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Preface: February 24, 2022
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Why the Cold War and Its Origins Still Matter
1. It Took Centuries to Get to Yalta
2. The Geopolitics of the Peace, 1945-1952
3. Truman and Kennan: The Beginning of Containment and the End of Isolationism
4. Geopolitical Realignment Becomes a Reality: A Tale of Two Nations and Their Leaders
5. Two Years That Set the Stage for the Next Four Decades
6. A Reflection on US Leadership in the 1940s and Early 1950s
7. The Russian Bomb
8. NSC-68: The Militarization of Containment
9. Politics and Policy in the First Decade of the Cold War: Getting Serious about Communism
10. From Korea to Khrushchev and the Thaw
11. Communism and the United States Supreme Court
12. Avoiding Armageddon
13. From Camelot to Saigon
14. Stalemate and the Birth and Death of Detente
15. From the Wilderness to the Promised Land: Carter and
Brezhnev to Reagan, Bush, and Gorbachev
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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In the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, with US-Russia relations approaching a breaking point, this book provides a key to understanding how we got here. Specifically, Stephen P. Friot asks, how do Russians and Americans think about each other, and why do they see the world so differently?

In the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, with U.S.-Russia relations approaching a breaking point, this book provides a key to understanding how we got here. Specifically, Stephen P. Friot asks, how do Russians and Americans think about each other, and why do they see the world so differently? The answers, Friot suggests, lie in the historical events surrounding the Cold War and their divergent influence on politics and popular consciousness.

Cross-disciplinary and cross-cultural in its scope, Containing History employs the tools and insights of history, political science, and international relations to explain how twenty-first-century public attitudes in Russia are the product of a thousand years of history, including searing experiences in the twentieth century that have no counterparts in U.S. history. At the same time, Friot explores how—in ways incomprehensible to Russians—U.S. politics are driven by American society’s ethnic and religious diversity and by the robust political competition that often, for better or worse, puts international issues to work in the service of domestic political gain. Looking at history, culture, and politics in both the United States and Russia, Friot shows how the forty-five years of the Cold War and the seventy years of the Soviet era have shaped both the Russia we know in the twenty-first century and American attitudes toward Russia—in ways that drive social and political behavior, with profound consequences for the post–Cold War world.

Amid the wreckage of the high hopes that accompanied the end of the Cold War, and as faith in a rules-based international order wanes, Friot’s work provides a historical, cultural, and political framework for understanding the geopolitics of the moment and, arguably, for navigating a way forward.
 

Reviews

At a time when the US-Russia relationship has deteriorated considerably, Stephen Friot provides a fresh, updated analysis of Cold War history and its subsequent impact that enables a better understanding of the factors on both sides that have resulted in the current tensions." —Nikolas K. Gvosdev, author of Decision Making in American Foreign Policy

"Stephen Friot connects the profiles of the key leaders to the decisions they and others made during the Cold War, and, rather than assume that the American interpretation is the default for understanding events, he also presents the Russian perspective." —Michael J. Sulick, author of Spying in America: Espionage from the Revolutionary War to the Dawn of the Cold War

"Fascinating and original. Stephen Friot arrives at a set of provocative conclusions about U.S.-Russian relations, conclusions he prepares the reader well for in this vividly written and substantially researched history of the Cold War." —Michael Kimmage, author of The Conservative Turn: Lionel Trilling, Whittaker Chambers, and the Lessons of Anti-Communism

About the Author

Stephen P. Friot is Senior U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma. He has traveled extensively in the Russian Federation while serving as guest lecturer with the faculties of law at numerous universities in Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, Saratov, and Ulyanovsk. He is also the author of three articles published in the Comparative Constitutional Review (Moscow).