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The longer telegram
The longer telegram













the longer telegram

Leaders were increasingly coming to the conclusion that the existing quid pro quo strategy was ineffective against the Soviets, but had no replacement strategy. In a 1982 interview, former diplomat Elbridge Durbrow expressed that Stalin's speech had in effect said, "to hell with the rest of the world." US President Harry Truman was confused by the Soviet's policies, at times appearing belligerent and at others exercising self-restraint. Despite the familiar statements from Stalin, the context in which they were made – including the Soviet Union's recent rejection of Bretton Woods and evidence of atomic espionage in the United States and Canada – alarmed officials in Washington. With this in mind, he issued only a quick summary of the speech for the State Department. Kennan, then working for the US State Department as chargé d'affaires in Moscow, found the speech routine and reflective of previous statements from Stalin. Stalin's speech provoked fear in the American press and public, with Time magazine calling it "the most warlike pronouncement uttered by any top-rank statesman since V-J Day." George F. He justified the expansion by pointing to Marxist–Leninist theory, warning that capitalism possessed a predisposition towards conflict. The speech did not discuss foreign policy, but instead made pledges to expand industry. Joseph Stalin, General Secretary and de facto leader of the Soviet Union, spoke at the Bolshoi Theatre on February 9, 1946, the night before the symbolic 1946 Supreme Soviet election. Kennan's long telegram began as an analysis of the speech. Joseph Stalin speaking at the Bolshoi Theatre, February 9, 1946. Retrospective commentators dispute the impact of the article Henry Kissinger referred to it as "the diplomatic doctrine of the era", while some historians write that its impact in shaping governmental policy has been overstated. The article was widely read though it does not mention the Truman Doctrine, having mostly been written before Truman's speech, it quickly became seen as an expression of the doctrine's policy. Expressing similar sentiments to that of the long telegram, the piece was strong in its anti-communism, introducing and outlining a basic theory of containment. His superiors granted him approval to publish the piece provided it was released anonymously Foreign Affairs attributed the article only to "X". Kennan revised a piece he had submitted to Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal in late-January 1947, but his role in government precluded him from publishing under his name. Gordon Wasson suggested that he express his views in an article for Foreign Affairs. The reception elevated Kennan's reputation within the State Department as one of the government's foremost Soviet experts.Īfter hearing Kennan speak about Soviet foreign relations to the Council on Foreign Relations in January 1947, international banker R. Washington bureaucrats quickly read the confidential message and accepted it as the best explanation of Soviet behavior. It argued that the Soviet leaders used the ideology to characterize the external world as hostile, allowing them to justify their continued hold on power despite their lack of popular support. The long telegram explained Soviet motivations by recounting the history of Russian rulers as well as the more recent ideology of Marxism–Leninism. Though the speech was in line with previous statements by Stalin, it provoked fear in the American press and public Time magazine called it "the most warlike pronouncement uttered by any top-rank statesman since V-J Day". Kennan composed the long telegram to respond to inquiries about the implications of a February 1946 speech by Joseph Stalin. The piece expanded on ideas expressed by Kennan in a confidential February 1946 telegram, formally identified by Kennan's State Department number, " 511", but informally dubbed the " long telegram" for its size. The article widely introduced the term " containment" and advocated for its strategic use against the Soviet Union. Kennan and published under the pseudonym "X" in the July 1947 issue of Foreign Affairs magazine. The " X Article" is an article, formally titled " The Sources of Soviet Conduct", written by George F.















The longer telegram