It Takes One to Tango - Book Review,
by Edward, L., Ambassador Rowny

From Publishers Weekly The author served on the SALT II delegation for six years and later headed the U.S. team at START (the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks). Here he reminisces about the personalities and policies of five presidential administrations as they dealt with arms control. Rowny discusses why he thinks Richard Nixon overrelied on Henry Kissinger, reveals why Gerald Ford circumscribed Kissinger's diplomatic duties, analyzes Jimmy Carter's technical approach to arms control problem-solving and offers fresh insights into Ronald Reagan's personal negotiating techniques during the four summit meetings with Mikhail Gorbachev. As for George Bush: Rowny finds him a leader without a plan or even fundamental beliefs and devoid of the strong sense of purpose that so characterized Ronald Reagan. The most memorable sections of the memoir, however, have to do with the art of negotiating, at which Rowny is an ac- knowledged master. He presents a list of what he considers the 10 most important dos and don'ts, which U.S. negotiators should follow to ensure more positive results. Readers will also find here an illuminating analysis of the importance of recognizing cultural differences in international negotiations. Rowney is refreshingly frank about these differences. Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews The blunt, score-settling recollections of an arms-control negotiator for five Presidents. A three-star general who fought in Italy, Korea, and Vietnam, Rowny was assigned to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks in 1973, largely at the behest of the late Senator Henry Jackson, who prized Rowny's fluency in Russian, familiarity with nuclear-deterrence theory--and hawkish concern with national security rather than unverifiable treaties. Once involved in the arcane trade, Rowny was effectively hooked, spending much of the eventful 17 years that followed at the bargaining table with hard-line envoys of the USSR (and, in many cases, the US State Department). In his opinionated, anecdotal retrospective, the author reprises the conflicts, domestic crises, summit meetings, and other geopolitical developments that helped determine the course of the struggle between the two superpowers. While Rowny looks back on efforts to close the Pandora's box of atomic weaponry, he offers candid, often arresting, comment on his superiors, colleagues, and opposite numbers. Reagan--whose peace-through-strength doctrine the author deems vindicated--comes off best. Nixon and Ford also fare well but Carter and Bush, along with a host of lesser lights (including Henry Kissinger), are accorded decidedly short shrift. Throughout, though, Rowny (who has no problem with self-esteem) delivers his typically harsh judgments with considerable humor. In summarizing prospects for reaching an agreement with his truculent USSR adversaries during the mid-70's, he notes: ``I knew the Soviets like their currency were simply not convertible.'' Finally, he cautions that, although the US ``won'' the cold war, the nation and its allies cannot afford to let their guard down. A memoir with an unyielding point of view and genuine bite. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Book News, Inc. Memoirs of the arms control negotiator who served five presidents. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.
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