Word: kennan
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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RUSSIA LEAVES THE WAR (544 pp.)-George F. Kennan-Princeton University...
...perspective on these notions, it is well to turn away from the headlines and go back to the beginning. That is the task undertaken by George F. Kennan, onetime (1952) U.S. Ambassador to Russia, now professor at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Studies. Russia Leaves the War is the first volume (two more to come) of his history of Russia's time of troubles. It might as justly have been called Russia Leaves the West, for with the triumph in 1917 of Lenin's Bolsheviks over Russia's first and only democratic (Kerensky) government, the Czar...
...clear and resourceful prose, Kennan has threaded through a huge maze of diplomatic papers to present a clear picture of America's first frustrations in dealing with the new power. The very first year of the Red Revolution set the future pattern: Western liberal gullibility trying to cope with men who have raised deceit to the level of a philosophy...
Fool's Mate. Kennan's book begins by evoking the grimness of the Russian scene seen at its capital, Petrograd, where at every hand "one feels the proximity of the great wilderness of the Russian north-silent, somber, infinitely patient." Lenin and Trotsky were emerging as the main figures on that somber scene. These agile clever, ruthless and dedicated men-Stalin was still a poisonous penumbra on the horizon of history-were theoretically bent on directing Russia as an ally of the U.S. and the Anglo-French alliance against imperial Germany and Austria. The problem...
...words might as well be those of Khrushchev. And with all of this, Kennan (as quoted in a later issue of TIME) can still moan bitterly that the "intellectual" is not properly esteemed in American life. If the above policy is the best that the cream of America's brains can do, our intellectuals should be smart enough not to be surprised by the consequent reaction...