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First published in 1979. We associate Professor Kennan, with what
came to be known as a doctrine of containment, the first serious
theoretical attempt within the American foreign policy
establishment to understand the consequences for world affairs of a
suddenly substantial and quite visible Soviet power. This
collection of debates includes an opening conversation between
Kennan and George Urban.
First published in 1979. We associate Professor Kennan, with what
came to be known as a doctrine of containment, the first serious
theoretical attempt within the American foreign policy
establishment to understand the consequences for world affairs of a
suddenly substantial and quite visible Soviet power. This
collection of debates includes an opening conversation between
Kennan and George Urban.
For more than fifty years, George F. Kennan's "American Diplomacy"
has been a standard work on American foreign policy. Drawing on his
considerable diplomatic experience and expertise, Kennan offers an
overview and critique of the foreign policy of an emerging great
power whose claims to rightness often spill over into
self-righteousness, whose ambitions conflict with power realities,
whose judgmentalism precludes the interests of other states, and
whose domestic politics frequently prevent prudent policies and
result in overstretch. Keenly aware of the dangers of military
intervention and the negative effects of domestic politics on
foreign policy, Kennan identifies troubling inconsistencies in the
areas between actions and ideals - even when the strategies in
question turned out to be decided successes. In this expanded
fiftieth-anniversary edition, a substantial new introduction by
John J. Mearsheimer, one of America's leading political realists,
provides new understandings of Kennan's work and explores its
continued resonance. As America grapples with its new role as one
power among many - rather than as the "indispensable nation" that
sees "further into the future" - Kennan's perceptive analysis of
the past is all the more relevant. Today, as then, the pressing
issue of how to wield power with prudence and responsibility
remains, and Kennan's cautions about the cost of hubris are still
timely. Refreshingly candid, "American Diplomacy" cuts to the heart
of policy issues that continue to be hotly debated today.
Beginning with his first foreign service post in 1927 and ending
seven decades later, Kennan's account is rich with the insight of a
major historical participant. Whether relating the perils of
Hitler's Germany or revisiting Kennan's days as ambassador to the
Soviet Union, Sketches from a Life is as riveting as great
literature, and one of the most invaluable documents of our time.
Reflections 19821995
"Forty glittering, insightful essays . . . [from] the dean of diplomatic historians."--Kirkus Reviews
As participant and observer, George F. Kennan has left an indelible mark on more than six decades of this century. In this new volume of essays, reviews, and speeches, Kennan reflects on the forces that have shaped this tragic century.
"There are few American observers whose sense of history is as acute, whose principles are so fundamental and whose common sense so accessible and so traditionally American. And when this century is tidied away in the history books, it is to George Kennan's journals, essays, and papers that historians will go for the most thoughtful, farsighted, and enduring American commentary on its terrible events."--S. J. Hamrick, Chicago Tribune (Editor's Choice)
"Kennan's voice is unique . . . informed by a deep, unmatched knowledge of Russia's people and history."--Matthew Dallek, Boston Book Review
"[Kennan] has a large and sagacious mind. . . . It is an inspiration to read his reflections on the eternal truths of morality and power."--John Keegan, London Daily Telegraph
The distinguished statesman George F. Kennan has written widely on diplomatic history and current affairs, including the bestselling Around the Cragged Hill. Among his many awards are two Pulitzer prizes and a National Book Award. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.
"I have attempted to take the high ground," writes George F. Kennan
in the foreword to this illuminating work, "trying to stick to the
broader dimensions of things-the ones that would still be visible
and significant in future decades." Against the background of a
century of wars, revolution, and uneasy peace, Mr. Kennan advances
his thoughts on a broad front: how the individual's quest for power
can transform a government into a confusion of ambition, rivalry,
and suspicion; how a nation's size can create barriers between the
rulers and the ruled; why America must first set its own house in
order before it can become a beacon to others. Deeply aware of the
pressures under which public officials must act, Mr. Kennan sees a
government in Washington that is forced to make decisions on issues
of the moment, often without regard for long-term consequences.
Neither the legislature, responsive to the interests of a narrow
constituency, nor the executive branch, swamped by urgent problems
at home and abroad, has the time or inclination to look far beyond
the next election. Lost entirely is a vital element in any
democracy: deliberation based upon study, review, and judgment. To
address problems that defy quick political solutions, Mr. Kennan
here boldly lays down a blueprint for a Council of State, a
nonpolitical, permanent advisory board that would stand alongside
yet apart from government policy makers, with the prestige to be
heard "above the cacophony of political ambitions." Rich in
historical example, this volume is a brilliant summing up of the
experience and thought of the man the Atlantic described in a cover
story entitled "The Last Wise Man" as: "diplomat, scholar, writer
of rare literary gifts, one of most remarkable Americans of this
century."
In 1918 the United States government decided to involve itself with
the Russian Revolution by sending troops to Siberia. This book
recreates that unhappily memorable story the arrival of British
marines at Murmansk, the diplomatic maneuvering, the growing
Russian hostility, the uprising of the Czechoslovak troops in
central Siberia which threatened to overturn the Bolsheviks, the
acquisitive ambitions of the Japanese in Manchuria, and finally the
decision by President Woodrow Wilson to intervene with American
troops."
Setting out to examine the world context within which American
foreign policy must function, Mr. Kennan faces the hard facts of
Soviet expansion, the ambiguous and often chaotic forces in the
non-communist world, and the enormous difficulty of maintaining a
posture of dignity and restraint in our foreign affairs. He warns
against the dangers of relying on rigid military solutions, of
over-estimating the capacities of the United Nations and other
international peace-keeping institutions, and, in general, of
looking at international life as a mechanistic rather than an
organic process. It is in the inner development of our national
life that he believes we can find solutions to our external
problems, for American foreign policy will take its shape from the
goals of American society.
Accompany George Kennan as he explores his family's roots in the
American past. George F. Kennan has forged one of the most
illustrious careers in the annals of American letters and politics.
His prophetic American Diplomacy influenced several generations of
Cold War policy makers, and Sketches from a Life, one of the most
lyrical accounts of a life in public service ever written,
chronicled his extraordinary diplomatic career spanning more than
half a century. As a consummate statesman and prolific writer,
Kennan has distinguished himself as one of the most influential
figures of the twentieth century. Now in his late nineties, Kennan
turns an eye to a matter closer to his heart in An American Family:
The Kennans. Embarking on a genealogical journey spanning several
decades, he traces the roots of the Kennan family back more than
five generations, discovering a family history that has all the
makings of a classic American story. Beginning with the Kennans'
life of unmitigated poverty in Scotland in the late seventeenth and
early eighteenth centuries, An American Family details the Kennan
family's passage to America and the hardships they faced as early
settlers in Connecticut and Massachusetts, "the epitome of the
backcountry family of the most remote northern fringes of New
England life." He adroitly captures life in colonial times and in
the period following the Revolutionary War, and chronicles the
major events of a nation's early history with the rare intimacy of
a family member reflecting on his forebears. Filled with lively and
sometimes haunting vignettes collected from archives and libraries
across New England, An American Family is a fascinating detective
story and brings to fruition a family memoir begun by Kennan's
grandfather nearly a century ago. Graceful yet revealing, it is a
cherished reminder of three hundred years of a nation's history
through the eyes and words of one of America's most remarkable
sons.
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