Berlin 1961
Kennedy, Khrushchev, and the Most Dangerous Place on Earth
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Buy for $30.76
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Narrated by:
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Paul Hecht
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By:
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Frederick Kempe
A former Wall Street Journal editor and the current president and CEO of the Atlantic Council, Frederick Kempe draws on recently released documents and personal interviews to re-create the powder keg that was 1961 Berlin. In Cold War Berlin, the United States and the Soviet Union stand nose to nose, with the possibility of nuclear war just one misstep away.
©2011 Frederick Kempe (P)2011 Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...
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Easy to follow and well narrated. A story full of interesting insight with just enough relevant detail to fill up the canvas. A gut-wrenching tale of how close we came to nuclear war. A war prevented in spite of the foibles of men, skewed perceptions of the other, and the chance of history. The wall was an afterthought that came about due to its own momentum. A band-aid that held throughout the Cold War.Important history well told
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hair raising times
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Great historic value
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I heard also all the indoctrination about the “Communist Scare”. And false flag situations.
I believe any academic view of history should educate & increase better judgment. As history has shown, better judgment is clouded by intents not governed by honorable reasons and we still keep shaking our heads at the folly.
During this audible book I learned a deal more about Communism & perhaps why it was more serious than my knowledge provided over the years. Dear Mao was indeed out to find new countries, like Tibet in 1959. However the information provided here gave an insight into the competition going on between the USDR & China, and expansionist ideas.
The focus on West Berlin in this writing connected problems of the Kennedy Administration with the Cuban missile crisis. For all the mistakes President Kennedy may have made, I still applaud his thinking outside the war box. I would have liked to have seen in this how it would have been difficult to combat group think as a new president. I have heard he used few close advisors because thinking outside of war wasn’t a part of the solution being offered.
I still believe this offers fresh insight, in grand chronological order, to flesh out the issues so immense that faced a new president. I applaud the author. Well done.
New Insights
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The combination of first person accounts with historical hindsight assembles the puzzle of the cold war in the early 1960s in a way that hasn't been done before.
It is a little dry and slow to get into, but if you focus on it long enough it becomes a digital page turner.
Good read (or listen).
Slow getting going, but just like a freight train-
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