Publisher's Weekly Review
The long duel between the U.S. and the Soviet Union emerges in a broad context in this insightful history of the Cold War. Fink (The Genoa Conference), professor emerita of history at the Ohio State University, grounds the book in a perspicacious review of Soviet international relations from 1917 onwards and a deft analysis of how wrangling over the fate of Germany and Eastern Europe during and after WWII laid the foundations for the coming rivalry. Her brisk narrative surveys important flashpoints of the Cold War, from the Berlin Airlift through the 1989 collapse of Soviet communism, and delineates its underlying shape as direct confrontation between Americans, Russians, and Chinese in Europe, Korea, Cuba, and Vietnam gave way to wary policies of coexistence and detente. She shows how the antagonism, while easing somewhat, also took on a life of its own as it subsumed quarrels between Arabs and Israelis, Indians and Pakistanis, or Guatemalan landlords and peasants; local conflicts the world over, she notes, entangled almost against their will two superpowers "still trapped by Cold War reflexes to seek advantage wherever possible." Fink's crisp, lucid prose and judicious, even-handed assessments impart a coherent arc to complex events; students especially will find this an invaluable introduction to a watershed era of modern history. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
The further we get from the withering away of the Cold War, the more likely we are to benefit from dispassionate and solid analytical accounts of the struggle. Fink, professor emeritus of history at Ohio State, has provided a compact, objective, and insightful account that illustrates how disputes over the post-WWII fate of Europe morphed into a conflict that engulfed regions across the world. For the populations in parts of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, the Cold War often became intensely hot. Fink includes the necessary historical context by examining the foreign relations of the Soviet Union after the Russian Revolution and the subsequent fear and suspicions that lay behind Soviet policy toward the West. Fink broadens her account to include China and the Chinese enigmatic relations with the supposed Soviet allies. She deftly illustrates how Third World nations became hapless pawns in the broader geopolitical struggle, and she concludes with a sharp description of the residual effects of the Cold War upon the major and minor participants. This is an ideal introductory text for college students and general readers.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2010 Booklist
Choice Review
Fink (emer., Ohio State Univ.) has written a landmark treatment of the Cold War by using new archival sources to flesh out the true relationship between the Soviet Union and the West. Many traditional studies have sought to portray Stalin and his successors as indomitable aggressors in the post-WW II era, with the West, especially NATO and the US, on constant alert against rapidly spreading communism in Eastern Europe and later, in the 1950s-70s, the Third World. Fink, however, has discovered that successive US administrations used the threat of the "domino theory," especially in Vietnam, to scare the Western public about the specter of worldwide communism. After Truman instituted the Marshall Plan and backed up West Germany and West Berlin, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon all became further enmeshed in Vietnam after the Korean stalemate. Here, they were concerned not only with Soviet actions, but with those of newly Communist China in North Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. Fink also effectively transfers the Cold War battlefield to the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America. Both the US and the Soviets attempted to use allies to gain advantages in these regions. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers through faculty. A. M. Mayer College of Staten Island
Library Journal Review
The Cold War was a part of our lives for decades before it came to an abrupt end in 1991. It has been described and assessed in a seemingly endless array of volumes, including John Lewis Gaddis's The Cold War: A New History and editors Melvyn P. Leffler and Odd Arne Westad's three-volume The Cambridge History of the Cold War. Those readers seeking a well-written single--volume treatment now can turn to this finely wrought book. Fink (history, emerita, Ohio State Univ.; Defending the Rights of Others) turns her considerable talents to the task of producing a global history of the Cold War that extends back to 1917 when a kind of incipient cold war began between the United States and Russia during the rise of the Soviets and Lenin. Fink also covers the well-known post-World War II Cold War in Europe, but, as per her subtitle, she also explores the war's impact on the Middle East, Asia, and elsewhere. To help the novice reader, she provides a time line, a glossary, and a list of significant individuals who played key roles in the struggle. VERDICT At a reasonable price and length, and with contents that are eminently readable, Fink's history is a gem that should be in all 20th-century history collections.-Ed -Goedeken, Iowa State Univ. Lib., Ames (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.