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The Cold War and the Making of the Modern World

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In this history of the Cold War, award-winning political commentator Martin Walker explains it as an economic and political dynamic that determined the structure of the modern global economy. Using recently-opened Kremlin archives and his own experience as "The Guardian"'s bureau chief in Moscow during perestroika and in Washington during the Bush years, Walker analyzes what, more than any other single strategic conflict, has shaped the modern world.

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First published January 1, 1993

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About the author

Martin Walker

66 books1,545 followers
Martin Walker is the U.S. bureau chief for The Guardian (London), a regular commentator for CNN, and a columnist for newspapers in the United States, Europe, and Moscow. A published novelist and poet, he lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, the novelist Julia Watson, and their two daughters.

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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Patrick.
1,045 reviews27 followers
August 1, 2012
Wonderful, fascinating, and educational read for anyone interested in recent history and the Cold War. I knew the broad outlines of much of this, but learned copious amounts of details and some large stuff I didn't know either. Got my Russian leaders straightened out in my head in time and personality/accomplishments. The perspective is very fair. The author points out when the Soviet Union and the US were tunnel-visioned and accomplished the opposite of what they intended through their policy, but there does not appear to be an agenda beyond explaining the causes, events, and tensions of the Cold War. The Soviets had some understandable fears despite their tyrannical regime, and the US made mistakes too. Too much support for tyrants who didn't happen to be aligned with the Soviet Union.

It is cool when the author, who was a reporter, quotes leaders or events in the eighties, and the footnote explains the author was there having private conversations with these famous people or at big events.

I now know why tensions were ratcheted up again in the early-mid-eighties when I remember nuclear bomb drills in school. This will educate you so much. I think my Goodreads friends could actually enjoy this one since we lived through the last decade of this.
Profile Image for Nikky Southerland.
254 reviews6 followers
December 10, 2016
Written in 1995, The Cold War provides a good overhead view of the general political causes of the Cold War before outlining the political, economic, and military progression of the two great foes. Only 360 pages, it's a brief journey through 50 tumultuous and tense years, but works well to introduce and weave together various threads of the conflict into some sort of cohesive narrative.

Profile Image for Eric Gilliland.
138 reviews8 followers
July 23, 2025

Published in 1995, The Cold War: History by Martin Walker, veteran journalist for the Guardian and many other outlets, wrote a one-volume history of the era. Written at a time when the Cold War was just starting to be thought of as history, the book offers a mostly balanced overview. Walker does an admirable job of placing five decades of history into a coherent narrative, balancing many viewpoints that went into policymaking, while providing a global perspective.
Walker is less concerned with personalities or ideology and more with economics and long-term policy outcomes. Ultimately, the Cold War was a matter of which economy performed better:

The West prevailed because its economy proved able to supply guns as well as butter, aircraft carriers and private cars, rockets as well as foreign holidays for an ever-increasing proportion of taxpayers (1-2)

A "synergy" between free enterprise and state investment in the West proved an essential in spurring economic growth and innovation, everything from massive investments in higher education after Sputnik to the construction of the Interstate highway system benefitted national security and long-term prosperity. Fostering the trading blocs of Western Europe and Japan also brought long-term dividends. The irony of Germany and Japan being the Axis Powers who waged the Second World War ended up being close Allies of the West speaks to the many contradictions and illusions of the post-war world.

An insight I gained from the book was how our perception of reality, especially when caught in the daily grind of crisis and response, can mislead anyone into short-sighted decisions. While I have little background in theory when it comes to international relations, knowing the interests and fears of the other side, and being realistic about your own objectives are critical while navigating crisis. Policies and decisions based on fear and paranoia can lead to extreme and even fatal miscalculations. Walker tracks how each side learned to coexist in the distrustful climate where disaster always loomed.

At the Yalta Conference in February of 1945, arguably the first superpower summit, each side had their own ideas about the post-war world. The United States, under the idealism of FDR, wanted to foster democracy and ensure self-determination, guided by the United Nations. The Soviets wanted long-term security above all else after four years of bearing the brunt of defeating Germany. Allowing the Soviets satellite states in Eastern Europe was anathema to the Americans who worried the Soviets might conquer all of Europe. The clash in objectives and ideologies between the two superpowers inevitably led to conflict.

Anti-communists in the West were convinced the Soviets were bent on world domination, while the Soviet leadership believed the West were imperialists scheming to enforce capitalism on the world. With each side believing the other wants world domination, conflict appears inevitable, and yet something else happened, in time the two sides established rules of conduct. History bears out the truth of both projections, the Soviets did force totalitarianism on Eastern Europe, while the United States often fostered authoritarian regimes under the guise of anti-communism.

Nuclear weapons were crucial in the calculus of every crisis. Truman's decision to use atomic weapons against Japan ended the war but also moved the world into a new stage of existential crisis, the next conflict would far worse. During the brief window when America had a monopoly on atomic weapons, it pursued a policy of secrecy and leverage. Once the Soviets had their own arsenal, each side could destroy each other many times over, crisis management became a means of survival. In the many nuclear clashes of the 1950s, culminating with the Cuban Missile Crisis in October of 1962, it was essential for each side to know what they were and were not willing to concede, added with the underlying assurance neither side desired a nuclear exchange.

The second half of the book views the latter decades of the Cold War as both superpowers discovered the limits of their power, whether it came to leveraging Allies or Quixotic attempts to achieve military superiority through fantastical technology. The age of detente which lasted through the 1970s, saw many changes, most of them positive. Both sides talked with regular frequency, engaging in arms control talks and cultural exchanges. European nations were starting to look beyond the trappings of the Cold War, whether it was East and West Germany moving towards unification, the French leading the way in creating the European Union. China began to engage, and Japan's economic achievements were the envy of the world.

Geopolitical and domestic politics led to new frictions between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. during the 1980s, as the scramble for oil and markets and heightened rhetoric threatened to rip apart the fragile peace. Yet there were signs the Soviet system was in decay, while Reagan's high defense spending led to deficits for the American economy. As Walker suggests, it might be something close to a miracle, the pressures on both nations during the late stages of the Cold War never boiled over. Reagan and Gorbachev both dismissed the hardliners in their midst and allowed the nuclear terror to dissipate - for a brief time anyway. The fall of the Berlin Wall and collapse of the Soviet served as more symbolic rather than concrete signs the travails of the Cold War were of the past; it was more of a respite and hardly an "end to history."

Walker packs his narrative with economic data, charting the long-term and short-term consequences of policy decisions made by all the players. Government involvement in everyday life, whether in the form of defense, education, or social services, maintained a cohesion towards social democracy, especially in Western Europe, while America began to scale back the welfare state and increasingly resort to military intervention. Ultimately end of the Cold War led to a new litany of complex problems which left many nostalgic for the old days of Checkpoint Charlie and fallout shelters.

Although written within the fragile euphoria of the 1990s while not having access to the archives which have opened since, Walker raises perceptive questions and approaches old questions from fresh angles.



Walker, Martin, The Cold War: A History. New York: Holt, 1995.





59 reviews3 followers
January 20, 2019
Martin Walker wrote a very comprehensive look at the Cold Was with his book The Cold War: A History. Even though his book was published in 1993 I can't think of a more important time as now to read his book.
Mistakes and missed opportunities were done by both sides of the conflict which now leads us to current events we are seeing now across the geopolitical spectrum.
I highly recommended Mr. Walker's book.
Profile Image for Ferris Mx.
709 reviews11 followers
October 19, 2018
A thoughtful assessment of some of the undercurrents of the cold war (largely economic, unsurprising since the writer is an economist). Because neither side trusted the other, many opportunities for de-escalation were lost. The book is very evenhanded in pointing out how both sides contributed to this conflict.
Profile Image for Sachit Kumar.
9 reviews
January 3, 2020
To start, I must state that I am a history geek and this book taught me a lot of things. I would recommend it for anyone interested in recent history and the Cold War. The perspective of this book is very fair. The author points out when the Soviet Union and the US were tunnel-visioned and achieved the opposite of what they intended through their policy, Overall, a nice, engaging read.
Profile Image for Wolfgang.
91 reviews2 followers
December 29, 2019
A clearly focused history of the confrontation. The main focus is on the West, probably nothing else could be expected from a book written as early after the end of the Eastern block. For my taste it emphasises the symmetry between East and West too much, but apart from that a good read.
280 reviews
January 31, 2021
Very interesting read, I knew bits and pieces of this story but was nice to have it all put together for me. The writing was a bit dense and dry though
Profile Image for luana.
83 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2023
Um ponto de vista geopolítico muito necessário.
Profile Image for Nick Pappas.
7 reviews11 followers
March 6, 2017
Some might call this revisionist history, but I enjoyed it for the way it reframed the Cold War and challenged the conventional narrative
18 reviews1 follower
May 17, 2016

A comprehensive overview of the geo-political and economic landscape that evolved between the US and Soviet Union in the aftermath of WWII, resulting in the world as we (on both sides) knew it, as children and adults back then. The book covers the period from the 1945 Yalta Conference, to the perestroika policy of Mikhail Gorbachev, and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. Enough detail to make it more than a cursory read, and keep the interest of the history buff, or those, like me, who want to delve into 'just why' the world was as it was during my formative years as a child in the 1950s and 1960s. It could serve as a text book for a junior college semester course on the period. Written in a 'matter-of-fact', but not overtly dry manner, the author illuminates each side as antagonistic with respect to the other, and makes it a point to also discuss the impact contributed by continental European politics of the era, especially as the economic growth and power of Europe became a critical factor in US-Soviet economic policies toward each other. An enjoyable and informative read. I didn't 'tear through it', but it held my interest from cover to cover.
Profile Image for Eilidh.
296 reviews134 followers
December 31, 2018
I found Walker’s book excellent, enjoyable and an extremely useful tool in my studies of the Cold War. Walker has successfully achieved a book that has the ability to bring the history to a readable level, that is accessible to everyone - anyone could pick the book up and learn about what happened.

It isn’t the most analytical commentary, but rather simply explains the “what happened” instead of “why it happened”, although Walker did attempt at various points to explain some whys. It is definitely a brief and concise outline of the historical event, which I found to be on the whole as objective as it could be.

So if you’re solely interested in learning what the Cold War was about, Walker’s The Cold War is by far one of the most easiest and simplified versions available to readers, that will be enough of an introduction to the subject area. Thoroughly recommend it!
23 reviews1 follower
July 31, 2014
Very interesting overview of the Cold War. I did not know much about the Cold War, because I wasn't old enough to experience it, and it doesn't get as much history coverage as the "real" wars. This was a great book from that perspective, as it briefly summarizes the different events from beginning to end. One negative being that sometimes I was very interested in certain events such as the end of the Cold War and the Cuban Missile Crisis and the descriptions are brief. The other negative is that this was published in 94 and it doesn't go into the economic decline of Russia in the post Soviet era, but leaves the reader on a "what will happen" ending that is somewhat irrelevant 20 years later.
Profile Image for Christopher.
200 reviews11 followers
October 15, 2012
Well, this was another pretty good history book for me. It was a condensed review of the Cold War covering not only military but political, economic and social events that had some sore of impact either on the the Cold War or because of it. I only have two issues with the book in that I think the author rushed it in order to be one of the first books out on the Cold War and that at the end he has a rather scathing review of the Reagan-Thatcher era and capitalism which I think was a little over the top. Otherwise a pretty good book for anyone interested in the Cold War but don't want to be weighed down reading some of the other, more in-depth books on the subject.
Profile Image for Dawn Wells.
766 reviews12 followers
April 5, 2013
Very informative all points of current history covered. Each decade of time represented with lots of views, outlooks and insights. So well written and documented you remember things forgotten, learn information new to you, and see the differences today.
615 reviews
August 28, 2016
Decent overview of th Cold War, hitting all the highlights (though Nixon's relation making with China is barely mentioned). There are lots of surveys of the Cold War out there, and there isn't much here to distinguish it from the other works.
Profile Image for Kiri.
332 reviews
February 9, 2011
A really interesting and easy to read account of the Cold War which is still relevant today.
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