book joins a growing body of scholarship
that has challenged the traditional view that it was the Soviet
Union that was the master of propaganda and political warfare during
the Cold War.(3) However, gauging
the success of covert and propaganda activities is not easy. Mitrovich
subscribes to the view that American advocacy of liberation drew
the Hungarians into an imprudent and unfortunate uprising. But impetus
also came from internal factors, not least a domestic power struggle
that escalated from demonstration to insurrection. Nonetheless,
this book offers an invaluable exegesis of a notoriously difficult-to-research
dimension of Cold Was history. Mitrovich's scholarship is not only
highly commendable, but also testimony to the continuing value of
American-based archival research.
The same is true of the work of John McNay whose
book Acheson and Empire: The British Accent in American Foreign
Policy is based on rigorous research in archival sources that
include the Truman Library, the National Archives, the Public Record
Office in London and Acheson's personal papers at Yale. McNay presents
a persuasive and compelling argument that is not only a reassessment
of Dean Acheson and a challenging revision of a crucial period in
Cold War history, but also highlights the personal dimension as
being of much more significance than it is usually accorded in the
historical record.
It is McNay's contention that 'Human agency is
an especially key factor in foreign policy making'. On this basis
he has undertaken a study of the ambiguities and complexities of
US foreign policy in the context of one man's personal history,
Dean Acheson. Acheson was one of the main architects of the Cold
War as Secretary of State from 1949 to 1953 in the administration
of President Harry Truman. Acheson was, according to McNay, 'more
responsible for the foreign policy of the United States during his
tenure in office than the president he served.'
McNay posits that to understand the substance
of American foreign policy in these crucial early Cold War years,
it is Acheson rather than Truman who needs to be studied. And to
understand Acheson, according to McNay's central argument, it is
critical to appreciate the way in which his policy choices were
influenced by his 'world-view'. According to McNay, Acheson's world-view,
to which he adhered throughout his life, 'not only grew out of his
Ulster heritage but also encouraged him to see international relations
generally, and US policy specifically, in terms derived from traditional
style British imperialism.' (p. 2)
McNay's argument deserves serious consideration,
not least owing to the consequential outcomes for the United States
and Britain that he perceives as deriving from Acheson's polices
in these years. The British were encouraged to devote more resources
than they could afford to often hopeless situations because they
mistook the support and sympathy of one man as indicative of general
American favour and long-term and assistance. Nor were Acheson's
policies good for America. Support for Britain in these years brought
unwelcome repercussions, generating bitterness and criticism, even
hostility, from Third World nations that saw the United States as
'little better than a front for British interests'. (p. 4)
McNay tests his hypothesis with a close examination
of the responses from the United States and Britain to four nations,
India, Ireland, Iran and Egypt, all seeking independence from British
control during Acheson's secretaryship. In the process of testing
his own conclusions, McNay challenges the widely accepted view that
Acheson was a foreign policy realist. He contends that this is a
view that requires modification in the light of the 'imperial paradigm'
to which Acheson was subject. Most importantly, McNay argues that
historians have overstressed the continuity of US foreign policy
during the Cold War era. He claims that there were significant changes
in US foreign policy between when Acheson entered and left high
office and that historians have missed these owing to 'Acheson's
success in masking his imperial paradigm behind a veil of realist
rhetoric.
Certainly the case studies that McNay presents
for consideration provide persuasive insights that support his interpretation
of Acheson's motivation. Each one is a worthwhile study on its own
account, showing a masterly grasp of the minutiae and nuances of
unfolding event in the countries examined, not to mention equally
profound insights into the evolution of Anglo-American relations
and the interaction of individual British and American officials.
McNay convincingly shows that human agency matters. In demonstrating
this point, however, he raises the difficulties, particularly pertinent
to the study of Cold War diplomacy, in discerning the influence
in the policy-making process between pragmatic realism and romantic
idealism.
In arguing that historians have not simply overlooked
the nostalgic, romantic admiration for empire incorporated into
Acheson's diplomacy, but have mistaken it for realism, McNay raises
a significant problem at the heart of Cold War history. Realism
as a philosophy is notoriously hard to define. The problem is compounded
by the complex phenomenon of the Cold War, the very nature of which
remains contested, especially the degree to which it was an ideological
conflict as opposed to a pure power struggle. And it is this same
difficulty that makes it impossible for McNay to prove his thesis.
He himself recognises that a key objection to his study is that
it ignores the perceived necessity at the time of preserving the
Anglo-American alliance in the Cold War world. McNay's evidence
is persuasive, but it does not displace the other cogent explanations
provided by realism. What it does do effectively is to illustrate
the importance of the ideals, beliefs and values of key leaders
in the international arena.
The distinguished Cold War historian Melvyn Leffler
has elsewhere drawn attention to how the new historians of the Cold
War stress the significance of ideas and beliefs. However, while
focusing on the importance of ideology and culture, the new scholarship
tends to be preoccupied with communist ideology rather than that
of the West. (4) The trend is
discernible in We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History by
John Lewis Gaddis (Oxford University Press: Oxford, 1997), the best
known historian of the Cold War and foremost proponent of a school
of interpretation -- post-revisionism -- that stresses the importance
of geo-politics and power balances. (5)
Gaddis's new work is distinctive owing to the extent that it abandons
post-revisionism and returns to a more traditional interpretation
of the Cold War, blaming the Cold War on Stalin's personality, on
authoritarian government and on Communist ideology.(6)
American ideas and the actions they inspired have
been rather marginalised in the new literature, which conveys an
image of a passive Washington.(7)
In reality, as McNay shows, American officials held powerful beliefs
that influenced their approach to policy-making. And, as McNay again
shows, these beliefs were more than simply about the superiority
of American institutions, culture and way of life. Thus, while McNay
might not persuade everyone to accept his central contention about
Acheson's motivations, he raises profound questions about the role
of individual beliefs and values in the policy-making process.
For students newly embarking on the study of the
Cold War there are two excellent new texts from Blackwell. The prize-winning
author of The Iron Curtain: Churchill, America, and the Origins
of the Cold War (Oxford University Press: Oxford, 1986), Fraser
J. Harbutt, reveals a firm grasp of the period from the Yalta conference
in 1945 to the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 in The
Cold War Era. A first class contribution to Blackwell's useful
series 'Problems in American History', the text is more than an
important introduction to the Cold War, it is an outstanding overview
of a complex and critical period in which the Cold War was sometimes
the key player and sometimes simply the backdrop. In addition to
being a comprehensive survey, the book is distinguished by perceptive
insights into the historiographical debates, which Harbutt not only
shrewdly assesses, but to which he also makes significant contributions.
A key feature of this book is that the reader
derives a sense of the ways in which historians, academic, journalist,
novelists and others, have defined and explained compelling Cold
War issues, while simultaneously being treated to Harbutt's own
distinctive approach to the period. Harbutt's judicious insinuation
of his particular notions provides an original and stimulating outlook
that brings fresh perspectives to material that can otherwise seem
deceptively familiar. For example, Harbutt views American diplomacy
as in the main the expression, not of a warrior or imperial culture,
but of a compulsively managerial ethos. Harbutt is 'intrigued by
the uneasy co-existence of a conservative political structure and
a private realm of techno-business volatility and radical popular
culture'. (p. ix) Additional insights are derived from Harbutt's
invoking the neglected concept of generational change to supplement
the hallowed trinity of class, race and gender.
Above all, Harbutt's multi-dimensional treatment
of the era provides rich insights into and telling analyses of American
society and the way in which the Cold War was at all times a formidable
cultural and intellectual presence. He also writes with a flair
and clarity that make the book a pleasure to read.
Equally pleasurable to read, well presented and
discerning is The Cold War: The Essential Readings. The editors,
Klaus Larres and Ann Lane, are to be commended on a selection that
provides not only an introduction to the period, but also an introduction
to some of the very best scholars and scholarship in the field.
The essays are solicitously arranged into four thematic sections
that provide a logical and coherent overview of the period: 'Cold
War Origins', 'First Attempts at Conflict Management, 'War and Détente'
and 'The End of the Cold War'. Each section is introduced by an
informative summary of the period, including an erudite and astute
review of its historiography.
While the value of the Melvyn P. Leffler survey
(see note 4) lay in its authorial overview, the value of this book
is very much in the diversity of views presented. The two texts
are extraordinarily complementary and students would certainly profit
from studying the two together. From Larres and Lane, in particular,
students will learn to appreciate the opposing scholarly views and
different interpretations that are the essence of Cold War historiography.
For example, to illustrate how the debate about Cold War origins
is one about perceptions and intentions, the selection begins with
two of the most eminent Cold War historians, Leffler and Gaddis.
While both authors express reservations about Soviet intentions,
Gaddis argues that the US was ultimately a reactive power and that
the primary element in bringing about the Cold War was the personality
of Josef Stalin. Leffler, on the other hand, is rather more equivocal
about American foreign policy.
The end of the Cold War took scholars completely
by surprise. Insightful, cogent commentaries on this unpredicted
event come from two doyens of Cold War history, Arthur Schlesinger,
Jr and H. W. Brands. Other important contributions on key Cold War
episodes come from Richard Crockatt, Raymond L. Garthoff and Klaus
Larres himself, not to mention the important essay from Vladislav
Zubok and Constantine Pleshakov discussed above. Lane and Larres
are to be congratulated on bringing together this wide range of
excellent scholarship into a coherent whole that makes a first class
contribution to our understanding of the era and the ceaseless debates
surrounding it. And in the crisis climate of the present, with the
ominous resonance of the 'War on Terror' increasingly redolent of
America's Cold War past, these debates are of more than just historical
merit.
Bill Clinton missed the Cold War because anti-communism
provided a more potent rationale for American interventionism than
did humanitarian missions and promoting democracy in the eyes of
the all-important American electorate. Michael Ignatieff is not
alone among political commentators in discerning the degree to which
the political and intellectual climate of the 'War on Terror' now
resembles that of the Cold War. (8)
David Blight reminds us that 'All memory is prelude.' (9)
Therefore, keeping in mind George Orwell's famous epigraph, 'Who
controls the past, controls the future', the fact is that we need
more books of the calibre of those discussed here. More research,
more debate, more understanding of the Cold War is today an urgent
imperative.
April 2002
Notes:
1. John Lewis
Gaddis, We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History, (Oxford
University Press: Oxford, 1997).
2. I make the
same point in a study of how religious forces were mobilised to
create dissent and contribute to instability behind the Iron Curtain,
'Harry Truman's religious legacy: the holy alliance, containment
and the Cold War', in D. Kirby, ed., Religion and the Cold War
(Palgrave: Basingstoke, 2002).
3. Scott Lucas,
Freedom's War: The US Crusade Against the Soviet Union, 1945-1956
(New York University Press; New York, 1999).
4. Melvyn P.
Leffler, 'The Cold War: what do "We Now Know"?', American Historical
Review, 104 (1999), 501-24.
5. Gaddis, We
Now Know.
6. Leffler,
'The Cold War'.
7. Ibid.
8. Michael Ignatieff,
'Is the human rights era ending?', New York Times, 5 February
2002.
9. David Blight,
Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory (Harvard
University Press: Cambridge, 2001), p. 397.
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