Reading this book in January 2022, is somewhat surreal, but timely. Also, having been a “news and military history” junkie as a child throughout the 90s when many of the events written about in this text were occurring makes it extra surreal as I even recall reading and thinking about these events as they occurred, so there’s an added element of (strange) nostalgia. On its own merits however, M.E Sarotte’s book is a well-written sequence-history of the geopolitical events that led to the current security environment in eastern Europe (or Russia’s ‘near-abroad’) starting from the last few years of the Cold War to the last year of the 1990s.
As a reference, it may be better than good, but excellent, with well over a hundred pages of citations, and bibliography. I anticipate many hours of primary source reading yielded from this book. However, as a piece of synthesis, the book is more wanting, with the synthesis not occurring till literally the last 40 mins of audio (out of a 15 hour and 54 mins book), and it was definitely rushed or massaged to fit current messaging (likely by editors to ensure it would maximize sales given current events). After 15+ hours (500+ pages) of text with the author basically outlining how the multiple ways the H.W Bush administration, then the Clinton administration, “dunned” the Yeltsin administration of Russia’s nascent democracy, for political capital, to hurriedly acquiesce to various NATO enlargement schemes, the author’s only conclusion was effectively “we could have done better, though had we have to do it again, we’d more or less do the same thing, but w/ more panache. Further, now that we are in conflict with Russia, we can't be critical of NATO (which I was sort of doing for 90% of this book)”. There’s no real latitude of vision on whether it even made sense for the post-Cold War framework to be primarily driven by NATO, and not by something altogether different, like a novel European security framework, which was actively being discussed by policy makers at the time, including the famed Cold-War architect George Kennan (who’s apprehension to NATO enlargement was quoted several times by Sarotte).
Sarotte’s basic conclusion assumes NATO is fixed, and given the desire of nations like Poland to join, concludes that nothing much (substantive) could have been done to change the eventuality of expansion, and more importantly of "Article 5" expansion, or the "full rights". The few “changes” mentioned include changing the name of NATO into something else though not changing the organization at all (a strange request from Yeltsin’s foreign minister), and having more discussion on the nature of “Article 5” expansion beyond Germany. Banal. Though to be fair to the author, the normative question of what could have replaced NATO, or how might the European Economic Community (EEC/EC, the precursor to the EU) might have evolved to expand into a common continental/regional security scope is both counterfactual and possible beyond the domain of a historian, and firmly within the domain of international relations/political science/social science.
Again, this element of the text is literally less than 10% of the content, so it’s weakness doesn’t weigh the whole text down too much, which is otherwise a good detailed-filled history on this topic. The book nicely spans not only the internal dialogue/rationale of the three US administrations / two presidents (Bush-88/Clinton-92/Clinton-96) very well, but also provides good context on the internal logic of some of the European leaders, most prominently Helmut Kohl, but also including some input from the various French administrations, including Mitterand/Chirac as well as the relevant British administrations to name a few.
What becomes clear quickly as one reads this is that Yeltsin was not prepared to deal w/ the Western nations soundly. This was either because of the momentous change that Russia had recently undergone, both in internal economy and governance, or the personal failing of Yeltsin, most notably his ill-controlled alcoholism (or both), which features prominently in the narrative here. Yeltsin’s strategy seems to have been to provide as much cooperation as possible to both the Bush and Clinton administrations, first in the realm of strategic arms-controls, then WMD-cleanup/consolidation, and finally in conventional-arms reduction in Europe, in hopes this will incentivize Western capital to flow into the country. The Western nations likewise were incentivized to make Yeltsin’s transition and leadership as smooth as possible, mostly because they feared what would happen once/if he was removed/left/retired from power, and to buy time to expand NATO as far east as possible.
The author paints this later objective mostly as benign, though vaguely so. There’s a key quote from Clinton, who’s opinion was basically that NATO should expand maximally east eventually, and that it would provide Russia w/ a sort of fait-accompli, and incentivize it to cooperate, and revert to a more docile form (it should noted that this was the time of maximum Russian cooperation via Yeltsin). It is also the case that many of these former Warsaw Pact nations had understandable concerns and more importantly, understandable economic incentives to join the alliance, especially as “consumers” of security (if not “producers” of it), thus allowing them to reallocate capital generated within their nations to more productive use outside of security.
I thought that reading this book would make me feel more informed, and thus better equipped to understand the current situation, and more confident in it’s ultimate resolution, but it does not. In fact, it all seems even bleaker now. Although we were able to achieve substantive cooperation during the Yeltsin era, it was not lasting, and most importantly, the national security apparatus of Russia learned to trust the US and some European nations less. This occurred under a mostly passive and benign Russian leader. But it’s also unclear what control US policy makers do have over the multifarious interests that represent US “interests” (much less broader “Western” ones). Several times both, Bush and Clinton administrations had principals who saw that they needed to change course, or to “come to terms” with the Russians, that would be acceptable to all parties with respect to a security compact for Europe. Yet, in each case, those principals were confounded by the chaotic realities of internal domestic politics as well as the chaos of internal fighting within the respective administrations. Even when such an arraignment was made, the so-called “Partnership for Peace” (PfP), the author reveals that the architects of this architecture always planned it for being a “holding pen” to retard the progress of certain nations, which was exclusively Russia at the time, from ever ascending to NATO membership, yet provide some minimal operational alignment and the outer-veneer of partnership. In effect, it was at least partially a subterfuge, and not genuine.
Either way, this is a good read, and will likely be authoritative on this topic going forward. Recommended.