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Loading... Forging the Alliance: NATO, 1945-1950by Don Cook
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. 5758. Forging the Alliance NATO, 1945-1950, by Don Cook (read 24 Sep 2021) This book was published in 1989 and is the third book by its author I have read. The author was an astute reporter for many years and and was familiar with the events he writes about. The book carefully relates the events which resulted in the NATO being created, detailing in lucid prose its origin and how it was carefully brought to fruition. While the title of the book gives the impression that the history goes only up to 1950, the book actually tells the history of NATO up to 1989--but does not tell of the fall of Soviet Russia. I have always been struck that apparently no student of Communism expected the end of the Soviet empire till it actually happened. So this book is an excellent history of the creation of NATO and of the period pertaining thereto till just before the end of the Soviet empire. ( )
From the author of Charles de Gaulle (1984), Ten Men and History (1981), and Floodtide in Europe (1965), a 40th-anniversary tribute to NATO in the form of a chronicle of the years between WW II and the sealing of the US-European defense alliance. Except for semi-official histories like Acheson's Present at the Creation, most writings about this crucial period over the last two decades have been revisionist, with writers such as William Appleman Williams and John Gardner implying that NATO was a typically aggressive American gambit that led to responses in kind by the Soviets. Cook disagrees, demonstrating that it was Ernest Bevin, Britain's postwar foreign secretary, who was the driving force behind the treaty, overcoming longstanding objections on the part of America's foreign-policy elite to "entangling alliances." The author begins with heavy-handed criticism of FDR's naiveté in thinking that he could "baby" Stalin with his charm. "Roosevelt displayed an almost total indifference to problems of postwar Western security in Europe," Cook writes. But when the British recognized that they could no longer hold a European balance of power, impetus arose to manipulate FDR's successors into creating the 12-nation NATO alliance. At times, Cook's reportage verges on the amateurishly subjective: "Joe Davies was probably the silliest ambassador America ever sent to Moscow. . .fortunately for history, Davies was of no importance." Still, as accessible history for the general reader, this will do.
On jacket: The birth of the NATO treaty and the dramatic transformation of U.S. foreign policy between 1945 and 1950. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)355.031Social sciences Public administration & military science Military science National Security NATO And Warsaw PactLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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