From Publishers Weekly:
Based on newly declassified material, Thompson's thoughtful reassessment confirms the Soviet claim that the Americans were preparing an all-out invasion of Cuba, that Khrushchev placed missiles in Cuba to forestall it and that President Kennedy, in order to resolve the ensuing crisis, made many more concessions than he publicly admitted. This is the first study to treat JFK's handling of the Cuban missile crisis primarily in terms of presidential weakness: "The Bay of Pigs was a failure. Laos was a failure. Vienna was a failure. JFK needed a victory, desperately." Thompson ( A Time for War: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Path to Pearl Harbor ) describes Kennedy's efforts to give the impression of standing up to the Russians and winning a great victory, when in fact he was forced to agree privately to the Soviet leader's terms--pledging not to invade Cuba and trading withdrawal of U.S. missiles in Turkey for withdrawal of Soviet missiles in Cuba--while hoping that his political enemies would not find out. The author concludes that Khruschev "beat Kennedy in Vienna" and "beat him again in Cuba." A controversial slant on one of the most dangerous moments in history. Photos.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
Scholarship concerning the Cuban Missile Crisis has had a resurgence due to the recent declassification of pertinent government documents by the United States and the former Soviet Union. Thompson (international relations, Univ. of South Carolina; author of A Time for War , LJ 7/91) revisits what is now familiar territory in telling the story behind the Cuban Missile Crisis. The author begins with U.S. policies toward the Caribbean at the end of World War II and ends with the resolution of the crisis and an account of the key participants at the time of President Kennedy's assassination. Thompson's subtitle leads the reader to expect some new revelation, but the book delivers nothing of substance that hasn't been discussed in more detail by Michael Beschloss in The Crisis Years ( LJ 6/1/91) or by Dino Brugioni in Eyeball to Eyeball ( LJ 11/15/91). Still, this work will fit well into the collections of public and undergraduate academic libraries looking for a general history of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
- Robert Favini, Bentley Coll. Lib., Waltham, Mass.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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