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Critical Issue

The Specter of Communism: The United States and the Origins of the Cold War, 1917-1953

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The Hill and Wang Critical Issues concise, affordable works on pivotal topics in American history, society, and politics.

The Specter of Communism is a concise history of the origins of the Cold War and the evolution of U.S.-Soviet relations, from the Bolshevik revolution to the death of Stalin. Using not only American documents but also those from newly opened archives in Russia, China, and Eastern Europe, Leffler shows how the ideological animosity that existed from Lenin's seizure of power onward turned into dangerous confrontation. By focusing on American political culture and American anxieties about the Soviet political and economic threat, Leffler suggests new ways of understanding the global struggle staged by the two great powers of the postwar era.

160 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1994

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About the author

Melvyn P. Leffler

17 books31 followers
Melvyn Paul is an American historian and educator, currently Edward Stettinius Professor of History at the University of Virginia

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5 stars
37 (16%)
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91 (39%)
3 stars
78 (34%)
2 stars
13 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews
Profile Image for Joseph Stieb.
Author 1 book240 followers
May 16, 2020
You simply are not going to find a more concise, clear, and effective summary of the causes of the Cold War and its first decade than this one. In about 150 pages, Leffler walks through the roots of this conflict mainly from the US perspective, but he skillfully incorporates the secondary literature from the USSR, Great Britain, and other critical countries in this history. He moves along quickly but with enough depth to give you a bit of color and a clear sense of motives, perspectives, etc. He does one thing I really like in Cold War history: describing how the participants interpreted each other's motives and actions but then explaining what "We Now Know" through recent releases of documents and historical work. Obviously Gaddis' book of that title is the gold standard on that topic, but you can get a very similar treatment from Leffler in 1/3 of the time.

Here are a couple of the major themes from this book, or at least some new things I picked up. For Leffler, it is obvious that the US would be hostile to the USSR, and vice versa, for cultural, ideological, political, religious, etc, reasons from its inception. To get a Cold War, though, you needed the expansion of Soviet power and the ability to threaten vital US interests. After WWII, the US leadership believed that key regions of the world like Europe and Japan needed to be rehabilitated and integrated into a more open global economy and political order. The immediate postwar threat wasn't so much a litany of aggressive Soviet actions (although they certainly were brutal and extractive in their treatment of Eastern Europe) but the possibility that the failure of places like Western/Central Europe and Japan to recover from the war would create openings for communist infiltration or neutralism. The greatest fear was that the Soviets would gain the resources of an entire continent (either Europe or NE Asia) and project that power against an isolated US. As a side note: I really got from this book why the US saw SE Asia as so strategically critical: with JP surrounded by Communist states on all sides, the possibility of SE Asia falling as well would leave JP isolated and probably force it to drift toward the Eastern Bloc, creating the specter of a continent under communist control.

The US, Truman and others thought, would then have to become a "garrison state," a permanently and heavily armed country mobilized for war at all times and, ultimately, a less liberal and democratic society. The Cold War was originally conceived as a way to avoid that outcome. Of course, Leffler goes through the back and forth of escalating events and perceptions, including Stalin's remarkable blunders based on his belief that the US would be endlessly understanding of his need to ensure friendly countries along his border. I still kind of think the Cold War was largely the Soviets fault (I know that's not a very historical question), but Leffler does a good job skirting that question and unpacking the steady escalation of this conflict and the US adoption of the role of hegemon, which despite its negative connotations really means a predominant power that guarantees some kind of order in a region. He duly notes that US hegemony was far more negotiated and consensual than the cage of Soviet control.

This is a book I might assign to an undergrad class on the Cold War, although it might be a bit old at this point (1994). I will definitely reference it a lot in my own research as a reliable and concise guide to a complicated topic.
Profile Image for Randall Wallace.
665 reviews653 followers
November 24, 2018
Melvyn’s main thesis is that “the Cold War was waged abroad to maintain a political economy of freedom at home.” That the Cold War brought that promise of economic freedom only to capitalist elites, or that it permanently moved Post-War U.S. from the New Deal framework to military Keynesianism is fine with Melvyn. 1948 presidential Candidate Henry Wallace said, fighting communists with guns a blaze will only make the world fear us. Why not show all tempted countries instead that we have the best system/product and they will follow us instead with their hearts and wallet? and millions won’t have to die in needless wars just to increase war profiteering? Centrist Melvyn also says he thinks the Cold War was great because it meant one united bipartisan foreign policy. Less clutter. Maybe Melvyn has OCD. The millions of dead in Laos, Cambodia, Indonesia PKI Massacre, East Timor, Chile, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Cuba, and dozens of other countries don’t bare a mention in Mel’s stupid book about the full price of the Cold War. Too much clutter. Melvyn has the balls to mention Mosaddegh’s removal in 1953 in Iran but reports it only as fact and includes no moral qualms seemingly fine with it and all the decades of Cold War killing under the Shah and the SAVAK.

Melvyn states the Cold War rightfully happened because Communism is “a hostile ideology”. Let’s say for a minute that is true. But centuries of US settler-colonialism against Native-Americans was also a hostile ideology. Centuries of enslavement of US Blacks sure looked like part of a hostile ideology. To the wants of the 99%, U.S. led Neoliberalism has only been an hostile ideology. Facing the extinction, Capitalism looks completely hostile. Has bipartisan support for permanent illegal war been hostile? has centuries of American Foreign Policy been hostile? or centuries of intitutionalized US Patriarchy and Racism been hostile? But centrist Melvyn conveniently ignores all those sides. Now that most of the Cold War fears have long been discredited by Noam and others, it’s hard to read this without rolling one’s eyes thinking, “Oh joy, one hundred and thirty pages glorifying the Cold War and Truman”. This book is almost at the level of “the Cold War as a success because those commies would have killed us if they could”. Kudos to Melvyn for daring to mention the obvious Cold War down side of millions of dead, especially the dead of North Korea and Vietnam, the excesses of Senator McCarthy, government testing on civilians, and that CIA was wrong to destroy elections in Italy and Greece Post-War because of an overstated threat. However, when Mel mentions the fall of Soviet Communism, he ignores totally that Brzezinski had consciously given Afghanistan to Russia as their own protracted Vietnam to bring them down. Historians are supposed to cover power – not cover FOR power. What’s up with Mel? He doesn’t even feign concern when he says the Red Scare forced screenwriters in the 50’s to stop tackling social issues. He just worries about the myth of white America being humiliated on the Global stage. White paranoid fantasies- you can’t trust any poor country being tempted by the only offer, communism, when no other country will step up to also help - Yawn… One some pages you think Leffler is concerned with the rest of us about the colossal violation of basic human values caused by the Cold War, and then on others you wonder is Leffler half-way to having a pin-up poster of Curtis LeMay tacked above his bed.
Profile Image for Daniel Kukwa.
4,742 reviews122 followers
October 8, 2014
An enormous achievement in concise history. You'll be a touch lost if you don't possess a modicum of historical understanding in regards to the Cold War...but if you do, you'll sit back in amazement, admiring the author's ability to compact so many events into such an effective little volume. This is a concentrated, sugary squirt of history, smack into the gap between your brain's hemispheres.
Profile Image for Madeline.
684 reviews63 followers
September 28, 2018
Read this for class, and it is rather dry but informative.. Gets a little more readable in the end.
Profile Image for Nathan Hart.
18 reviews
May 29, 2018
While I enjoyed this book, I did not find it to be much of a page turner. It is a brief introduction to the perceptions in the U.S., and to some extent in the U.S.S.R., that led to the Cold War. Leffler frames U.S. motivation for the Cold War as a global desire to establish democratic capitalism to keep markets open, mostly for the benefit of Western Europe and Japan, which in turn was intended to keep the U.S. from becoming an ally-less, trade-partner-less garrison state. This motivation was certainly at least partially justified, but there is no denying it was also largely fueled by paranoia and a tendency to focus on worst-case scenarios. At the end, Leffler points out the irony that many American economic and personal liberties were eroded in service of this goal, and he slightly alludes to Eisenhower's role as an imperfect savior who, while working to establish a "military-industrial complex", played a key role in keeping it from totally consuming American life as it otherwise could have.

I give this only three stars because I think the narrative struggles to stay interesting in the final two chapters, and it reads as more of a laundry list of facts, but perhaps this is inevitable in such a brief treatment of the origins of the Cold War.
4 reviews
February 5, 2024
A passable survey of the inception and consolidation of American Cold War policy. Would have liked to learn more about the domestic repression that resulted from Red Scare rhetoric and a more critical view to the actions of American policymakers for instigating the Cold War; my read tells me that the Soviets would have preferred cooperation, rather than competition, albeit apprehensively, and were more or less forced on a defensive/war footing because of American posturing. Supposedly this was all done to avoid a garrison state within the United States, instead we exported it abroad. ‘Freedom’, under our direction.
Profile Image for Sam.
34 reviews
March 28, 2021
A great introduction to the events leading up to the Cold War (from a centrist/neo-liberal perspective) mostly uninfluenced by ideology...a non-biased, just the facts summary if you will. (As much as that's actually possible)

Learn the past to move into the future
Profile Image for Madeline.
15 reviews6 followers
January 15, 2021
Dry college reading. Sometimes interesting, but not worth it for how short the book is compared to how long it took to read it.
Profile Image for Shaun Richman.
Author 3 books40 followers
November 2, 2021
As advertised, a concise foreign policy history of the early Cold War.
Profile Image for Alex Hope.
82 reviews6 followers
October 4, 2021
Worst ever account on the beginning of Cold War. To that, again comes the biased perspective. Page 49: Stalin killed millions of his own people and sent to GULAGs fucking EVERYONE (it literally says everyone) who was a prisoner of war. My Great Grandfather’s brother was a prisoner of war. He was rescued and he has never been to Gulag. This is a horrible mistake to make in a historical research. S.V. Vishnevsky, rescued in 1945, never sent to GULAG. M.F. Lukin, rescued in 1945 AND GIVEN BACK his rank of general-lieutenant. Stalin himself wrote on his case that “This man can be trusted and this man needs to get his rank back”. Stop making it seem like he killed 20 million, when in fact he killed less than a million. He was a horrible person, which my country will never recover from, but again, this is history. You do not bring tour opinion in history, you bring facts. I would hardly encourage all Americans to google what ГАРФ. Ф.9401. Оп.1.Д.4157.Л.201-205 states, or at least google the statistics. This is a horrid mess that needs to be corrected. 1/5 stars
L.V.Georgiev is was my Great Grandpa’s brother by the way. He was taken prisoner of war in 1942. It is my family’s history and it is being dismantled right in front of my eyes by idiots like Leffler. I am triggered, indeed, I can not not be triggered because if I was an American student, who was brainwashed that Stalin killed millions for the entirety of my life, then I would have believed it; however, I have facts and historical archives on my hands before reading books such as these.
Know your history. Do not let them falsify it.
Have a great day.
Profile Image for Billy Marino.
131 reviews13 followers
June 27, 2017
Well, I got distracted from reading this while doing separate research, but put together, this book is a concise, yet enlightening read. It's not always the most engaging, and can feel a bit repetitive, but it wonderfully succeeds in getting across the main point that the Cold War was an ideological struggle that predates its given time frame, which is complicated in the post-WWII years by geopolitical issues dealing with economic struggles, power vacuums, and military strength. This book is useful for both those in the field, especially when it came in in 1994 with newly released sources from the Soviet Union, and undergrads, or anyone new to the field. It can be a bit overwhelming with the amount of players discussed, but knowing who did what when and where comes over time with studying a seriously complex era global interactions.
426 reviews7 followers
April 23, 2024
Good, concise account of the fear of communism and the roll that it played in the development of the Cold War after 1945. Pre World War II chapters were less detailed but still helpful. Would work as a short textbook in a upper level high school course on this topic.
Profile Image for Emery.
19 reviews
December 8, 2022
A rather succinct summary of early Cold War drivers. I found it quite interesting and informative. The footnotes are a great starting point for further research.
Profile Image for audrey :).
68 reviews
October 17, 2025
had to read this for my history class and it was just not good or interesting at all. same information repeated over 130 pages
Profile Image for John.
236 reviews2 followers
September 28, 2025
An excellent primer on the roots of the cold war since the Russian Revolution. Although a short volume, Leffler shows he is keenly aware of the latest scholarship exploring the motives, miscommunications, and mistrust between the USSR and the USA.
14 reviews1 follower
August 24, 2014
This was a good book. But it had a little bit too much of a liberal twist to it. It did focus a great deal on the cold war which I liked and was extremely informative. Although it was well written it did make Stalin sound like a sensible guy and make America look like a bully that forced the Soviet Bloc into existence. I think a slightly more balanced view would have made it a better book. Despite the liberal twist I liked it.
Profile Image for Medicinefckdream.
97 reviews12 followers
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July 17, 2013
if you ever want to hear a lukewarm ciriticizm of us cold war policy, along with a halfass defense of soviet cold war policy, heres the book for you. this book was like kind of short too, and theres like 50 russian names with 10 syllables that i dont even know who they are.
61 reviews10 followers
September 16, 2013
A good summary of how the Cold War started. Leffler goes into great detail about the fears that gripped both the United States and the Soviet Union. This book is a must read for any student of U.S or World history.
Profile Image for untogether.
60 reviews4 followers
March 24, 2009
The Specter of Communism: The United States and the Origins of the Cold War, 1917-1953 (A Critical Issue) by Melvyn P. Leffler (1994)
122 reviews5 followers
May 25, 2012
Short, good overview- useful to teach from.
Profile Image for Stacy  Sturdevant.
7 reviews3 followers
July 31, 2015
Reading this book for my Cold War class at the University of Iowa Spring 2015 semester. So far it is well written and informative. Will update when done.
Profile Image for Didier "Dirac Ghost" Gaulin.
102 reviews26 followers
August 30, 2022
A rather short introduction to Leffler's magnum opus, Preponderance of Power. The first two chapters are basically acting as a prelude to the author's later study of the first part of the cold war.
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews

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