The peacemaker Ronald Reagan, the Cold War, and the world on the brink

William Inboden, 1972-

Book - 2022

"An in-depth and masterful account of how Ronald Reagan's foreign policy "team of rivals" ended the Cold War and laid the foundation for the twenty-first century. Today, the ending of the Cold War seems a foregone conclusion. But in the early 1980s, U.S. intelligence predicted the Soviet Union would last another century. Ronald Reagan entered the White House with no certainty of what would happen next, only an overriding faith in American democracy and an abiding belief that the communist system--and the threat of nuclear war--must be brought to an end. The Peacemaker is the story of the eight years of Reagan's presidency, as he and his foreign policy team managed, in real time, multiple crises around the globe. Fro...m the emergence of global terrorism, wars in the Middle East, the rise of Japan and the awakening of China, to proxy conflicts in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, Reagan's team oversaw the worldwide expansion of democracy, globalization, free trade, and the information revolution. Yet no issue was greater than the Cold War standoff with the Soviet Union. As president, Reagan cast aside the four-decades-old policy of containment and challenged the Soviets in an arms race that pushed them towards economic and political collapse, all while extending an olive branch of diplomacy. Reagan's revolving team included Secretaries of State Al Haig and George Schultz; Secretaries of Defense Caspar Weinberger and Frank Carlucci; National Security Advisors Bill Clark, John Poindexter and Bud McFarlane; Chief of Staff James Baker; CIA Director Bill Casey; and Jeane Kirkpatrick, Reagan's United Nations ambassador who fell out with the president over the Falkland War. Talented and devoted to their cause, at times their inner rivalries and backstabbing led to missteps and crises. But over the course of the administration, the Reagan team developed the strategies that brought us to the brink of the Cold War's peaceful conclusion, and remade the world"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

973.927/Inboden
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 973.927/Inboden Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
[New York] : Dutton [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
William Inboden, 1972- (author)
Physical Description
xi, 593 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 485-500) and index.
ISBN
9781524745899
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. East of California
  • Chapter 2. Taking the Stage
  • Chapter 3. The Global Chessboard
  • Chapter 4. The Battle is Joined
  • Chapter 5. Summer of Freedom
  • Chapter 6. Raising the Stakes
  • Chapter 7. The Maelstrom
  • Chapter 8. Toil and Trouble
  • Chapter 9. Morning in America, Twilight in the Cold War?
  • Chapter 10. Waiting for Gorbachev
  • Chapter 11. Making History in Geneva, and Finding Trouble in Tehran
  • Chapter 12. The Crucible
  • Chapter 13. Comeback
  • Chapter 14. Endgame
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Sources and Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Often reviled as a warmonger, Ronald Reagan succeeded through resolve and canny policy in peacefully ending the Cold War, according to this sweeping study of his foreign policy. Inboden (The Last Card), a University of Texas professor of public affairs and former State Department official, credits Reagan with a visionary strategy to promote the dissolution of the Soviet Union with a massive military buildup, economic sanctions, and support for insurgencies in Afghanistan, Nicaragua, and other Soviet client states, all aimed at imposing crippling costs on the rickety Russian economy. Meanwhile, Reagan's genuine revulsion at the possibility of nuclear war--the postapocalyptic television movie The Day After terrified him, Inboden reports--prompted the president to pursue intense diplomacy with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, leading to groundbreaking nuclear arms reduction agreements. Throughout, Inboden offers blow-by-blow accounts of foreign-policy crises and melodramatic infighting among Reagan administration officials while shaping a lucid, engrossing narrative from the chaos. Though he questions morally dubious Reagan initiatives like the arms-for-hostages deals with Iran and support for Iraq's authoritarian ruler Saddam Hussein, the criticism feels somewhat anodyne: "Such were the hard choices of geopolitics at the time." Still, this is a stimulating case for the 40th president as a serious, far-sighted statesman. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An admiring account of Ronald Reagan's role in winning the Cold War. Inboden, executive director of the Clements Center for National Security at the University of Texas, admits that Reagan had a few warts, and members of his administration far more, but some readers may believe he gives Reagan more credit than he deserves. Throughout the Cold War, many Americans believed that the Soviet Union was militarily stronger than the U.S. and that clever communists were more successful than democratic parties in influencing foreign governments. In fact, by Reagan's arrival, its clunky command economy was on life support, its leaders a series of unimaginative old men, and its army bogged down in Afghanistan. Reagan hated communism and détente, the American policy at the time (begun the previous decade by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger), which aimed to ease tensions. Most Republicans approved of Reagan's confrontational policies, but the Soviet Union showed no signs of change until his second administration. Largely ignoring Reagan's domestic agenda, Inboden delivers an expert account of the political and diplomatic events of the 1980s. Carrying out his vow to pressure the Soviets, Reagan expanded the military, pressed allies to do the same, and "escalated the CIA covert action flooding the Iron Curtain with contraband media to undermine communism." He extolled free elections, democracy, and human rights, but critics still point out that dictators who proclaimed their anti-communism often got free passes. Matters changed when Mikhail Gorbachev assumed power in 1985, but few knew it at the time. A year passed before Reagan came "to see that Gorbachev was indeed the partner for peace Reagan had long sought." To his credit, he was far ahead of his advisers, and by the time he left office, the Cold War hostility and fear of nuclear Armageddon had vanished and the Soviet Union was on its way to collapse. Throughout, the author's portrait is more flattering to Reagan than usual but not unconvincing. A well-researched study that will produce further debate about the Reagan era and the Cold War. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 East of California I On Tuesday, November 13, 1979, an eager audience gathered in the ballroom of the New York City Hilton to hear the worst-kept secret in politics revealed. Former governor of California Ronald Reagan was going to announce his third attempt at the presidency. His first campaign, in 1968, had been a half-hearted effort soon stymied by his California rival Richard Nixon. His second effort, in 1976, a primary challenge against the incumbent Gerald Ford, had come within a heartbreak of victory, ending only on a sweltering summer night in Kansas City at the Republican convention when Ford's delegate count barely beat Reagan's. It was the last time in American presidential politics when a political convention determined a major party's nominee. Many also expected it was the last time Reagan would seek the White House. But the ensuing years of the Jimmy Carter presidency also witnessed Reagan's new incarnation as a conservative speaker and broadcaster who stayed in the public eye-and kept his own eager eyes on the White House. Now aged sixty-eight, Reagan stood at once as a conservative icon and an old man. His campaign aimed to persuade Republican primary voters to focus on the former and disregard the latter. Perhaps seeking to recapture the enchantment of his political debut, 1964's "A Time for Choosing," the television speech that launched his political career, Reagan forsook the traditional campaign announcement before a hometown crowd and instead returned to a nationwide broadcast. His campaign purchased airtime on some eighty television stations across the nation to reintroduce viewers to the man who would be president. Arriving inside the Hilton from Gotham's chill fall air, the two thousand guests encountered the singular blend of Hollywood and Washington, DC, that would define the Reagan presidency. His good friend and fellow actor Jimmy Stewart welcomed the audience and introduced Reagan, who took the stage and began to speak to the gathered crowd-and to a curious nation. For the man who would devote much of his presidency to waging the Cold War, Ronald Reagan gave but a perfunctory mention to the Soviet Union. Instead, he spent most of his foreign policy attention on North America. Proclaiming, "We live on a continent whose three countries possess the assets to make it the strongest, most prosperous and self-sufficient area on earth," he called for "a developing closeness among Canada, Mexico, and the United States-a North American accord." Why this focus on North America? Because for Reagan, defeating Soviet communism began with restoring national strength at home. He believed that a free and prosperous North America held the key to the United States' power projection in the world. In contrast to the Soviet Union's position on the Eurasian landmass-a decrepit empire surrounded by coerced vassal states to its west and impoverished and wary neighbors to its south and east-Reagan held that these "three countries with such long-standing heritages of free government" could forge a new hemispheric partnership committed to liberty and prosperity. Yet before he could get to the White House, Reagan had to win the election. And before he could win the election, he had to win the Republican nomination, which meant winning over many skeptics in his own party. In what would be a recurring theme over the next decade, prominent conservative voices lambasted Reagan's announcement speech for being too soft on Moscow. The weekly magazine Human Events, at the time perhaps the nation's most influential conservative periodical, pulled no punches: "Considering the grave peril to this country because of the Soviet worldwide challenge, the foreign policy portion of the Reagan speech had a rather pathetic quality to it." The Wall Street Journal editorial page voiced similar displeasure at the speech's anemic foreign policy content, noting caustically, "Perhaps Mr. Reagan will offer more as time goes by. For his own sake, he will have to." Considering the multiple security crises facing the nation, such caviling was understandable. Just one week earlier, Iranian revolutionaries had stormed the United States embassy in Tehran and seized the American staff-an ordeal that would continue for 444 days with 52 Americans held hostage and the United States subjected to unrelenting global humiliation. The next month the Red Army would pour across the Friendship Bridge in the Soviet Union's surprise invasion of Afghanistan. These two blows to America's already battered national psyche and international credibility reinforced the sense among many voters that the Carter presidency was weak, and put the United States at more risk in a dangerous world. II It was also a different world than the one Reagan had faced fifteen years earlier when he had made his national political debut. His "A Time for Choosing" speech, aired nationwide in support of Barry Goldwater's presidential campaign on October 27, 1964, catapulted Reagan from a forgotten Hollywood actor and corporate pitchman to a conservative political luminary. One abiding concern connected Reagan then with Reagan now: a hatred of communism, and the conviction that the Cold War must not be lost and could be won. He declared in the speech, We cannot buy our security, our freedom from the threat of the bomb by committing an immorality so great as saying to a billion now in slavery behind the Iron Curtain, "Give up your dreams of freedom because to save our own skin, we are willing to make a deal with your slave masters." . . . There is no argument over the choice between peace and war, but there is only one guaranteed way you can have peace-and you can have it in the next second-surrender. Reagan had long worried that the United States' Cold War strategy failed to exploit America's strengths and Soviet communism's weaknesses. In a 1963 speech he complained that American policy was "based on pure conjecture that maybe communism will mellow and recognize that our way is better." Instead, he asked, If we truly believe that our way of life is best aren't the Russians more likely to recognize that fact and modify their stand if we let their economy come unhinged so that the contrast is apparent? . . . In an all out race our system is stronger, and eventually the enemy gives up the race as a hopeless cause. Then a noble nation believing in peace extends the hand of friendship and says there is room in the world for both of us. Reagan envisioned how the Cold War would end-more than a quarter century before his presidency would help bring it about. Among the many Americans who took note of Reagan's speech for Goldwater was former president Dwight Eisenhower. While splitting time between his Gettysburg farm and a winter home in Palm Desert, California, Eisenhower also worked to shape and steer the Republican Party. This mission became an even more critical rebuilding project after Goldwater's landslide loss in 1964. Captivated by Reagan's communication skills, Eisenhower reached out and urged him to register as a Republican (Reagan had only left the Democratic Party two years earlier) and consider running for office. Over the ensuing four years, particularly after Reagan won the California governorship in 1966, Eisenhower became Reagan's first foreign policy mentor, conducting a series of discussions on statecraft, world affairs, and lessons of World War II and Korea. In one meeting Eisenhower told Reagan that the most successful use of military force was to win a victory without firing a shot. If an enemy battalion controls a hill, the aging general said, "give me a division and I will take it without a fight." Eisenhower's message shaped Reagan's emerging worldview on force and statecraft: Be cautious about going to war, but if you do, then go all in. And be sure the employment of military power is connected to a strategic policy goal. Their final meeting on March 9, 1968, a round of golf in Palm Desert followed by lunch, covered the relationship between the economy and national power. Reflecting on his generalship during World War II, Eisenhower declaimed, "It was the American economy, the arsenal of democracy, that really won the war." Mindful of the need for a strategic focus in Pentagon spending, the former president, who had balanced several budgets while maintaining a strong military, also admonished Reagan to "limit defense spending" and "expand the economy," saying, "Sooner or later, that's how we'll win [the Cold War]." The next month Eisenhower suffered a heart attack, and he died less than a year later. Even in death he left his mark, and he would become the single most influential of Reagan's predecessors in shaping the fortieth president's time in office. III Interestingly, in this mentorship Eisenhower also revealed his preference for Reagan over another prominent California Republican, Richard Nixon. This was all the more remarkable because Nixon had served as Eisenhower's vice president for eight years, and Eisenhower knew him much better than he knew Reagan. Yet perhaps it was knowing Nixon so well that led to Eisenhower's disdain. During their White House years, Eisenhower had held his vice president in low regard, cutting him out of major policy decisions, and he had done little to help Nixon's 1960 presidential campaign. As perspicacious as Eisenhower was in spotting Reagan's talent, he misjudged Nixon, who would soon mount one of the singular comebacks in American political history and twice win election to the presidency. Along the way, Nixon and Reagan developed a relationship of tortured complexity. Both bitter rivals and uneasy allies, the two Californians alternately worked against each other and with each other, while together dominating Republican presidential politics for nearly a half century. Nixon and Reagan shared much in common. Both had family roots in the Midwest. Both had survived troubled, sometimes abusive fathers; both in turn had found comfort in their pious, nurturing mothers. Both came from families of little means and low social standing. Both found California a land of opportunity and upward mobility, for Nixon first in the practice of law and then in politics, for Reagan in the movie industry, then as corporate pitchman for General Electric, and finally also in politics. Yet they could not have been more different in outlook, temperament, character, and convictions. They differed especially over foreign policy. For example, in Asia the two Californians envisioned different priorities. Nixon saw China as the strategic key to the region; Reagan believed instead that Japan was the strategic cornerstone of America's Asia posture. Nixon used international economic policy as a mere instrument subordinate to geopolitics, whereas Reagan believed open trade to be a fundamental principle in its own right and a key pillar of the free societies he sought to promote. Nixon disdained promotion of human rights and democracy as distractions from America's core interests, while Reagan put political and religious liberty at the center of his strategic priorities. In short, Nixon saw the world as it was and tried to align American policy with the way things were. Reagan envisioned the world as it could be and directed American policy toward creating that new reality. Their biggest difference came over America's main enemy, the USSR. When Nixon and his national security advisor Henry Kissinger took office in 1969, they beheld an ascendant Soviet Union and a weakened United States mired in the Vietnam War. They developed the policy of dZtente to reduce tensions with Moscow through arms control agreements and other conciliatory measures, while pursuing a negotiated exit from Vietnam. They also expanded the global chessboard by bringing China into alignment with the United States as a counterweight to the USSR. For a time dZtente worked. But then it mutated from a temporary tactic that had advanced American interests in a particular geopolitical moment into a permanent posture that advantaged the Kremlin. It rested on several assumptions: that the Soviet Union was motivated by rational interests rather than communist ideology; that its government and economy were strong and durable; that moderated American policies could change Moscow's international conduct; and that the Kremlin's torment of its own citizens could not be changed. As historian John Lewis Gaddis notes, dZtente invited the critique "that Nixon, Ford, and Kissinger . . . acquiesced in the emergence, for the first time since World War II, of a serious rival to the United States in virtually all categories of military competition." DZtente also conceded Soviet-sponsored gains in the developing world. In the 1970s alone, communists seized power in South Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Angola, Ethiopia, Mozambique, South Yemen, Afghanistan, Nicaragua, and Grenada. In the pungent summary of Tom Reed, a senior Pentagon official in the Nixon and Ford administrations who later joined the Reagan NSC staff, dZtente meant "losing as slowly as possible." And losing at any rate was still losing. DZtente was becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy of Soviet strength and American weakness. Reagan emerged as dZtente's most prominent critic. He rejected its assumptions and prescriptions, and in 1976 tried to defeat its main proponents, Ford and Kissinger, in the Republican primary. Reagan did not believe American decline was inexorable, or that the Soviet Union would surrender its ambitions. He lamented that dZtente only fueled Moscow's malign intentions, dismissing it as "a one-way street that simply gives the Soviets what they want with nothing in return." He frequently described dZtente as "what a farmer has with his turkey-until Thanksgiving Day." This line was pithy, simplistic, even corny. But it exposed dZtente's pretensions in a way that any American could understand-and that Nixon, Ford, and Kissinger found hard to rebut. Reagan's sustained campaign against the Nixon-Ford-Kissinger foreign policy became a defining moment in the history of the Republican Party, and in Reagan's own political career. The national security debate marked Reagan as a new kind of Republican who simultaneously sought to bring his party back to the principles of Eisenhower while updating them for a new era and adding a few unique elements of his own. Yet for those who assumed that a Reagan presidency would make a clean break with Nixon, some surprises lurked-as Nixon would later resurface as a quiet but influential voice in the Reagan White House. Excerpted from The Peacemaker: Ronald Reagan, the Cold War, and the World on the Brink by William Inboden All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.