Collision Course : NATO, Russia, and Kosovo
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Norris, now with the International Crisis Group, was Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott's communications director during the Clinton Administration. His book recounts the immediate genesis and outcome of the 1999 Kosovo crisis. The author has the advantage of an insider's experience....Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and practitioners.”–Choice
“As communications director for U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott, the lead American negotiator during the war, John Norris had a ringside seat for the diplomacy that ultimately produced a settlement. The story is a dramatic one, and Norris tells it well, drawing the reader into the web of relationships within and between the countries involved....Norris is particularly good at conveying just how grueling diplomacy can be. The number of flights that Talbott and his team took to Europe and Moscow, resulting in a marathon series of exhausting negotiations, is extraordinary....[e]ven readers familiar with the general contours of the Kosovo war will learn a great deal from an extraordinary tale-one that is told extraordinarily well.”–Political Science Quarterly
“[N]o one has pulled the war's tale together quite as Norris has--teaching even those who had central roles, such as the Finnish president, Martti Ahtisaari, things the did not know. Becuase NATO allies also often did not agree, and even the U.S. commander in Europe fought with the U.S. secretary of defense, it makes for a saga as tempestuous as it was crucial.”–Foreign Affairs
“[E]xamines the multilateral diplomacy surrounding the Kosovo war. Author John Norris was communications director for U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott, the lead diplomat for the United States on the crisis, and his book provides a highly readable, blow-by-blow history of the diplomacy that sought to resolve the conflict. As presented by Norriss book, the Kosovo conflict suggests that aggressive multilateral diplomacy, coupled with the use of limited force, can perhaps solve such disputes, or at least prevent the worst outcomes for them.”–The Washington Diplomat
“[A]n important and exciting story told with verve and a lot of detail by the author....The debate will continue, and this interesting, well-researched book is a valuable addition to it.”–International Affairs
“Norris judges the diplomacy as largely successful, but offers cautionary notes about the fragility of alliances with Europe and the challenges of engaging Russia.”–Reference & Research Book News
Book Description
If Europe, Russia, and international bodies such as the U.N. and NATO end up playing a more prominent role in Iraq's immediate future, all parties, including the United States, would do well to revisit the lessons learned during the U.S.-led war in Kosovo in 1999. As a confrontation over Kosovo's final push for independence looms, this book offers seminal insight into the negotiations that took place between the United States and Russia in an effort to set the terms for ending the conflict. This study in brinksmanship and deception is an essential background for anyone trying to understand Russia's uneasy relations with the West.
Collision Course : NATO, Russia, and Kosovo
Collision Course: NATO, Russia, and Kosovo,John Norris,Praeger Publishers,0275987531,Armed Forces,Bombing, Aerial,Eastern Europe - Balkan Republics,History,History - Military / War,International Relations - General,Kosovo (Serbia),Military,Military - General,Modern - 20th Century,North Atlantic Treaty Organiza,Operation Allied Force, 1999,Serbia,Serbia and Montenegro,History / Military / General
Books Report:
Recommended Books