“A World Transformed” an account of the major foreign policy challenges confronted by the United States in the years 1989-1993 as seen by President George H. W. Bush and his National Security Advisor, Brent Scowcroft. It focuses on the continuing relationship and interactions with Mikhail Gorbachev and the steps taken to assemble the coalition that reversed the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. Although many players play their parts in this drama, the main characters are Bush and Gorbachev. Gorbachev was a crucial factor in the management of the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union and also played a major supporting role in the Kuwait crisis, in many ways helpful, in others not. Related issues included the reunification of Germany and the coup in the Philippines.
The format of the book is that the background is narrated without specific attribution, followed by text provided by the two authors.
This is an “insiders’ book”. Bush and Scowcroft share their impressions of world leaders, such as Helmut Kohl, Francois Mitterrand, Margaret Thatcher, John Major and Brian Mulroney. Insights are shared concerning respect for leaders who took political risks in support of their nations’ interests, such as Kohl, strong allies, think of Thatcher and Major, those who became personal friends and political confidants, most prominently Mulroney, and the adversary with whom Bush shared friendship, Gorbachev. Then there are those called out as not being helpful with King Hussein of Jordan in that spotlight.
A sense that emerges is that the great affairs of nations are managed by people, people with political needs, personal strengths and weakness, families and emotions. Readers get a glimpse of how precedent weighs on decisions. Bush and Gorbachev share their disappointments with Yalta. Bush “asked Borden Gray to look into how Lyndon Johnson had handled Congress at the time of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution in 1964. Johnson had worked hard to get individual member of Congress, and Congress itself, to go on record in support of what he was doing in Vietnam.” (p.371) He “had in mind the bombing pauses that Johnson and Nixon were pressured into calling during the Vietnam War. Instead of bringing peace, they gave the enemy a chance to regroup. I was determined not to repeat the mistake.” (p.454) Speaking of the President, Scowcroft recalled that “Still vivid in his mind was the image of Lyndon Johnson during Vietnam, hunched over aerial charts selectin individual targets for air strikes.” (p. 466)
By the end of my reading, I concluded that “A World Transformed” is an essential aid to understanding the crucial and necessary role George H. W. Bush played in managing the end of the Cold War.