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14
This description is from Yarynich interviews with the author, as well as
C
3
, p. 156; Korobushin interview, Hines, vol. 2, p. 107; Bruce Blair,
Global Zero Alert for
Nuclear Forces
, Brookings Occasional Papers (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1995), pp. 43–56.

15
The United States was the chief adversary, but Western European or other targets might also have been included. China had a relatively small nuclear force.

16
Yarynich details the test on p. 170 in
C
3
. The delay was described in an interview with the author.

CHAPTER 7: MORNING AGAIN IN AMERICA

1
Reagan,
An American Life
, p. 589.

2
Massie first met with Reagan January 17, 1984, before the trip. She reports meeting him twenty-two times in his second term, and taught him the Russian proverb
Doveryai no proveryai
, or “Trust, but Verify.” See
http://www.suzannemassie.com
. Also see Deborah Hart Strober and Gerald S. Strober,
The Reagan Presidency: An Oral History of the Era
(Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s, 2003), pp. 222–228. Reagan’s diary, March 1, 1984.

3
Jack F. Matlock Jr.,
Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended
(New York: Random House, 2004), p. 88.

4
Reagan diary, March 2, 1984.

5
Reagan,
An American Life
, pp. 594–597.

6
Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky,
KGB: The Inside Story
(New York: HarperCollins, 1990), p. 602.

7
Andrew and Gordievsky, pp. 603–604.

8
NSDD 119, Jan. 6, 1984. Christopher Simpson,
National Security Directives of the Reagan and Bush Administrations: The Declassified History of U.S. Political and Military Policy, 1981–1991
(Boulder: Westview Press, 1995), pp. 374–378.

9
Peter Grier, “The Short Happy Life of the Glick-Em,”
Air Force
magazine, Journal of the Air Force Association, vol. 85, no. 7, July 2002.

10
Anatoly Chernyaev,
My Six Years with Gorbachev
(University Park, Pa.: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000), p. 9.

11
Herbert E. Meyer, vice chairman, National Intelligence Council, “What Should We Do About the Russians?” June 28, 1984, NIC 03770-84.

12
Matlock, p. 95.

13
Reagan diary, April 9, 1984.

14
David Hoffman, “Chernenko ‘Disappointed’ White House,”
Washington Post
, April 10, 1984, p. 9.

15
Reagan,
An American Life
, p. 602. Also see SNIE 11-9-84,
Soviet Policy Toward the United States in 1984
, Aug. 9, 1984.

16
Seweryn Bialer,
The Soviet Paradox: External Expansion, Internal Decline
(New York: Knopf, 1986), see Ch. 6.

17
George Shultz,
Turmoil and Triumph: My Years as Secretary of State
(New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1993), p. 480.

18
Shultz, p. 484. Gromyko recounted the moment to Dobrynin as if it had been more an exchange of slogans. Anatoly Dobrynin,
In Confidence: Moscow’s Ambassador to America’s Six Cold War Presidents
(New York: Times Books, 1995), p. 556.

19
Shultz, p. 484; Andrei Gromyko, Harold Shukman, trans.,
Memories
(London: Hutchison, 1989), p. 307.

20
Don Oberdorfer,
From the Cold War to a New Era
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998), p. 93.

21
Steve Coll,
Ghost Wars
(New York: Penguin Books, 2004), p. 102.

22
Andrew and Gordievsky, p. 604.

23
Shultz, p. 477. Andropov had proposed a unilateral moratorium on space weapons the previous year, just before the KAL shoot-down.

24
Nigel Hey,
The Star Wars Enigma: Behind the Scenes of the Cold War Race for Missile Defense
(Dulles, Va.: Potomac Books, 2006), p. 136.

25
The
New York Times
raised questions Aug. 18, 1993, about whether the test was rigged. The General Accounting Office found no evidence that it was, though the playing field was slightly tilted by heating the target so it would be easier for the interceptor to discover and turning the target sideways. The investigation revealed that the United States had also devised a deception program that would have exploded the target regardless to spook the Soviets. However, the deception program was not used in the June 1984 test. It had been readied in the first two experiments, but the interceptor and rocket missed by such a wide margin that the deception explosion was not used. “Ballistic Missile Defense: Records Indicate Deception Program Did Not Affect 1984 Test Results,” United States General Accounting Office, GAO/NSIAD-94-219, July 1994.

26
George Raine, “Creating Reagan’s Image; S.F. Ad Man Riney Helped Secure Him a Second Term,”
San Francisco Chronicle
, June 9, 2004, p. C1.

27
Shultz, p. 478.

CHAPTER 8: “WE CAN’T GO ON LIVING LIKE THIS”

1
Except where otherwise noted, Margaret Thatcher’s recollections are from her memoir,
The Downing Street Years
(New York: HarperCollins, 1993), pp. 452–453, and 459–463. Mikhail Gorbachev’s recollections are chiefly from his
Memoirs
in English and in Russian,
Zhizn’
i
reformi
, two vols. (Moscow: Novosti, 1995). In some cases, as noted, Gorbachev’s comments are from the author’s interview in 2006; and
Conversations with Gorbachev
, transcribed interviews with himself and Zdeněk MlynááY (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002). Raisa Gorbachev mentioned the Chernenko permission in her memoir
I Hope: Reminiscences and Reflections
(New York: HarperCollins, 1991), p. 125.

2
Geoffrey Howe, interview with BBC’s “The Westminster Hour,” May 2005.

3
Archie Brown,
The Gorbachev Factor
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 77.

4
Gordievsky, interview, August 29, 2005; and
Next Stop
, pp. 305–313.

5
Gorbachev told a British official during the visit that the first modern English novel he read was Snow’s
Corridors of Power
. Archie Brown,
Seven Years That Changed the World: Perestroika in Perspective
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), p. 46. Also,
The Observer
, London, Dec. 23, 1984, p. 4; “The Westminster Hour,” BBC series
Power Eating
, by Anne Perkins, May 2005.

6
Geoffrey Howe,
Conflict of Loyalty
(New York: St. Martin’s, 1994), pp. 358–360.

7
The ad appeared Feb. 22, 1984. On the first page, which Gorbachev used for his prop, were the boxes and dots. On the second page, in bold headline, the advertisement asked “COULD THIS BE EARTH’S LAST CHART?” It was sponsored by a businessman, Harold Willens, who had spelled out his hopes to stop the arms race
in a book,
The Trimtab Factor: How Business Executives Can Help Solve the Nuclear Weapons Crisis
(New York: William Morrow and Co., Inc., 1984). Willens, chairman of the California bilateral nuclear freeze initiative campaign of 1982, attributed his antinuclear views to his experiences in the Pacific as a marine. He visited Hiroshima and Nagasaki weeks after the World War II bombing and was horrified at what he saw. Willens had fled the Soviet Union with his parents when he was eight years old and settled in Los Angeles, where he became a successful businessman.

8
See “Memorandum of Conversation,” meeting with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Dec. 22, 1984, Camp David.
http://www.margaretthatcher.org
.

9
Gorbachev, interview, June 30, 2006.

10
In the Dec. 23, 1983, issue of
Science
, two articles by teams of scientists argued that a nuclear war would have devastating environmental and ecological effects on the globe. In January 1984, a Vatican working group issued a report describing nuclear winter. “Nuclear Winter: A Warning,” Pontificiae Academiae Scientiarvm Docvmenta, 11, Jan. 23–25, 1984. Among the scientists who participated was Yevgeny Velikhov, who became a key adviser to Gorbachev.

11
Thatcher interview with John Cole, BBC, Dec. 17, 1984.

12
See
www.margaretthatcher.org
.

13
Memorandum of conversation, Dec. 22, 1984.

14
Gorbachev’s maternal grandfather had become a supporter of the Bolsheviks because the family was given the land they worked on after the revolution. “In the oral history of our family, it was constantly repeated: the revolution gave our family land,” he said.
Conversations
, p. 14.

15
David Remnick, “Young Gorbachev,”
Washington Post
, p. B1, Dec. 1, 1989.

16
The Soviet Union was not a rule-of-law state in the Western sense. But the law faculties were often used to groom future recruits for service in diplomacy, security services and party work.

17
Gorbachev and MlynááY,
Conversations
, p. 18.

18
The full title was
History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks), Short Course
, 1939.

19
Brown, p. 39.

20
In the Soviet system, the procuracy was more than just a prosecutor. The office also had an accountant’s auditing function and served as a watchdog for the party.

21
Ever since the Bolshevik revolution, the Communist Party leadership strove to keep the restiveness of youth in check through Komsomol. See Steven L. Solnick,
Stealing the State: Control and Collapse in Soviet Institutions
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999).

22
Raisa Gorbachev, pp. 93–99.

23
Gorbachev,
Conversations
, p. 38.

24
Robert G. Kaiser,
Why Gorbachev Happened: His Triumphs and His Failure
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991), p. 41.

25
Time
magazine editors,
Mikhail S. Gorbachev: An Intimate Biography
(New York: Time Inc., 1998), p. 98.

26
Brown, p. 45.

27
Gorbachev,
Conversations
, p. 47.

28
Gorbachev,
Conversations
, pp. 42–43.

29
Gorbachev succeeded Fedor Kulakov, who died July 17, 1978. Kulakov, who was previously first secretary in Stavropol, had been a mentor. Gorbachev delivered a eulogy for him in Red Square. However, the delay between his death in July and Gorbachev’s elevation in November may have meant internal wrangling over the appointment.

30
Volkogonov, p. 446, notes that Gorbachev’s assignment was doomed; decrees were never going to solve agricultural problems that dated back to Stalin’s disastrous campaign against the peasants.

31
The most significant source of unorthodox thinking was in Novosibirsk, Siberia, where an outspoken reform economist, Abel Aganbegyan, had come up with a candid and devastating critique of the Soviet economy. A colleague, Tatyana Zaslavskaya, a sociologist, prepared a landmark internal paper challenging the entire structure of the Soviet economy, which was debated at a 1983 conference in Novosibirsk. See Tatyana Zaslavskaya,
The Second Socialist Revolution: An Alternative Soviet Strategy
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990).

32
Robert D. English,
Russia and the Idea of the West: Gorbachev, Intellectuals and the End of the Cold War
(New York: Columbia University Press, 2000), pp. 172–173.

33
Narodnoye Khozyaistvo SSSR v 1983 g
. [Agriculture in the USSR in 1983] (Moscow: Finances and Statistics, 1984), p. 269.

34
Henry Kreisler, “Conversation with Alexander Yakovlev,” Nov. 21, 1996, Conversations with History, Institute of International Studies, University of California, Berkeley. Also, English, p. 184.

35
English, p. 190.

36
Eduard Shevardnadze,
The Future Belongs to Freedom
(New York: Free Press, 1991), pp. 23, 37.

37
Yegor Ligachev,
Inside Gorbachev’s Kremlin
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1993), p. 58.

38
Chernyaev diary, Feb. 26 and March 2, 1985.

39
Alexander Yakovlev,
Sumerki
(Moscow: Materik, 2003), pp. 459–461.

40
Brown,
Seven Years That Changed the World
, p. 32.

41
March 11 comments from minutes of the Politburo meeting, the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., Volkogonov Collection, Reel 17, Container 25.

42
Georgi Shakhnazarov,
Tsena Svobody: Reformatsiya Gorbacheva Glazami yevo Pomoshnika
(Moscow: Rossika-Zevs, 1993), pp. 35–36.

CHAPTER 9: YEAR OF THE SPY

1
Robert M. Gates,
From the Shadows: The Ultimate Insider’s Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), p. 329.

2
Reagan diary, April 19, 1985. Reagan acknowledged in his memoir, “I can’t claim that I believed from the start that Mikhail Gorbachev was going to be a different sort of Soviet leader.” Reagan,
An American Life
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990), p. 614.

3
Reagan,
An American Life
, pp. 615–616.

4
Reagan diary, March 20, 1985. In his memoir, Reagan said he told aides “we’d have to be as tough as ever in dealing with the Soviets” but “we should work hard to establish channels directly” between himself and Gorbachev, p. 615.

5
According to Matlock, Nicholson had strayed into a restricted area. The United States “was given a version that mixed fact with fiction to place the responsibility on Nicholson, not on the Soviet sentry. The official Soviet explanation was that Nicholson had entered a clearly marked prohibited area, was illegally photographing a Soviet military installation, and when spotted refused the sentry’s order to halt. Instead, he tried to escape and was therefore shot. It was this inaccurate version that convinced Weinberger and Reagan that the shooting had been deliberate.” Matlock,
Reagan and Gorbachev
, pp. 112–113.

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