Ronald Reagan and his quest to abolish nuclear weapons

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327 pages 2005

About This Book

"Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) has always puzzled scholars and commentators. Some have claimed that it was a purely political maneuver, while others have explained it as a ruse conjured up by presidential advisers to weaken Soviet resolve. These assumptions, however, fail to acknowledge the depth of Reagan's involvement in nuclear abolition, and how passionately committed Reagan was to the pursuit of this goal. In Ronald Reagan and His Quest to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, Paul Lettow renders untenable the persistent belief that Reagan was an ideologically shallow figurehead." "In a narrative that spans the start of Reagan's presidency and the 1986 Reykjavik summit between Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, during which SDI was a defining issue, we see SDI for what it was: a full-on assault against nuclear weapons waged as much through policy as through ideology. While cabinet members and advisers - Secretary of State George Shultz and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger among them - played significant roles, it was Ronald Reagan himself who presided over every element, large and small, of this paradigm shift in U.S. diplomacy." "Lettow conducted interviews with former Reagan officials - four of his six national security advisers, both of his ambassadors to the USSR, and both of his defense secretaries. He also draws upon the vast body of declassified security documents from the Reagan presidency; much of what he quotes from these documents appears publicly here for the first time. The result is the first major work to apply such evidence to the study of SDI and superpower diplomacy."--Jacket.

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