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Helmut Schmidt is the neglected chancellor of modern German
history, overshadowed by 'the greats' - Bismarck, Adenauer, Brandt
and Kohl. This volume retrieves Schmidt's true significance as a
pivotal figure who helped reshape the global order during the
crisis-ridden 1970s. This major reinterpretation, based on detailed
research in Schmidt's private papers and numerous archives in
Europe and America, reveals him as a leader equally skilled in
economics and security, and adept at personal diplomacy, who dared
to act as a 'double interpreter' between the superpowers during the
nadir of the Cold War. Schmidt was no mere 'crisis-manager': in
fact he brought to the chancellorship a depth of reflection,
evident in two decades of writings and speeches that justifies
considering him an intellectual statesman on a par with Henry
Kissinger. His achievements were prodigious. Hailed as the 'world
economist', Schmidt helped create the G7 forum for global economic
governance and the European Monetary System at a time when
capitalism seemed on the rocks. And as the 'strategist of balance',
he designed NATO's 'dual-track' response to the crisis caused by
the massive Soviet arms buildup of Euro-missiles. This decision,
Kristina Spohr argues, played a crucial part in holding together
the Western alliance and paved the way to defusing the Cold War in
Europe. Schmidt brought his country to the top table of world
politics - what he unashamedly called Weltpolitik - as an equal of
the wartime victor powers. It was through his Chancellorship that
West Germany came of age on the global stage.
In 1989 and 1990 the map of Europe was redrawn without a war,
unlike other great ruptures of the international order such as
1815, 1870, 1918, and 1945. How did this happen? This major
multinational study, based on archives from both sides of the 'Iron
Curtain', highlights the contribution of international statecraft
to the peaceful dissolution of Europe's bipolar order by examining
pivotal summit meetings from 1970 to 1990. These are organized into
three periods: 'Thawing', 'Living with', and 'Transcending' the
Cold War. The volume offers fascinating insights into key statesmen
such as Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, Leonid Brezhnev and
Mikhail Gorbachev, Willy Brandt and Helmut Kohl, Zhou Enlai and
Deng Xiaoping. It explores the central issues of the superpowers
and arms control, their triangular relationship with China, and the
seemingly intractable German question. Particular attention is
devoted to the cultural dimensions of summitry, as performative
acts for the media and as encounters with 'the Other' across
ideological divides. All these threads are drawn together in a
sweeping analytical conclusion. Written in lively prose,
Transcending the Cold War is essential reading for anyone
interested not just in modern history but also current
international affairs.
The root question this book addresses is how the new Germany will
use its re-found status as a great power. Does Germany - as in the
past - aim to dominate Europe? Or has it renounced its imperial
ambitions following the trauma of division during the Cold War? In
seeking answers to these questions, Kristina Spohr Readman
scrutinises the development of Germany's new Ostpolitik (eastern
policy) in the period 1989-2000. Against the background of recent
European history, she analyses the re-establishment of a special
relationship between Bonn/Berlin and Moscow. In particular, she
assesses the peculiar geopolitical situation of the Baltic states:
caught between a turbulent Russia in the east and a unified Germany
in the west. The Baltic case reveals the complexities of a
post-Cold War European security architecture in the making.
The root question this book addresses is how the new Germany will
use its re-found status as a great power. Does Germany - as in the
past - aim to dominate Europe? Or has it renounced its imperial
ambitions following the trauma of division during the Cold War? In
seeking answers to these questions, Kristina Spohr Readman
scrutinises the development of Germany's new Ostpolitik (eastern
policy) in the period 1989-2000. Against the background of recent
European history, she analyses the re-establishment of a special
relationship between Bonn/Berlin and Moscow. In particular, she
assesses the peculiar geopolitical situation of the Baltic states:
caught between a turbulent Russia in the east and a unified Germany
in the west. The Baltic case reveals the complexities of a
post-Cold War European security architecture in the making.
‘A gripping and compelling account…. The peaceful ending of the
Cold War between West and East remains one of the greatest
achievements of modern statecraft’ CHRISTOPHER ANDREW, Literary
Review This landmark global study makes us rethink what happened
when the Cold War ended and our present era was born. The world
changed dramatically as the Berlin Wall fell and protest turned to
massacre in Tiananmen Square. Now, with deft analysis and a wealth
of newly declassified archival sources, historian Kristina Spohr
offers a bold and novel interpretation of the revolutionary
upheaval of 1989 and, how in its aftermath, a new world order was
forged without major conflict. The Post-Wall world, Spohr argues,
was brought about in significant measure through the determined
diplomacy of a small cohort of international leaders. They engaged
in tough but cooperative negotiation and worked together to
reinvent the institutions of the Cold War. Exploring this
extraordinary historical moment, Spohr offers a major reappraisal
of US President George H. W. Bush and innovative assessments of
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, and President François
Mitterrand of France. But the transformation of Europe must be
understood in global context. Spohr elegantly weaves together the
Western and Asian timelines to revelatory effect, by contrasting
events in Berlin and Moscow with the story in Beijing, where the
pro-democracy movement was brutally suppressed by Deng Xiaoping.
Post Square, he pushed through China’s very different Communist
reinvention. Meticulously researched and brilliantly original, Post
Wall, Post Square provides an authoritative contemporary history of
those crucial hinge years of 1989-1992 and their implications for
our times. The world of Putin, Trump and Xi, with a fractious
European Union, rogue states and the crisis of mass migration has
its roots in the global exit from the Cold War.
'A gripping and compelling account.... The peaceful ending of the
Cold War between West and East remains one of the greatest
achievements of modern statecraft' CHRISTOPHER ANDREW, Literary
Review This landmark global study makes us rethink what happened
when the Cold War ended and our present era was born. The world
changed dramatically as the Berlin Wall fell and protest turned to
massacre in Tiananmen Square. Now, with deft analysis and a wealth
of newly declassified archival sources, historian Kristina Spohr
offers a bold and novel interpretation of the revolutionary
upheaval of 1989 and, how in its aftermath, a new world order was
forged without major conflict. The Post-Wall world, Spohr argues,
was brought about in significant measure through the determined
diplomacy of a small cohort of international leaders. They engaged
in tough but cooperative negotiation and worked together to
reinvent the institutions of the Cold War. Exploring this
extraordinary historical moment, Spohr offers a major reappraisal
of US President George H. W. Bush and innovative assessments of
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, and President Francois
Mitterrand of France. But the transformation of Europe must be
understood in global context. Spohr elegantly weaves together the
Western and Asian timelines to revelatory effect, by contrasting
events in Berlin and Moscow with the story in Beijing, where the
pro-democracy movement was brutally suppressed by Deng Xiaoping.
Post Square, he pushed through China's very different Communist
reinvention. Meticulously researched and brilliantly original, Post
Wall, Post Square provides an authoritative contemporary history of
those crucial hinge years of 1989-1992 and their implications for
our times. The world of Putin, Trump and Xi, with a fractious
European Union, rogue states and the crisis of mass migration has
its roots in the global exit from the Cold War.
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