¶ … Historiography of the Cold War
Why and how the Cold War ended became the question of the day after the Berlin Wall came down in 1989. To people whose lives had long been circumscribed, if not terrified, by Cold War-related events, the remarkable disintegration of the Soviet Union, the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, and the reunification of Germany signified the end of one era and the beginning of another. Any explanations for the demise of the Cold War depended, of course, upon answers to another fundamental question: Why and how did the Cold War begin?
The fact that for fifty years histories of the Cold War were written from within that war, it has been argued, made perspective hard to achieve. In the post-Cold-War era, it has been possible for the first time to 'step outside' the object of study itself and view the half-century of confrontation between East and West in a more balanced and rational way than has perhaps been feasible before. This process of reassessment has been aided by the opening of archives, most dramatically those in the former Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc, that were formerly off-limits to scholars from outside those countries (and to most of those within them) and a parallel, if more limited and less enlightening, release of Cold War information from Western archives. The result has been a process of revision and reassessment of the Cold War reflecting its closure as 'current affairs' and its admission to the category of 'history'. Among the most significant areas to be re-examined by historians in this new climate has been the question of the origins of the Cold War itself; as the 1992 quote from Thomas Paterson with which this paper begins suggests, the ending of the Cold War naturally led many to turn anew to the question of how it began. Related to that question is the issue of what kept it going over five decades of ceaseless confrontation and tension.
The end of the Cold War has freed scholars from the tendency to reflect the ideological divisions underpinning the confrontation in their own work - to seek to attack or to support particular Cold War positions rather than to analyse and understand from a position of impartiality. The ideological nature of Cold War history itself is reflected in the forms the historiography has taken since the late 1940s. As Thomas T. Hammond noted in 1982, the historiography of the origins of the Cold War passed through three chronologically defined and ideologically distinct phases, which can be called 'traditionalist', 'revisionist', and 'post-revisionist'. Each reflected the cultural and political attitudes prevailing in the wider Cold War context of the particular era in which it flourished.
From the end of the Second World War until the mid-1960s the 'traditionalists' held the field with a standpoint that can be summarized as essentially pro-American/pro-Western and anti-Soviet. Essentially, such scholars held the Soviet Union responsible for the onset of the Cold War by undermining the Second World War alliance between East and West, increasing the level of military confrontation between Russia and America, and acting aggressively to promote the imposition and spread of Communism in Europe and elsewhere. It was thus argued that the United States was correct in its policy of containment towards the U.S.S.R. And the Eastern Bloc, and that the American position was essentially a defensive one forced upon it by the hostility and aggression of the Communist East.
The 'traditionalist' position came under increasing assault during the 1960s by 'revisionist' historians who reflected what can be called the ascendant cynicism of the era towards the United States and its values, both within America and abroad. The experience of Vietnam played an important role in promoting a disillusionment with U.S. diplomacy and foreign policy, and a tendency to see the Soviet and American 'empires' as morally comparable. From being perceived as the defender of freedom against Soviet aggression and war-mongering, the United States was increasingly seen as an aggressive imperialist and militarist nation itself, sustaining the Cold War for selfish economic and strategic reasons rather than as a guarantor of liberty in a world threatened by totalitarianism.
During the 1970s, revisionism in turn began to be questioned by historians who argued that to seek to place the blame on one side or the other was misguided, and that explanation of the Cold War's origins was to be found in misunderstanding, miscalculation and miscomprehension between East and West. Such 'post-revisionism' can be understood as an expression of prevailing discontent with rigid ideological positions and tendency to seek for...
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