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Diplomacy Shot Down - The U-2 Crisis and Eisenhower's Aborted Mission to Moscow, 1959-1960 (Hardcover)
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Diplomacy Shot Down - The U-2 Crisis and Eisenhower's Aborted Mission to Moscow, 1959-1960 (Hardcover)
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The history of the Cold War is littered with what-ifs, and in
Diplomacy Shot Down, E. Bruce Geelhoed explores one of the most
intriguing: What if the Soviets had not shot down the American U-2
spy plane and President Dwight D. Eisenhower had visited the Soviet
Union in 1960 as planned? In August 1959, with his second term
nearing its end, Eisenhower made the surprise announcement that he
and Soviet premier Nikita S. Khrushchev would visit each other's
countries as a means of ""thawing some of the ice"" of the Cold
War. Khrushchev's trip to the United States in September 1959
resulted in plans for a four-power summit involving Great Britain
and France, and for Eisenhower's visit to Russia in early summer
1960. Then, in May 1960, the Soviet Union shot down an American U-2
surveillance plane piloted by Francis Gary Powers. The downing of
Powers's plane was, in Geelhoed's recounting of this episode in
Cold War history, not just a diplomatic crisis. The ensuing
collapse of the summit and the subsequent cancelation of
Eisenhower's trip to the Soviet Union amounted to a critical missed
opportunity for improved US-Soviet relations at a crucial juncture
in the Cold War. In a blow-by-blow description of the diplomatic
overtures, the U-2 incident, and the aftermath, Diplomacy Shot Down
draws upon Eisenhower's projected itinerary and unmade speeches and
statements, as well as the American and international press corps'
preparations for covering the aborted visit, to give readers a
sense of what might have been. Eisenhower's prestige within the
Soviet Union was so great, Geelhoed observes, that the trip, if it
had happened, could well have led to a detente in the increasingly
dangerous US-Soviet relationship. Instead, the cancelation of Ike's
visit led to an escalation in hostilities that played out around
the globe and nearly guaranteed that the ""missile gap"" would
reemerge as an issue in the 1960 presidential campaign. A detailed
account of an episode that defined the Cold War for a generation,
Diplomacy Shot Down is, in its insights and revelations, something
rarer still - a behind-the-scenes look at history in the unmaking.
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