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The Dead Hand

The Untold Story of the Cold War Arms Race and its Dangerous Legacy

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE
The first full account of how the Cold War arms race finally came to a close, this riveting narrative history sheds new light on the people who struggled to end this era of massive overkill, and examines the legacy of the nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons that remain a threat today.
 
Drawing on memoirs, interviews in both Russia and the US, and classified documents from deep inside the Kremlin, David E. Hoffman examines the inner motives and secret decisions of each side and details the deadly stockpiles that remained unsecured as the Soviet Union collapsed. This is the fascinating story of how Reagan, Gorbachev, and a previously unheralded collection of scientists, soldiers, diplomats, and spies changed the course of history.

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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2009
      Stanley Kubrick got it wrong in Dr. Strangelove: There was a Doomsday Machine, but it was in the other bunker.

      So we learn in this penetrating look at the history of the Cold War and its many curious assumptions, specifically the doctrine of mutually assured destruction, bearing the apt acronym MAD, courtesy of the late Robert McNamara. One of its offshoots was the notion that the Soviet military created"Dead Hand," a missile system that led to further assumptions that the civilian leadership and military command system were dead and gone. The Soviet brass, writes Washington Post reporter Hoffman (The Oligarchs: Wealth and Power in the New Russia, 2002), worried that human operators might have pangs of conscience and tried to push through a computer-loop design by which the machines would decide when to unleash hell without human intervention. Fortunately, more sensible heads prevailed—but not without a fight. One of the many virtues of Hoffman's book is that it depicts not just the death-tainted hand of the military-industrial complex in the United States, but also in the Soviet Union, where supposed strongmen like Leonid Brezhnev and Yuri Andropov had considerable trouble keeping the warmongers under control. Despite diplomatic agreements and good assurances, the Russian city of Sverdlovsk pumped out anthrax spores as"the Soviet Union promptly betrayed its signature on the [arms control] treaty." Indeed, readers will realize how lucky we are to have escaped being destroyed at their hands. Yet, Hoffman notes, even today,"in a remote compound near the town of Shchuchye in western Siberia, there are still 1.9 million projectiles filled with 5,447 metric tons of nerve agents."

      A compendium of discomfiting, implication-heavy facts, of particular interest to students of geopolitics.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      October 1, 2009
      A journalist associated with the Washington Post, Hoffman meticulously researched the Soviet Unions strategic-weapons posture in the 1980s and the armaments legacy the USSR bequeathed to Russia in the early 1990s. This narrative of his findings proceeds chronologically, from a hair-raising account of the Soviet leaderships genuine, if paranoid, fear that the U.S. might launch a nuclear attack in the fall of 1983, to American efforts to secure nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons in the chaotic years following the disintegration of the USSR. Hoffmans many revelations, arising from his interviews with designers or custodians of Soviet weapons, include description of a system that could launch nuclear missiles by itself if the Soviet leadership were killed in a U.S. first strike; fine-grained detail of the Soviet Unions secret and illegal biological-weapons production; and discussion of Soviet-era accidents, such as a 1979 anthrax outbreak. Revealing Ronald Reagans and Mikhail Gorbachevs attitudes toward and meetings about strategic weapons, Hoffmans thorough history of this phase in arms control should pique those interested in the policies and technicalities of reducing strategic weapons.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

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