Amazon.com Review
There are no earthshaking surprises in this memoir by Warren Christopher, the first secretary of state in the Clinton administration. No revelations, for example, about what Syrian strongman Hafez Assad
really said to him behind closed doors. Yet it is an engaging account of how a boy born in rural South Dakota came to occupy the corridors of power in Washington, D.C. Before rising to secretary of state in 1993, Christopher served at high levels under Presidents Johnson and Carter. Along the way, he earned a reputation for buttoned-down decorum. Clinton once called him "the only man ever to eat presidential M&M's on Air Force One with a knife and fork." Christopher doesn't reveal much about his personal life on the pages, but he does impart lessons learned from a life in public office: "Silence, once associated with discretion, begets confidence as well as confidences. I learned that people also tend to read wisdom from silence--even when silence means only that you know nothing about what they are talking about."
Christopher was involved in many important events during his career, from race riots in the 1960s (when he was a Department of Justice official) to the Iran hostage crisis in 1979 and1980 (when he did his first stint at State). About this latter episode, he writes: "Never before nor since has any foreign policy problem engaged me so intensively for so long. One of the most interesting sections of Chances of a Lifetime describes the extraordinary security measures Christopher learned to live with when he became secretary of state. He couldn't visit a friend's house without it undergoing a sweep several hours beforehand. Dinner at a restaurant involved reserving an extra table for a pair of agents who would do nothing but drink iced tea and watch for trouble. For a morning jog in Israel, "agents arranged for me to run at sunrise inside a deserted soccer stadium." Christopher came under intense scrutiny, too. He relates, for instance, the minor flap over choosing to edit a speech in which he referred to American Chinese relations as a "cooperation" rather than a "partnership."
Regrettably, the book does not include much discussion of Christopher's role in Democratic politics since leaving the Clinton administration; among other things, he led Al Gore's effort to challenge the Florida vote count in 2000. Yet Chances of a Lifetime is full of crisp and straightforward prose about an important public figure; it's required reading for foreign-policy aficionados, and anybody else interested in Washington's ladder of success. --John J. Miller
From Publishers Weekly
Christopher, former secretary of state under President Clinton and a veteran Washington insider, has led an interesting life, yet his account of that life is not consistently so. The diplomatic skills of probity and discretion, which Christopher wields so well in the public arena, are not necessarily assets in memoir writing. Christopher offers cursory descriptions of his early years and early mentors such as William O. Douglas, giving over the lion's share of the boook to his years as secretary of state. He offers detailed accounts of the many international crises and negotiations during his watchAthe Israeli-Palestinian peace accords of 1993, efforts to bring peace among the warring states of the former Yugoslavia, Clinton's decision to fully normalize relations with VietnamAand explains well the complex nature of these episodes. Yet many details are missing. There is little discussion, for instance, of policy disputes within the Clinton administration or of the policy-making process. Also, with certain exceptions such as Boris Yeltsin and Slobodan Milosevic, Christopher merely sketches the personalities of the leaders he encounters. Discretion prevails, and we are left with an informative yet dry history. Only occasionally does Christopher let his guard down so that we might get a glimpse of who he really isAas when he expresses, with great humor, his discomfort at being publicly bear-hugged by the ever exuberant Clinton. This is certainly a work of value, but there is more r?sum? than revelation here. Illus. (Feb.) Forecast: Christopher becomes the latest Clinton insider to give the public a look behind the scenesAbut Christopher's circumspection will keep this from appealing beyond the ranks of foreign-policy wonks, despite his recent very public appearances as one of the point men in Al Gore's quest for the presidency.
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