Deterring Armageddon: A Biography of NATO
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'EXCELLENT' - THE TLS'HUGELY IMPRESSIVE' - THE INDEPENDENT'AN
ASTONISHINGLY FINE HISTORY' - COUNTRY LIFE'FASCINATING' - DAILY
MAILThe history of the world's most successful military alliance,
from the wrecked Europe of 1945 to Vladimir Putin's invasion of
Ukraine. As they signed NATO into being after World War II, its
founders fervently believed that only if the West's democracies
banded permanently together could they avoid a catastrophic global
atomic conflict. Over the 75 years since, the alliance has indeed
avoided war with Russia, also becoming a major political, strategic
and diplomatic player well beyond its borders.It has survived
disagreements between leaders from Eisenhower, Churchill and de
Gaulle to Trump, Stoltenberg and Merkel, faced down Kremlin foes
from Stalin to Putin and endured unending questions and debate over
what new nations might be allowed to join. Deterring Armageddon
takes the reader from backroom deals that led to NATO's creation,
through the Cold War, the Balkans and Afghanistan to the current
confrontation with the Kremlin following the invasion of Ukraine.
It examines the tightrope walked by alliance leaders between a
powerful United States sometimes flirting with isolationism and
European nations with their ever-evolving wishes for autonomy and
influence.Having spent much of its life preparing for conflicts
that might never come, NATO has sometimes found itself in wars that
few had predicted - and with its members now again planning for a
potential major European conflict. It is a tale of tension, danger,
rivalry, conflict, big personalities and high-stakes military and
diplomatic posturing - as well as espionage, politics and protest.
From the Korean War to the pandemic, the Berlin and Cuba crises to
the chaotic evacuation from Kabul, Deterring Armageddon tells how
the alliance has shaped and been shaped by history - and looks
ahead to what might be the most dangerous era it has ever
faced.'Utterly eye-opening - compelling, haunting and continually
illuminating. As Peter Apps so brilliantly demonstrates in this
gripping book, the story of the NATO alliance is in many ways a
parallel global history of the last 75 years. As well as all the
outbreaks of seething tension between the US and its European
allies - and the counter-moves of rival powers - this is also an
account of just how often in those postwar years that we all stood
on the edge of the most terrible abyss.With mesmerising fluency,
and dazzling research, Apps follows the criss-crossing threads of
the Cold War and beyond. Those threads converge in our shadowed
present, and the conflict in Ukraine. In order to fathom today's
dark world, Apps has explored a labyrinth of once-classified
history, and he brings dazzling clarity.' - Sinclair McKay