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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.
Written originally as a series of entries in a travel diary and now considered one of the most important memoirs of our time, Sketches from a Life is George F. Kennan's peerless, impressionistic record of his experiences with twentieth-century history.
"As with the first volume, an extraordinarily complex story is developed with great skill, scholarship and reflective analysis." -Foreign Affairs
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.
"[Kennan] comes to us...as ambassador of a generation nearly gone and a conservatism so responsible, dutiful and so long extinct it may look revolutionary....As ever, Kennan in the present book has fulfilled his responsibility admirably." -Chicago Tribune
"Thoughtful critiques of many of the major issues confronting American foreign policymakers in the 1980s and early '90s. . . .Kennan's voice is unique, tempered by three decades of life in Stalinist Europe and informed by a deep, unmatched knowledge of Russia's people and history." -Matthew DallekBoston Book Review
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