George F. Kennan: An American Life
By John Lewis Gaddis
(Penguin Press, 784 pages, $39.95)
One of the more poignant moments in the massive new
biography of George F. Kennan describes him leaving the State
Department in Washington for good. There was no place for him in
the Eisenhower government. A receptionist held back tears as he
passed by on his way to the elevator.
Biographer John Lewis Gaddis calls it an “inglorious
conclusion to an illustrious career. For no Foreign Service officer
had … more significantly shaped grand strategy at the highest
levels of government. None had created, if inadvertently, a
‘school’ of international relations theory. And yet Kennan walked
out of the State Department on June 23, 1953, with hardly anyone
noticing. He was not prepared to reflect … on how this had
happened.”
Gaddis, a distinguished professor of history and strategy
at Yale University, explains in painstaking detail how the
headstrong young Kennan had risen so fast, accomplished so much,
then lost his way in the labyrinth of the international relations
bureaucracy.
The book dissects a man who was part prophet, part poet,
part visionary — but no diplomat in the true sense of the
emotional detachment required to report on events abroad. He proved
too volatile for the ambassador’s chair in Moscow and ended up
expelled, probably on Stalin’s direct orders.
Kennan had a taste for the long-form memo, so exhaustive
that his languid prose often was not read by the
addressee.
But he was finally noticed when his secret “long telegram”
on Soviet strategy hit Washington in 1946 during his earlier
posting to Moscow under Ambassador Averell Harriman. Gaddis devotes
a chapter to this seminal event under the title “A Very Long
Telegram.” This one did get read and distributed, and led to
decades of “containment” policies to confront the expansionist aims
of the Soviet Union. Kennan soon objected to the perversion of his
vision, however, as “containment” came to mean many things and to
have a military basis.
But it was his penchant for fine writing rather than data
that ultimately helped bring his Foreign Service career to a
premature close.
Under Secretary of State David Bruce told biographer
Gaddis he reached a point where he no longer read Kennan’s memos
“because they were so long-winded and so blatantly seeking to be
literary rather than provide information.”
Even Harriman found many of his judgments “too impractical
to be acted upon” and when the two men disagreed, Harriman recalled
that he ignored Kennan’s point of view. “I simply didn’t bother to
waste time to argue. It didn’t amuse me to do so.” Elsewhere,
Harriman said Kennan understood Russia but not the United
States.
George Frost Kennan was born in a
modest family in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and graduated from Princeton
University in 1925. He joined the U.S. Foreign Service fresh out of
school and began a series of low-level postings, first in Geneva,
then Hamburg, then Riga. President Franklin Roosevelt established
diplomatic relations in 1933 with the Soviets and Kennan found
himself in Moscow working for the first U.S. ambassador, William
Bullitt. Gaddis describes their fruitful partnership in some
detail. Kennan’s Russian was sufficient to allow him to act as
embassy interpreter. He moved on to Prague in 1938, then to Berlin
as Germany began to march. When the United States entered the war,
Kennan was interned in Germany with other U.S. diplomats for nine
months.
Although he grew impatient with the Foreign Service for
ignoring his counsel, he was pleased to be back in Moscow working
for Harriman in 1944. Two years later, in response to a request
from Washington, he sent his 5,500-word telegram – the longest on
Foreign Service history – to the State Department. The following
year, President Truman was quoting from it in Congress to support
his pledge in the Truman Doctrine to protect Greece and Turkey
militarily in the event of Soviet aggression there. Thus Kennan was
thrust into the origins of the Cold War and the Marshall
Plan.
Gaddis describes Kennan’s influence in Washington in
1947-48 as the peak of his official career when he was chosen to
establish what is now known as the Policy Planning Staff. But
tensions with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles became
intolerable. Dulles had described Kennan as a “dangerous
man” when they clashed over China’s admission to the
United Nations and again over the decision to send MacArthur’s
forces across the 38th parallel in the Korean War, and
they never worked well together subsequently.
Kennan fulfilled a series of Washington missions in the
1950s, served briefly as ambassador to Moscow, then was chosen by
President John Kennedy to become ambassador to Yugoslavia in 1961.
He resigned two years later over differences in policy and returned
to the United States in 1963. At this point, he permanently joined
the Institute for Advanced Study, where he pursued his true
vocation as historian and writer. He produced 17 books, twice
winning the Pulitzer Prizes and the National Book Award.
This Gaddis biography has stirred the foreign affairs
establishment to a high pitch for its account of the crucial
debates and decisions in American foreign policy during the period
leading up to World War II and ending with the collapse of the
Soviet Union. Kennan, who died in 2005 at the age of 101, saw it
all, commented on it all, and was a participant in much of
it.