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Nixon's Back Channel to Moscow - Confidential Diplomacy and Detente (Hardcover, annotated edition)
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Nixon's Back Channel to Moscow - Confidential Diplomacy and Detente (Hardcover, annotated edition)
Series: Studies in Conflict, Diplomacy, and Peace
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Most Americans consider detente -- the reduction of tensions
between the United States and the Soviet Union -- to be among the
Nixon administration's most significant foreign policy successes.
The diplomatic back channel that national security advisor Henry
Kissinger established with Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin
became the most important method of achieving this thaw in the Cold
War. Kissinger praised back channels for preventing leaks,
streamlining communications, and circumventing what he perceived to
be the US State Department's unresponsive and self-interested
bureaucracy. Nixon and Kissinger's methods, however, were widely
criticized by State Department officials left out of the loop and
by an American press and public weary of executive branch
prevarication and secrecy. Richard A. Moss's penetrating study
documents and analyzes US-Soviet back channels from Nixon's
inauguration through what has widely been heralded as the apex of
detente, the May 1972 Moscow Summit. He traces the evolution of
confidential-channel diplomacy and examines major flashpoints,
including the 1970 crisis over Cienfuegos, Cuba, the Strategic Arms
Limitations Talks (SALT), US dealings with China, deescalating
tensions in Berlin, and the Vietnam War. Moss argues that while the
back channels improved US-Soviet relations in the short term, the
Nixon-Kissinger methods provided a poor foundation for lasting
policy. Employing newly declassified documents, the complete record
of the Kissinger-Dobrynin channel -- jointly compiled, translated,
annotated, and published by the US State Department and the Russian
Foreign Ministry -- as well as the Nixon tapes, Moss reveals the
behind-the-scenes deliberations of Nixon, his advisers, and their
Soviet counterparts. Although much has been written about detente,
this is the first scholarly study that comprehensively assesses the
central role of confidential diplomacy in shaping America's foreign
policy during this critical era.
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