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The Gift of Time: The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Now
 
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The Gift of Time: The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Now [Paperback]

Jonathan Schell (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

080505961X 978-0805059618 October 15, 1998 1st Edition/ 1st Printing
From the author of The Fate of the Earth, a stirring new call to the nuclear age.

When Jonathan Schell's monumental best-seller The Fate of the Earth was published in 1981, it was hailed by The New York Times as "an event of profound historical importance." Harrison Salisbury called it "the most important book of the decade."Now Schell has produced a work of equal--or greater--historical significance and literary accomplishment. Just as The Fate of the Earth became the seminal volume of the Cold War era, The Gift of Time is destined to become the same for our age. In a series of conversations with officials as diverse as Vietnam-era defense secretary Robert S. McNamara, former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, and the last commander of the Strategic Command, General George Lee Butler, Schell finds support for the abolition of nuclear weapons in the unlikeliest places, among the very generals and politicians who presided over nuclear strategy and its implementation during the Cold War.

Writing in a spirit of optimism and hope, Schell calls upon all Americans--indeed, all of the world's citizens--to snap out of our cold-war trance, this forced cohabitation with horror, and take the step that alone can free us from nuclear danger and corruption, namely the abolition of nuclear weapons.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

While baby boomers make their plans for those looming retirement years and take pride in their IRAs, Jonathan Schell wants to pull us yet again from complacency and self-absorption. But hasn't the fate of the Earth, well, you know--blown over? What new news about the necessity of nuclear disarmament can Schell bring?

The gist of his long introductory argument is this: since nuclear weapons proliferated in order to face down Communism, and since Communism has been faced down, and since the U.S. and Russia are, presumably, pals, isn't it time to dissolve the arsenals? Decency cries out, "Yes!" But, he writes, "the nuclear policies of the Clinton administration have been both tentative and vague, and their articulation mainly left to lower-level officials." This upsets Schell. As does the egregious fact that deterrence is still the policy mainstay. "In the words of Bruce Blair, of the Brookings Institution, 'No major change in the U.S.-Russian nuclear equation has occurred--not in war planning, not in daily alert practices, not in strategic arms control, and maybe not even in core attitudes.'" Schell is upset, but who is going to listen?

It's never entirely clear what facts, what hard news has unleashed Schell's passions. When he writes, for example, "gone [are] the obstacles to inspection that have been considered the main brake on nuclear disarmament," one wonders where he was when the stories on the stalled attempts at inspection in North Korea and Iraq aired. Perhaps he does not own a radio? Such discrepant statements make the reader querulous and grumpy.

The Gift of Time is nothing less than a cry for the abolition of nuclear weapons throughout the world. Schell is peeved that this has only been a whisper in the Clinton agenda, while outmoded policies and vague planning reveal the stronger belief in abolition's undesirability. Schell illustrates this fork-tongued approach to the crafting of nuclear policy by citing the testimony of Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Walter B. Slocombe, quoted as saying that the U.S. would like to pursue a negotiated reduction of nuclear arms but can't, because other countries are unlikely to embrace disarmament. Schell finds this argument absurd, an admission that the goal can be achieved, but no one really wants it. He concludes, "The fear of breakout animates all those who wish to retain nuclear weapons indefinitely," as if such a fear itself had no basis in reality.

If his book were, instead, the collection of the interviews that follow, the reader might embrace Schell's thesis with less belligerent equivocation. He has talked with an impressive group of leading nuclear policymakers during the cold war, who have made stunning ideological reversals. Included are General Charles Horner (air force commander), whose 1994 quote, "The nuclear weapon is obsolete; I want to get rid of them all," stunned officials in D.C. (he's now on the steering committee of the Stimson Center's Project on Eliminating Weapons of Mass Destruction); Robert McNamara, "one of the quintessential men of the Cold War" and crafter of the Vietnam War, whose last vision is of a nonnuclear world; Joseph Rotblat, the Manhattan Project scientist who resigned eight months before the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima--the only scientist who quit the project on ethical grounds; and many others. The section "European Voices" includes a talk with, among others, Helmut Schmidt; "Russia" includes an interview with Mikhail Gorbachev.

A contentious read, The Gift of Time will animate and annoy. After all, Schell purports to yank ours heads from the sands of denial, but he seems to try with such pap as, "Our primary inspiration for attending to the nuclear question ... should not be fear but fear's opposites, hope and faith--hope that, in the transformed and brightened political scene, the goal of abolition is achievable, and faith that we possess the nerve, stamina, and wisdom to reach it." What "we" will set aside the security, however bogus, derived from nuclear arsenals in favor of some hope-based, fuzzy "should"? --Hollis Giammatteo --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Longtime New Yorker writer Schell, best known for his landmark polemic The Fate of the Earth (LJ 4/15/82), revisits the issue of nuclear annihilation in this important new book. Concerned about the still-lingering threat of nuclear confrontation, Schell has assembled impressive testimony against nuclear weapons from a variety of former Cold Warriors, among them Robert McNamara, Fred Ikle, Alan Cranston, and Gen. Charles Horner. He includes the views of European policymakers, most prominently Mikhail Gorbachev and Helmut Schmidt. However, the most effective chapter of the book is an in-depth conversation with Gen. George Lee Butler, former commander of the Strategic Air Command, who eloquently explains his conversion to nuclear abolition and concludes that "There is no security found in nuclear weapons. It's a fool's game." Like Schell's earlier works, this will be in high demand in most libraries. Highly recommended.?Thomas A. Karel, Franklin & Marshall Coll. Lib., Lancaster, PA
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Holt Paperbacks; 1st Edition/ 1st Printing edition (October 15, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 080505961X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0805059618
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.7 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,433,581 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Visionary and Hopeful, yet lacks a strategies, July 8, 1998
By A Customer
This book comes at a time of important decisions concerning the continued existence of nuclear weapons in a world groping for an alternative. With the formal joining of the nuclear club by India and Pakistan the discussion on the continued existence of nuclear weapons takes on a renewed urgency.

Mr. Schell does a fine job of explaining the difficulty in getting to zero. Implicit in his work is that that the world as it presently is structured cannot escape the"security dilemma". Nuclear aboition in such a world is a remote possibility so long as nations remain in the "self-help" model of international relations. The continued anarchic situation in international affairs leaves the world with the age old game of the balance of power. What is needed is a re-conceptualiztion of how nations can relate to one another and strategies for a new international order founded on renewed spiritual insight and vision grounded in a practical expression through a new politics concerned with justice and ecological responsibility--which in the final analysis is the way out of pending conflict and is in all nations' interests. Until a commitment to a new way is made we will continue to be plagued by the nuclear threat--virtual or otherwise.

This book,serves the important purpose of reminding us that we cannot allow things to drift. History has portals of opportunity which close quite quickly. It is the time to seize the opportunity to take measures like de-alerting and horizontal disarmament described by Mr. Schell now while we have the chance. Sooner or later in an imperfect world something is bound to go wrong. Mr. Schell calls us to the task that remains unfinished. As ordinary citizens , in effect, he is asking, "What are we waiting for ?"

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a practicable road to abolition of nuclear weapons, August 16, 1999
This review is from: The Gift of Time: The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Now (Paperback)
The great contribution of Schell's book is to describe a practicable road to the abolition of nuclear weapons. For many years a writer for "The New Yorker," Schell unravels the complicated technical issues of nuclear weaponry and missile delivery systems in comprehensible English, describing an alternative vision of how international relations without nuclear weapons might look. Framing the discussion as a debate between what he calls the abolitionists and the possessionists, Schell does not restrict himself to abstract theoretical questions of strategic doctrine, but rather devotes most of the book to an analysis of the nitty-gritty technical details of how we could reduce nuclear weapons to zero in the real world. Some of the key problems that he addresses are: what does "zero" nuclear weapons actually mean as a practical matter? how can we defend against cheating or so-called "break out"? and how can we deal with the problem that we cannot undo our knowledge about how to make nuclear weapons.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Strong on description,weak on solutions to nuclear dilemma., December 27, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: The Gift of Time: The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Now (Paperback)
"The Gift of Time" presents an excellent and well written summary of the views of leading world thinkers and political activists on the dangers posed by nuclear weapons from Rotblat to McNamara and Gorbachev to Cranston among others. To properly evaluate this work it must be place in the perspective of Schell's trilogy on this subject starting with "The Fate of the Earth"(1981)and "The Abolition" (1983) The most ambitious of these was "The Fate of the Earth" which went beyond the mere identification of the problem to an impassioned plea that its solution called for nothing less than reinventing world politics. It received brilliant reviews from "The New York Times and other journals and was mocked by the likes of "The Wall Street Journal"Perhaps because of the disparaging nature of the latter review "The Abolition (1983) was more conservative and incremental. While "The Fate of The Earth" never mentioned the twerm "world government" the

reviewers of the Earth in both TIME and NEWSWEEK characterized it as in effect calling for some form of world government. "The Abolition" on the other hand made over 40 references to "world government" only to distance itself from the con= cept calling it neither necessary or desirable to achieve the end of reducing the nuclear danger. "The Gift of Time" refers to world government only in its interview with Alan Cranston who was national President of the World Federalists from

1949 to the early 50's. Cranston, however, suggests that while he still favors world law and the sharing of sovereignty he regards the actual term world government as politically unviable. Similarly Rotblat who has recently expressed unequivocal support for the concept of "world government" in other documents in his interview with Schell only goes as far as to state that "the long-term objective must not be just nuclear dis- armament but a world without war". Schell, how- ever does not press Rotblat for the implications of this statement as he did in the case of the other known sympathize for some form of world federation Alan Cranston. In short my chief criti- cism of Schell's otherwise excellent treatment of the nuclear dilemma in "The Gift of Time" is his timidity in raising the question of the possible need of structures required for the enforcement of disarmament whether nuclear or otherwise. 1949 to the early 50's

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