Superb. animmense scholarly achievement, engrossing and terrifying, and surely one of themost important books ever written about the Cuban Missile Crisis and 20thcentury international relations.--James Rosen, Wall Street Journal The story isextraordinary, and Plokhy is an accomplished narrator. This account isprobably as authoritative a version of the Soviet side as we are likely to get.--Max Hastings, Sunday Times (UK) [Plokhy]provides fresh and horrifying new details. Finishing this soberingaccount, I could not help but think of the dangers that exist today fromnuclear standoffs involving Pakistan, India, China, North Korea and the UnitedStates.--Max Boot, Washington Post A magisterial workbased on a bevy of U.S.
and Soviet archival sources, including previouslyclassified KGB documents. The perspective Plokhy provides exposes the perverseincentives that fueled dangerous nuclear power plays during the Cold War and,he suggests, beyond.--Andre Pagliarini, New Republic What makes this thedefinitive history is Mr Plokhy''s telling of the tale in gripping detail fromthe Soviet perspective. It is the picture Mr Plokhy paints of the completefailure of the key decision-makers to get inside the minds of theircounterparts that is most telling. With his masterly book, Mr Plokhy hassounded a warning bell.--The Economist Arguably the mostauthoritative and cleverly written work on the subject yet produced. Packedwith fresh information from newly declassified Russian sources, including a KGBarchive no researcher has previously accessed. Gripping.
--Victor Sebestyen, Financial Times Nearly sixty years after the Cuban missile crisis, Serhii Plokhy, the author of multiple groundbreaking books on Soviet history, once again uses newly released KGB archives to offer a new perspective: In gripping, granular detail, he shows us just how close the United States and the Soviet Union came to Armageddon. At a moment when nuclear technology is still spreading, Nuclear Folly reminds us of the danger we all still face.--Anne Applebaum, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and author of Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism If you think the story of the Cuban missile crisis has been told so often that nothing remains to be learned, think again! Drawing on KGB documents preserved in Ukrainian archives and Soviet military memoirs, as well as American documents and Cuban materials, Serhii Plokhy''s almost hour-by-hour account freshly illuminates mistakes by the Kremlin and the White House that triggered the crisis and snafus at sea and in Cuba that almost sparked a nuclear war, while drawing ominous lessons for our own once again hair-trigger nuclear age.--William Taubman, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and author of Gorbachev An excellent overview of the Cuban missile crisis from one of America''s leading Cold War historians. Serhii Plokhy has mined previously untapped Soviet archives to shed new light on the thirteen days that brought the world closer than ever before to nuclear destruction, and the pivotal roles of John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev. A thrilling read that justifies his sobering conclusion: we may not be so lucky next time.--Michael Dobbs, author of One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War A fresh examination of the historical milestone.
Plokhy keeps the pages turning, and he includes far more Soviet material than earlier scholars. Far from the first account but superbly researched and uncomfortably timely.--Kirkus, starred review Paint[s] a clearer picture of the behind-the-scenes machinations, the motivations, the politics, and the errors in judgment that almost brought about a nuclear holocaust. Plokhy pulls it all together with sober yet accessible prose that reads like a suspenseful thriller. For anyone interested in the Cold War, this is an indispensable read.--Booklist, starred review This important, absorbing work shows that the full story of the Cuban Missile Crisis must be told from its global perspective.--Library Journal, starred review.