Ratings11
Average rating3.7
Many will remember what it was like to live under the shadow of the Cold War, the ever-present anxiety that at some point, because of some miscalculation or act of hubris, we might find ourselves in the middle of a nuclear holocaust—a war that , if we survived it, would change our lives and our planet forever.
How did this terrible conflict arise? How did wartime allies so quickly become deadly foes after 1945 and divide the world into opposing camps, each armed to the teeth? And how, suddenly, did it all come to an end? Only now that the Cold War has been over for fifteen years can we begin to find a convincing perspective on it. John Lewis Gaddis’s masterly book is the first full, major history of the whole conflict and explains not just what happened, but why it happened—why the Soviet Union brutally repressed rebellion in East Germany, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia; how Kennedy and Khrushchev confronted each other over the Cuban Missile Crisis; why Nixon and Mao Zedong sought wary friendship; what, at the end, John Paul II, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and Mikhail Gorbachev each thought they were doing. Gaddis has synthesised all the most recent scholarship, but has also used minutes from Politburo meetings, startling information from recently opened Soviet and Asian archives, conversations between leaders overheard and noted down by their aides, and above all, the words of the leading participants themselves—showing what was really on the mind of each, with a very dramatic immediacy.
With the judgement of a master history, Gaddis shows what the underlying dynamics of the conflict were—how politics and ideology interact with each other, how changes in society were as important as changes in government, and how ideas of morality affected (or didn’t affect) what politicians actually did. Finally, in a work who’s interpretive authority equals its narrative power, he how’s how policy makers at the top—and ordinary people at the bottom—reversed the course of history thereby achieving one of the greatest victories ever for the human spirit.
—jacket
Reviews with the most likes.
“Nixon was bombing civilians in Cambodia and Laos but he felt vewwy vewwy sad about it and those meanie leftist cowwege students made him feel afwaid.”
Real Prager U revisionist, American bias nonsense here that omits a ton of atrocities condoned and perpetrated by the United States. Puts all the blame for literally every terrible thing done in the world during the cold war on everyone but the US.
Just silly, quite frankly.
A well-crafted history; nothing an academic would find hugely useful, but an eminently readable summary of one of the most turbulent periods in Earth's history. Gaddis has a fairly clear right-wing bias, but as long as you bear that in mind this is a useful and enjoyable book
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