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Cold War Follies
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In October 1962, after the
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Soviet Union stationed nuclear missiles in Fidel Castro's Cuba, President John
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F. Kennedy called upon Dean Acheson for advice. With typical self-assurance,
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the grand old man of the Cold War bellowed his recommendation at a meeting of
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the so-called ExComm of top Kennedy aides: a swift U.S. airstrike to take out
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the nukes. When asked what the result would be, Acheson replied that Moscow
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would then destroy a cache of NATO nuclear missiles in Turkey. Then what? he
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was asked. Under our NATO obligations, Acheson said, Washington would have to
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attack a nuclear base within the Soviet Union itself. And then? Acheson paused.
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"That's when we hope," the magisterial wise man said, "that cooler heads will
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prevail, and they'll stop and talk."
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Mercifully, the end of the Cold War has brought an end to this type of
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hair-raising exchange. But those readers looking to remember the bad old days
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can find this sort of thing, and plenty of it, in Aleksandr Fursenko and
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Timothy Naftali's important new book on the Cuban missile crisis, "One Hell
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of a Gamble ." It would be nice to report that their account packs
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the pleasure and thrills of a spy novel, but that's not exactly the case. Spy
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novels induce a frisson of tension that's enjoyable because the reader
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knows nothing is really at stake. But Fursenko and Naftali's book, while it
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will leave readers' knuckles white, is no fun at all to read, because the
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events it describes are so frightening.
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Their impressive account is one of the best of a flood of
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new books about the Cold War, triggered by the end of the superpowers' long
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struggle. These have ranged from the triumphalist (such as Jay Winik's On
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the Brink , a hagiographic account of the Reagan-era officials he sees as
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the Cold War's victors) to the tendentious (say, Peter Schweizer's simplistic
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Victory , giving all the credit, again, to Reagan) to the thoughtful
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(such as We Now Know , by the dean of Cold War historians, John Lewis
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Gaddis). "One Hell of a Gamble" belongs in the last category. Fursenko
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and Naftali resist the urge to gloat or sermonize, and instead let their
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research speak for them. It has quite a bit to say, little of it soothing.
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Fursenko, a leading Russian historian and member of the Russian Academy of
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Sciences, and Naftali, a fellow in international-security studies at Yale, add
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much to what we know about the coldest days of the Cold War from careful
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digging in newly opened Soviet archives.
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In
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particular, the popular image of the missile crisis as a triumph for JFK's
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diplomacy gets badly dented. Kennedy began his term hoping to establish a new
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detente with Moscow, but he also sought to rid the Western Hemisphere of
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communism by ousting Castro. These goals soon proved incompatible. In his 1960
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campaign, Kennedy talked up a fictional missile gap in order to show up the GOP
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as flaccid on communism. During the Eisenhower administration, Castro had begun
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moving deeper into the Soviet orbit out of fear of a U.S. invasion; Kennedy's
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failed Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961 aggravated Castro's anxieties and gave him
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a rallying cry for a pro-Soviet tilt. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, fearing
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the loss of his model for a new path of socialist development, got mischievous.
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"Why not throw a hedgehog at Uncle Sam's pants?" he asked, and decided to move
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missiles into Cuba. The gambit would, at a stroke, deter Kennedy from invading
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Cuba, cement Moscow's alliance with Havana, and shift the world strategic
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balance. Washington would learn to live with the missiles, Khrushchev figured,
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just as Moscow lived with NATO's nuclear missiles on its Turkish frontier.
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But Kennedy had no intention of doing so.
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Instead of Acheson's airstrike, the ExComm chose to blockade Cuba with
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warships. After several harrowing days, Khrushchev blinked and agreed to remove
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the missiles in return for an American pledge not to invade Cuba and a secret
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pact to remove the Turkish missiles. The superpowers subsequently entered a
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brief era of eased tensions, installing the famous Kremlin-White House hot line
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and signing a nuclear test ban treaty. " 'One Hell of a Gamble,' "
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writes Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Camelot's court historian, shows "an American
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president doggedly bent on the avoidance of nuclear war." Actually, it shows
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that mixed politics send mixed signals. True, the planet was not destroyed, for
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which we should be grateful, but Kennedy's maladroit foreign policy helped
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create the conditions for the crisis. The world was brought to the verge of
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nuclear catastrophe because of a missile gap that did not exist, Turkish
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missiles that were not supposed to be there, and an invasion that was not
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coming.
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Khrushchev doesn't come off looking any better. Fursenko and Naftali offer a
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wealth of new details about Soviet and Cuban motives, including the most
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comprehensive picture yet of Havana's slow entry into the Soviet orbit. We also
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get a better look at the roots of Khrushchev's decision to back down. In the
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"X" article, the landmark 1947 essay that spelled out the fundamentals of
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America's Cold War strategy, George Kennan argued that "the Kremlin has no
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compunction about retreating in the face of superior force. And being under the
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compulsion of no timetable, it does not get panicky under the necessity for
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such retreat. ... [I]f it finds unassailable barriers in its path, it accepts
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these philosophically and accommodates itself to them." Sure enough, confronted
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with such a barrier in 1962, Khrushchev decided to give way. He retreated as
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philosophically as he could, although he described his reaction to the setback
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in rather less elegant language. There was no need for the Kremlin, he said, to
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"act like the czarist officer who farted at the ball and then shot
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himself."
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Fursenko and Naftali's book is full of this type of
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gripping new detail, including the book's biggest, scariest revelation. The
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Kremlin, we learn, had decided to use tactical battlefield nuclear weapons
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against U.S. troops if Kennedy invaded Cuba. Had Kennedy not opted for the
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blockade, it's clear that the first combat use of nuclear weapons since
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Nagasaki could have prompted a terrifying cycle of escalation. The Cuban
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missile crisis, it seems, may have been even worse than we had thought.
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Facing a more complex world,
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some diplomats and conservative scholars seem to long nostalgically for the era
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of Mutual Assured Destruction. "One Hell of a Gamble" comes as a welcome
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corrective. Bad as today's global uncertainties may seem, the Cold War system
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always had an even more dangerous potential for getting out of control. Even
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after the superpowers' 1962 showdown led to an easing of tensions, the planet
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still had a series of nuclear scares, such as the October 1973 nuclear
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alert--which happened on the detente-minded watch of Henry Kissinger and
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Richard Nixon. The inherent problem with Cold War brinkmanship, as the Harvard
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theorist Thomas C. Schelling has noted, is that it could elicit concessions
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only if one's opponent didn't know exactly where the brink was. "One Hell of
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a Gamble" reminds us just how terrifying that game could be. "Any fool
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could start a war," Khrushchev used to like to say. In 1962, Khrushchev,
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Castro, and Kennedy almost did.
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