Stalin's war A new history of World War II

Sean McMeekin, 1974-

Book - 2021

"Drawing on ambitious new research in European and U.S. archives, Stalin's War revolutionizes our understanding of World War II by moving its epicenter to the east. Hitler's genocidal ambition may have helped unleash Armageddon, but as McMeekin shows, the war that emerged in Europe in August 1939 was the one Stalin wanted, not Hitler. So, too, was the Pacific war of 1941-1945 the direct result of Stalin's maneuverings, which he orchestrated to unleash the furies of war between capitalist powers Japan and the U.S. This groundbreaking reassessment of the Second World War elucidates Stalin's conquest of most of Eurasia, from Berlin to Beijing, for Communism"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Published
New York City : Basic Books 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Sean McMeekin, 1974- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 831 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 673-812) and index.
ISBN
9781541672796
  • A Note on Dates, Names, Translation, and Transliteration
  • Introduction: Whose War?
  • Prologue: May 5, 1941
  • I. Before the Storm: The Main Currents of Soviet Foreign Policy, 1917-1938
  • 1. World Revolution
  • 2. Stalin Makes His Mark
  • 3. Strategic Coup in Washington
  • 4. Behind the Popular Front
  • II. "Huge and Hateful": The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
  • 5. Courting Hitler
  • 6. Gangster Pact, Part I: Poland
  • 7. Gangster Pact, Part II: Finland
  • 8. Maximum Danger: Finland, Baku, and the Katyn Massacre
  • 9. Stalin Strikes: The Baltic, Bessarabia, and Bukovina
  • 10. Showdown at the Danube Delta
  • 11. Summit in Berlin: The Four-Power Pact?
  • 12. Hitler Bars the Door
  • III. Preparing for Armageddon
  • 13. Mobilizing the Proletariat
  • 14. The Battle for Belgrade
  • 15. Operation Snow: Stalin Secures His Eastern Flank
  • 16. To the Brink
  • 17. Hitler Smashes Stalin's War Machine
  • 18. Terror at the Front-and in the Rear
  • 19. War for Aluminum
  • 20. On the Ropes
  • IV. Capitalist Lifeline
  • 21. Lifting the Moral Embargo
  • 22. The Hinge of Fate: December 1941
  • 23. Capitalist Rope
  • 24. Just-in-Time Delivery: Lend-Lease and Stalingrad
  • V. Second Front
  • 25. Keeping Stalin Happy: Unconditional Surrender and Katyn
  • 26. Stopping Citadel: The Second Front?
  • 27. Operation Tito
  • 28. Teheran and Cairo
  • 29. Second Front
  • VI. Plunder
  • 30. Warsaw
  • 31. Soviet High Tide in Washington: The Morgenthau Plan
  • 32. Moscow and Yalta: Unfinest Hour of the Anglo-Americans
  • 33. Booty
  • 34. Red Star over Asia: The Final Wages of Lend-Lease
  • Epilogue: Stalin's Slave Empire and the Price of Victory
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • List of Archives and Principal Collections Used
  • Document Collections and Published Diaries
  • Published and Online Works Cited or Profitably Consulted, Including Memoirs
  • Index
  • Photo sections appear after pages 216 and 432
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Soviet leader Josef Stalin cleverly manipulated the U.S. and Great Britain during WWII, sowing the seeds for Communist expansion throughout Europe and Asia, according to this richly detailed account. Historian McMeekin (The Russian Revolution) draws from recently opened Soviet archives to shed light on Stalin's dark reasoning and shady tactics, documenting how he boozed up Nazi foreign affairs minister Joachim von Ribbentrop in Moscow and forged the 1939 nonaggression pact with Germany during phone calls with Hitler. (Stalin then began "wringing every last drop of nectar out of his honeyed partnership" by invading the Baltics and Romania, McMeekin writes, prompting Hitler to begin "clearing the decks for war.") Ever the bully, Stalin cajoled Churchill and Roosevelt into sending enormous amounts of aid to the Soviet Union, then showed little gratitude to the Allies, despite "timely interventions" that helped defeat Hitler's forces at Stalingrad and Kursk. Stalin also forced Churchill and Roosevelt into "swallowing" his slander of the International Red Cross after it accused him of having thousands of Polish officers killed and buried in a mass grave in the Katyn Forest during the Soviet occupation of Poland in 1940. Packed with incisive character sketches and illuminating analyses of military and diplomatic maneuvers, this is a skillful and persuasive reframing of the causes, developments, and repercussions of WWII. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A sweeping reassessment of World War II seeking to "illuminate critical matters long obscured by the obsessively German-centric literature" on the subject. Veteran historian McMeekin states bluntly that while Hitler wanted war, Stalin wanted it more. A loyal Marxist, he had no doubt that capitalist nations--among which he included Nazi Germany--were doomed. According to the author, throughout the 1930s, as war became more likely, Stalin worked to ensure that it would leave his enemies exhausted and ripe for revolution. The 1939 nonaggression pact between the Soviet Union and Germany seemed a dazzling coup for both nations, but Stalin got greedy. Piggybacking on Hitler's early victories, he snatched as much territory as Nazi Germany. As a result, several hundred miles of buffer between the Soviet Union and Germany disappeared, making Hitler's 1941 surprise attack possible. In his account of the titanic campaign that followed, McMeekin pays more attention than most military historians to the loathsome behavior of both sides to civilians and even their own soldiers. He shows less sympathy than most to Stalin's insults and demands for aid from the Allies and none whatsoever for Soviet representatives vacuuming up America's patents, technology, and services. The author maintains that Nazism vanished in 1945, but "the Soviet legacy lives on in the Communist governments of China, North Korea, and Vietnam, countries on which Hitler's short-lived Reich left not even a shadow." He adds that Allied efforts to cultivate Stalin before Hitler's invasion failed, and the massive American support afterward was entirely selfish. Consequently, the Soviets, having done most of the fighting, emerged with most of the fruits of victory. The author's provocative suggestion that America should have allowed the two evil empires to fight it out will ruffle feathers, but it effectively kills the idea that WWII was a battle of good vs. evil. Yet another winner for McMeekin, this also serves as a worthy companion to Niall Ferguson's The Pity of War, which argued that Britain should not have entered World War I. Brilliantly contrarian history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.