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Richard Pipes

Richard Edgar Pipes (Yiddish: ריכארד פּיִפּעץ Rikhard Pipets; Polish: Ryszard Pipes; July 11, 1923 – May 17, 2018) was an American historian who specialized in Russian and Soviet history. Pipes was a frequent interviewee in the press on the matters of Soviet history and foreign affairs. His writings also appear in Commentary, The New York Times, and The Times Literary Supplement.

Richard Pipes
Pipes in 2004
Born(1923-07-11)July 11, 1923
DiedMay 17, 2018(2018-05-17) (aged 94)
NationalityPolish American
CitizenshipPoland (1923–1943)
United States (1943–2018)
EducationMuskingum College
Cornell University
Harvard University
SpouseIrene Eugenia Roth
ChildrenDaniel Pipes, Steven Pipes
AwardsNational Humanities Medal
Scientific career
FieldsRussian history
Doctoral advisorMichael Karpovich
Doctoral studentsJohn V. A. Fine, Anna Geifman, Abbott Gleason, Edward L. Keenan, Peter Kenez, Eric Lohr, Michael Stanislawski, Richard Stites, Lee In-ho

At Harvard University, Pipes taught large courses on Imperial Russia as well as the Russian Revolution and guided over 80 graduate students to their PhDs. In 1976, he headed Team B, a team of analysts organized by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) who analyzed the strategic capacities and goals of the Soviet military and political leadership. Pipes is the father of American historian Daniel Pipes.[1][2]

Early life edit

Richard Pipes was born in Cieszyn, Poland to an assimilated Jewish family (whose name had originally been spelled "Piepes" in German spelling, which in pronunciation is the same as the Polish spelling "Pipes" [piˈpes]).[3] His father Marek Pipes [pl] was a businessman and a Polish legionnaire during World War I.[4] He was a co-owner of the chocolate factory Dea in Cieszyn, before he moved to Warsaw in 1929. During the time Pipes attended the Synagoga Ahawat Tora [pl] in Michejda Street.[5] By Pipes's own account, during his childhood and youth, he never thought about the Soviet Union; the major cultural influences on him were Polish and German. When he was age 16, Pipes saw Adolf Hitler at Marszałkowska Street in Warsaw during Hitler's victory tour after the Invasion of Poland.[6] The Pipes family fled occupied Poland in October 1939 and arrived in the United States in July 1940, after seven months passing through Italy.[7][8] Pipes became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1943 while serving in the United States Army Air Corps. He was educated at Muskingum College, Cornell University, and Harvard University.

Career edit

Pipes taught at Harvard University from 1958 until his retirement in 1996. He was the director of Harvard's Russian Research Center from 1968 to 1973 and later Baird Professor Emeritus of History at Harvard University. In 1962 he delivered a series of lectures on Russian intellectual history at Leningrad State University. He acted as senior consultant at the Stanford Research Institute from 1973 to 1978. During the 1970s, he was an advisor to Washington Senator Henry M. Jackson. In 1981 and 1982 he served as a member of the National Security Council, holding the post of Director of East European and Soviet Affairs under President Ronald Reagan.[9] He also became head of the Nationalities Working Group.[10] Pipes was a member of the Committee on the Present Danger from 1977 until 1992 and belonged to the Council of Foreign Relations.[11] He also attended two Bilderberg Meetings, at both of which he lectured.[11] In the 1970s, Pipes was a leading critic of détente, which he described as "inspired by intellectual indolence and based on ignorance of one's antagonist and therefore inherently inept".[12]

Team B edit

Pipes was head of the 1976 Team B, composed of civilian experts and retired military officers and agreed to by then-CIA director George H. W. Bush at the urging of the president's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB) as a competitive analysis exercise.[9] Team B was created at the instigation of then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld as an antagonist force to a group of CIA intelligence officials known as Team A. His hope was that it would produce a much more aggressive assessment of Soviet Union military capabilities. Unsurprisingly, it argued that the National Intelligence Estimate on the Soviet Union, generated yearly by the CIA, underestimated both Soviet military strategy and ambition[13] and misinterpreted Soviet strategic intentions.

Team B faced criticism. The international relations journalist Fred Kaplan writes that Team B "turns out to have been wrong on nearly every point."[14] Pipes's group insisted that the Soviet Union, as of 1976, maintained "a large and expanding Gross National Product,"[15] and argued that the CIA belief that economic chaos hindered the USSR's defenses was a ruse on the part of the USSR. One CIA employee called Team B "a kangaroo court".[16]

Pipes called Team B's evidence "soft."[9] Team B came to the conclusion that the Soviets had developed several new weapons, featuring a nuclear-armed submarine fleet that used a system that did not depend on active sonar, and was thus undetectable by existing technology.[17]

According to Pipes, "Team B was appointed to look at the evidence and to see if we could conclude that the actual Soviet strategy is different from ours, i.e. the strategy of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD). It has now been demonstrated totally that it was".[18] In 1986, Pipes maintained that Team B contributed to creating more realistic defense estimates.[19]

In what was meant to be an "off-the-record" interview, Pipes told Reuters in March 1981 that "Soviet leaders would have to choose between peacefully changing their Communist system in the direction followed by the West or going to war. There is no other alternative and it could go either way – Détente is dead." Pipes also stated in the interview that Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher of West Germany was susceptible to pressure from the Russians. It was learned independently that Pipes was the official who spoke to Reuters. This potentially jeopardized Pipes' job. The White House and the "incensed" State Department issued statements repudiating Pipes' comments.[20]

Writings on Russian history edit

Pipes wrote many books on Russian history, including Russia under the Old Regime (1974), The Russian Revolution (1990), and Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime (1994), and was a frequent interviewee in the press on the matters of Soviet history and foreign affairs. His writings also appear in Commentary, The New York Times, and The Times Literary Supplement. At Harvard, he taught large courses on Imperial Russia as well as the Russian Revolution and guided over 80 graduate students to their PhDs.

Pipes is known for arguing that the origins of the Soviet Union can be traced to the separate path taken by 15th-century Muscovy, in a Russian version of the Sonderweg thesis. In Pipes' opinion, Muscovy differed from every other State in Europe in that it had no concept of private property, and that everything was regarded as the property of the Grand Duke/Tsar. In Pipes' view, this separate path undertaken by Russia (possibly under Mongol influence) ensured that Russia would be an autocratic state with values fundamentally dissimilar from those of Western civilization. Pipes argued that this "patrimonialism" of Imperial Russia started to break down when Russian leaders attempted to modernize in the 19th century, without seeking to change the basic "patrimonial" structure of Russian society. In Pipes's opinion, this separate course undertaken by Russia over the centuries made Russia uniquely open to revolution in 1917. Pipes strongly criticized the values of the radical intelligentsia of late Imperial Russia for what he sees as their fanaticism and inability to accept reality. Pipes stressed that the Soviet Union was an expansionist, totalitarian state bent on world conquest.[21] He is also known for the thesis that, contrary to many traditional histories of the Soviet Union at the time, the October Revolution was, rather than a popular general uprising, a coup under false slogans foisted upon the majority of the Russians by a tiny segment of the population driven by a select group of radical intellectuals, who subsequently established a one-party dictatorship that was intolerant and repressive from the start.[22]

In 1992, Pipes served as an expert witness in the Constitutional Court of Russia's trial of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[23]

Reception edit

His writing has provoked discussions in the academic community, for example in The Russian Review among several others.[24][25][26][27][28][29] Among members of this school, Lynne Viola and Sheila Fitzpatrick write that Pipes focused too narrowly on intellectuals as causal agents. Peter Kenez, a former PhD student of Pipes', argued that Pipes approached Soviet History as a prosecutor, intent solely on proving the criminal intent of the defendant, to the exclusion of anything else,[30] and described Pipes as a researcher of "great reputation" but with passionate anti-communist views.[31]

Other critics have written that Pipes wrote at length about what Pipes described as Vladimir Lenin's unspoken assumptions and conclusions while neglecting what Lenin actually said.[32] Alexander Rabinowitch writes that whenever a document can serve Pipes' long-standing crusade to demonize Lenin, Pipes commented on it at length; if the document allows Lenin to be seen in a less negative light, Pipes passed over it without comment.[27] Pipes' critics argued that his historical writings perpetuated the Soviet Union as "evil empire" narrative in an attempt "to put the clock back a few decades to the times when Cold War demonology was the norm."[33][34]

Following the demise of the USSR, Pipes charged the revisionists with skewing their research, by means of statistics, to support their preconceived ideological interpretation of events, which made the results of their research "as unreadable as they were irrelevant for the understanding of the subject,"[35] to provide intellectual cover for Soviet terror and acting as simpletons and/or communist dupes.[36] He also stated that their attempt at "history from below" only obfuscated the fact that "Soviet citizens were the helpless victims of a totalitarian regime driven primarily by a lust for power."[37]

Honors edit

Pipes had an extensive list of honors, including: Honorary Consul of the Republic of Georgia, Foreign Member of the Polish Academy of Learning (PAU), Commander's Cross of Merit of the Republic of Poland, Honorary DHL at Adelphi College, Honorary LLD at Muskingum College, Doctor Honoris Causa from the University of Silesia, Szczecin University, and the University of Warsaw. Honorary Doctor of Political Science from the Tbilisi (Georgia) School of Political Studies. Annual Spring Lecturer of the Norwegian Nobel Peace Institute, Walter Channing Cabot Fellow of Harvard University, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Guggenheim Fellow (twice), Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies and recipient of the George Louis Beer Prize of the American Historical Association.[38] He was a member of the Board of Advisors of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy. He served on a number of editorial boards including that of the International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence. He received one of the 2007 National Humanities Medals[39][40] and in 2009 he was awarded both the Truman-Reagan Medal of Freedom by the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation[41] and the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize by the William & Mary Law School.[42] In 2010, Pipes received the medal "Bene Merito" awarded by the Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs. From 2010 to 2014, he participated in the annual Valdai Discussion Club.

He was a member of the advisory council of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.[43]

Personal life edit

Pipes married Irene Eugenia Roth in 1946; the couple had two children, Daniel and Steven. Their son Daniel Pipes is a scholar of Middle Eastern affairs.[44][45]

Pipes died in Cambridge, Massachusetts on May 17, 2018, at the age of 94.[1][2]

Works edit

External videos
  "Russia: The More Things Change, The More They Stay the Same." Interview on The Open Mind, 1990.
  Presentation by Pipes on The Unknown Lenin, November 22, 1996, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Pipes on Property and Freedom, December 13, 1999, C-SPAN
  Interview with Pipes, conducted by William F. Buckley Jr., on Communism: A History, November 1, 2001, C-SPAN
  Booknotes interview with Pipes on Vixi: Memoirs of a Non-Belonger, December 7, 2003, C-SPAN

Author

Editor

Contributor

Essays

  • "The Russian Military Colonies, 1810–1831." The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 22, No. 3, September 1950, pp. 205–219. JSTOR 1871751.
  • "The First Experiment in Soviet National Policy: The Bashkir Republic, 1917–1920." The Russian Review, Vol. 9, No. 4, October 1950, pp. 303–319. doi:10.2307/125989. JSTOR 125989.
  • "The Trial of Vera Z." Russian History, Vol. 37, No. 1, 2010, pp. v, vii–x, 1–3, 5–31, 33–49, 51–82. JSTOR 24664570.

Filmography edit

  • War and Peace in the Nuclear Age (documentary mini-series). Episode 12: “Reagan Reagan’s Shield”. WGBH, 1989.
  • History’s Mysteries (documentary series). “Killer Submarine”. History Channel, 2001.[46]
  • Beyond the Movie – The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King. National Geographic, 2003.[47]
  • The Power of Nightmares: The Rise of the Politics of Fear (documentary mini-series). Episode 1: “Baby It’s Cold Outside”. Written and directed by Adam Curtis. 2004.[48]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Nie żyje prof. Richard Pipes" (in Polish). Gremi Media. Retrieved May 17, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Grimes, William (May 17, 2018). "Richard Pipes, Historian of Russia and Reagan Aide, Dies at 94". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Pipes, Richard. Vixi: Memoirs of a Non-Belonger. 2006, pp. 14–15
  4. ^ . Historia.uwazamrze.pl. Archived from the original on February 16, 2015. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  5. ^ Cieszyn. Zmarł Richard Pipes. 2018. Polin. Wirtualny Sztetl. 18 May.
  6. ^ Pipes, Richard (March 7, 2014). "Need To Know with Mona Charen and Jay Nordlinger" (Interview). Interviewed by Jay Nordlinger.
  7. ^ Romano, Sergio (2005). Memorie di un conservatore. TEA. p. 180. ISBN 88-304-2128-6.
  8. ^ "Notes on Professor Richard Pipes". Persiancarpetguide.com. Retrieved January 28, 2006.
  9. ^ a b c Press, Eyal (May 2004). . The Nation. Archived from the original on November 13, 2007. Retrieved August 17, 2007.
  10. ^ Kalinovsky, Artemy M. (2015). "Encouraging Resistance: Paul Henze, the Bennigsen school, and the crisis of détente". Reassessing Orientalism: Interlocking Orientologies During the Cold War. doi:10.4324/9781315758619-8. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  11. ^ a b Pipes, Richard. "Vixi: Memoirs of a Non-Belonger". Interview by Brian Lamb. C-SPAN Booknotes, December 7, 2003. Full transcript available.
    "Well, because I attended – I am a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. I attended two Bilderberg meetings. The Council on Foreign Relations is scholarly institute, and you know, it has a reputation of being very liberal, but I am – here I am, I am a conservative, and I lecture to it, and I wrote for the Foreign Affairs, its official organ, and so on. And secondly, Bilderberg – well, those are very exclusive meetings, they take place once a year in different locations. Some 100 people attend. And again, I attended these two meetings, and I have lectures, people speaking about this, and people speaking about that. And nobody tried to make policy, and nobody conspired about anything."
  12. ^ Bogle, Lori Lyn "Pipes, Richard" p. 922.
  13. ^ Betts, Richard K. and Mahnken, Thomas G. Paradoxes of Strategic Intelligence: Essays in Honor of Michael I. Handel. 2003, p. 68.
  14. ^ Kaplan, Fred (September 7, 2004). "Can the CIA be saved?". Slate.com. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  15. ^ [1] February 4, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (February 11, 2003). "The Hard Liner: Harvard historian Richard Pipes shaped the Reagan administration's aggressive approach to the Soviet Union". Boston Globe. Retrieved July 30, 2006.
  17. ^ "Anatomy of a Neo-Conservative White House". Canadian Dimension. 39 (3): 46. May 1, 2005.
  18. ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (February 11, 2003). "The hard-liner". The Boston Globe.
  19. ^ . Commentary Magazine. Archived from the original on June 24, 2006. Retrieved July 30, 2006.
  20. ^ Author Unknown (March 19, 1981). "U.S. Repudiates a Hard-Line Aide". New York Times: A8. {{cite journal}}: |author= has generic name (help); Shribman, David (October 21, 1981). "Security Adviser Ousted for a Talk Hinting at War". New York Times: A1.; Author Unknown (November 2, 1981). "The Rogue General". Newsweek. {{cite journal}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  21. ^ Pipes, Richard. Communism: A History. Modern Library. pp. 94, 108–110.
  22. ^ Pipes, Richard (1998). The Three Whys of the Russian Revolution. London: Pimlico. p. 60. ISBN 0-7126-7362-8. what occurred in October 1917 was a classical modern coup d'etat accomplished without mass support. It was a surreptitious seizure of the nerve centres of the modern state, carried out under false slogans in order to neutralise the population at large, the true purpose of which was revealed only after the new claimants to power were firmly in the saddle.
  23. ^ Richard Pipes (August 16, 1992). "The Past on Trial: Russia, One Year Later". Washington Post. Retrieved May 18, 2018.
  24. ^ David C. Engerman, Know your enemy. The rise and fall of America's Soviet experts, Oxford University Press, 2009, p.305.
  25. ^ Richard Pipes; Walter C. Clemens, Jr. (1983). "U.S.-Soviet Relations in the Era of Détente". Slavic Review. 42 (1). Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies: 117–118. JSTOR 2497460.
  26. ^ Raymond L. Garthoff, Foreign Affairs, May 1995, p. 197
  27. ^ a b Rabinowitch, Alexander (1998). "Richard Pipes's Lenin". Russian Review. 57 (1): 110–113. doi:10.1111/0036-0341.00011. JSTOR 131696.
  28. ^ Richard Pipes; Diane P. Koenker (1993). "The Russian Revolution". The Journal of Modern History. 65 (2). The University of Chicago Press: 432–435. doi:10.1086/244669. JSTOR 2124477.
  29. ^ Richard Pipes; Ronald Grigor Suny (1991). "The Russian Revolution". The American Historical Review. 96 (5). Oxford University Press: 1581–1583. doi:10.2307/2165391. JSTOR 2165391.
  30. ^ Peter Kenez (1995). "The Prosecution of Soviet History, Volume 2". The Russian Review. 54 (2). Wiley: 265–269. doi:10.2307/130919. JSTOR 130919.
  31. ^ Kenez, Peter, and Richard Pipe. “The Prosecution of Soviet History: A Critique of Richard Pipes' The Russian Revolution.” The Russian Review, vol. 50, no. 3, 1991, pp. 345–351. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/131078. Accessed 4 June 2021.
  32. ^ Lenin rediscovered: what is to be done? in context, Volume 2005. Lars T. Lih, Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin 2006. pp. 23–24
  33. ^ Flewers, Paul (1997). "Review: The Unknown Lenin". Merlin Press.
  34. ^ Alexander Rabinowitch, "Richard Pipes' Lenin", The Russian Review 57, January 1998.
  35. ^ Pipes, apud Ronald I. Kowalski, The Russian Revolution, 1917–1921. London: Routledge, 1997, ISBN 0-415-12438-7, p. 8.
  36. ^ Richard Pipes (2003). "Vixi: Memoirs of a Non-Belonger". Fas.harvard.edu. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  37. ^ . Yale.edu. Archived from the original on February 16, 2015. Retrieved February 23, 2015., book review of: Lewis Siegelbaum, Andrei Sokolov [ru], Stalinism As a Way of Life
  38. ^ . Harvard Gazette Archives. Archived from the original on September 3, 2006. Retrieved July 30, 2006.
  39. ^ Breslow, Jason M. (November 16, 2007). "6 Academics Receive National Honors in Arts and Humanities – Faculty". The Chronicle of Higher Education. Chronicle.com. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  40. ^ "Humanities Medals Awarded by President Bush. Recipients honored for outstanding cultural contributions"
  41. ^ . Victims of Communism. Archived from the original on June 6, 2013.
  42. ^ . Neh.gov. Archived from the original on December 20, 2007. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  43. ^ . Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. Archived from the original on June 10, 2011. Retrieved May 20, 2011.
  44. ^ Norton, Anne. Leo Strauss and the politics of American empire. 2005, p. 93
  45. ^ Steven M. Chermak, Frankie Y. Bailey, Michelle Brown. Media representations of September 11. 2003, p. 22
  46. ^ “Full Cast & Crew”. IMDb
  47. ^ ”Full Cast & Crew”. IMDb
  48. ^ “Full Cast & Crew”. IMDb

Further reading edit

  • Bogle, Lori Lyn, "Pipes, Richard", pp. 922–923, in The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing edited by Kelly Boyd, Vol. 2, London: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishing, 1999. online
  • Daly, Jonathan, “The Pleiade: Five Scholars Who Founded Russian Historical Studies in America,” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 18, no. 4 (Fall 2017): 785–826.
  • Daly, Jonathan, ed., Pillars of the Profession: The Correspondence of Richard Pipes and Marc Raeff (Leiden, The Netherlands, and Boston, 2019).
  • Firestone, Thomas. "Four Sovietologists: A Primer". National Interest No. 14 (Winter 1988/9), pp. 102–107 on the ideas of Zbigniew Brzezinski, Stephen F. Cohen Jerry F. Hough, and Richard Pipes.
  • Malia, Martin Edward, "The Hunt for the True October", pp. 21–28, from Commentary, Vol. 92, 1991.
  • Pipes, Richard, "Vixi: The Memoirs of a Non-Belonger", 2003.
  • Poe, Marshall, "The Dissident", Azure (Spring 2008).
  • Somin, Ilya, "Riddles, Mysteries, and Enigmas: Unanswered Questions of Communism's Collapse", pp. 84–88, from Policy Review, Vol. 70, 1994.
  • Stent, Angela, "Review of U.S-Soviet Relations in the Era of Détente", pp. 91–92, from Russian Review, Vol. 41, 1982.
  • Szeftel, Marc, "Two Negative Appraisals of Russian Pre-Revolutionary Development", pp. 74–87, from Canadian-American Slavic Studies, 1980.

External links edit

richard, pipes, richard, edgar, pipes, yiddish, ריכארד, עץ, rikhard, pipets, polish, ryszard, pipes, july, 1923, 2018, american, historian, specialized, russian, soviet, history, pipes, frequent, interviewee, press, matters, soviet, history, foreign, affairs, . Richard Edgar Pipes Yiddish ריכארד פ י פ עץ Rikhard Pipets Polish Ryszard Pipes July 11 1923 May 17 2018 was an American historian who specialized in Russian and Soviet history Pipes was a frequent interviewee in the press on the matters of Soviet history and foreign affairs His writings also appear in Commentary The New York Times and The Times Literary Supplement Richard PipesPipes in 2004Born 1923 07 11 July 11 1923Cieszyn PolandDiedMay 17 2018 2018 05 17 aged 94 Cambridge Massachusetts U S NationalityPolish AmericanCitizenshipPoland 1923 1943 United States 1943 2018 EducationMuskingum CollegeCornell UniversityHarvard UniversitySpouseIrene Eugenia RothChildrenDaniel Pipes Steven PipesAwardsNational Humanities MedalScientific careerFieldsRussian historyDoctoral advisorMichael KarpovichDoctoral studentsJohn V A Fine Anna Geifman Abbott Gleason Edward L Keenan Peter Kenez Eric Lohr Michael Stanislawski Richard Stites Lee In ho At Harvard University Pipes taught large courses on Imperial Russia as well as the Russian Revolution and guided over 80 graduate students to their PhDs In 1976 he headed Team B a team of analysts organized by the Central Intelligence Agency CIA who analyzed the strategic capacities and goals of the Soviet military and political leadership Pipes is the father of American historian Daniel Pipes 1 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Team B 2 2 Writings on Russian history 3 Reception 4 Honors 5 Personal life 6 Works 7 Filmography 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editRichard Pipes was born in Cieszyn Poland to an assimilated Jewish family whose name had originally been spelled Piepes in German spelling which in pronunciation is the same as the Polish spelling Pipes piˈpes 3 His father Marek Pipes pl was a businessman and a Polish legionnaire during World War I 4 He was a co owner of the chocolate factory Dea in Cieszyn before he moved to Warsaw in 1929 During the time Pipes attended the Synagoga Ahawat Tora pl in Michejda Street 5 By Pipes s own account during his childhood and youth he never thought about the Soviet Union the major cultural influences on him were Polish and German When he was age 16 Pipes saw Adolf Hitler at Marszalkowska Street in Warsaw during Hitler s victory tour after the Invasion of Poland 6 The Pipes family fled occupied Poland in October 1939 and arrived in the United States in July 1940 after seven months passing through Italy 7 8 Pipes became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1943 while serving in the United States Army Air Corps He was educated at Muskingum College Cornell University and Harvard University Career editPipes taught at Harvard University from 1958 until his retirement in 1996 He was the director of Harvard s Russian Research Center from 1968 to 1973 and later Baird Professor Emeritus of History at Harvard University In 1962 he delivered a series of lectures on Russian intellectual history at Leningrad State University He acted as senior consultant at the Stanford Research Institute from 1973 to 1978 During the 1970s he was an advisor to Washington Senator Henry M Jackson In 1981 and 1982 he served as a member of the National Security Council holding the post of Director of East European and Soviet Affairs under President Ronald Reagan 9 He also became head of the Nationalities Working Group 10 Pipes was a member of the Committee on the Present Danger from 1977 until 1992 and belonged to the Council of Foreign Relations 11 He also attended two Bilderberg Meetings at both of which he lectured 11 In the 1970s Pipes was a leading critic of detente which he described as inspired by intellectual indolence and based on ignorance of one s antagonist and therefore inherently inept 12 Team B edit Further information Team B Pipes was head of the 1976 Team B composed of civilian experts and retired military officers and agreed to by then CIA director George H W Bush at the urging of the president s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board PFIAB as a competitive analysis exercise 9 Team B was created at the instigation of then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld as an antagonist force to a group of CIA intelligence officials known as Team A His hope was that it would produce a much more aggressive assessment of Soviet Union military capabilities Unsurprisingly it argued that the National Intelligence Estimate on the Soviet Union generated yearly by the CIA underestimated both Soviet military strategy and ambition 13 and misinterpreted Soviet strategic intentions Team B faced criticism The international relations journalist Fred Kaplan writes that Team B turns out to have been wrong on nearly every point 14 Pipes s group insisted that the Soviet Union as of 1976 maintained a large and expanding Gross National Product 15 and argued that the CIA belief that economic chaos hindered the USSR s defenses was a ruse on the part of the USSR One CIA employee called Team B a kangaroo court 16 Pipes called Team B s evidence soft 9 Team B came to the conclusion that the Soviets had developed several new weapons featuring a nuclear armed submarine fleet that used a system that did not depend on active sonar and was thus undetectable by existing technology 17 According to Pipes Team B was appointed to look at the evidence and to see if we could conclude that the actual Soviet strategy is different from ours i e the strategy of Mutual Assured Destruction MAD It has now been demonstrated totally that it was 18 In 1986 Pipes maintained that Team B contributed to creating more realistic defense estimates 19 In what was meant to be an off the record interview Pipes told Reuters in March 1981 that Soviet leaders would have to choose between peacefully changing their Communist system in the direction followed by the West or going to war There is no other alternative and it could go either way Detente is dead Pipes also stated in the interview that Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Genscher of West Germany was susceptible to pressure from the Russians It was learned independently that Pipes was the official who spoke to Reuters This potentially jeopardized Pipes job The White House and the incensed State Department issued statements repudiating Pipes comments 20 Writings on Russian history edit Pipes wrote many books on Russian history including Russia under the Old Regime 1974 The Russian Revolution 1990 and Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime 1994 and was a frequent interviewee in the press on the matters of Soviet history and foreign affairs His writings also appear in Commentary The New York Times and The Times Literary Supplement At Harvard he taught large courses on Imperial Russia as well as the Russian Revolution and guided over 80 graduate students to their PhDs Pipes is known for arguing that the origins of the Soviet Union can be traced to the separate path taken by 15th century Muscovy in a Russian version of the Sonderweg thesis In Pipes opinion Muscovy differed from every other State in Europe in that it had no concept of private property and that everything was regarded as the property of the Grand Duke Tsar In Pipes view this separate path undertaken by Russia possibly under Mongol influence ensured that Russia would be an autocratic state with values fundamentally dissimilar from those of Western civilization Pipes argued that this patrimonialism of Imperial Russia started to break down when Russian leaders attempted to modernize in the 19th century without seeking to change the basic patrimonial structure of Russian society In Pipes s opinion this separate course undertaken by Russia over the centuries made Russia uniquely open to revolution in 1917 Pipes strongly criticized the values of the radical intelligentsia of late Imperial Russia for what he sees as their fanaticism and inability to accept reality Pipes stressed that the Soviet Union was an expansionist totalitarian state bent on world conquest 21 He is also known for the thesis that contrary to many traditional histories of the Soviet Union at the time the October Revolution was rather than a popular general uprising a coup under false slogans foisted upon the majority of the Russians by a tiny segment of the population driven by a select group of radical intellectuals who subsequently established a one party dictatorship that was intolerant and repressive from the start 22 In 1992 Pipes served as an expert witness in the Constitutional Court of Russia s trial of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 23 Reception editHis writing has provoked discussions in the academic community for example in The Russian Review among several others 24 25 26 27 28 29 Among members of this school Lynne Viola and Sheila Fitzpatrick write that Pipes focused too narrowly on intellectuals as causal agents Peter Kenez a former PhD student of Pipes argued that Pipes approached Soviet History as a prosecutor intent solely on proving the criminal intent of the defendant to the exclusion of anything else 30 and described Pipes as a researcher of great reputation but with passionate anti communist views 31 Other critics have written that Pipes wrote at length about what Pipes described as Vladimir Lenin s unspoken assumptions and conclusions while neglecting what Lenin actually said 32 Alexander Rabinowitch writes that whenever a document can serve Pipes long standing crusade to demonize Lenin Pipes commented on it at length if the document allows Lenin to be seen in a less negative light Pipes passed over it without comment 27 Pipes critics argued that his historical writings perpetuated the Soviet Union as evil empire narrative in an attempt to put the clock back a few decades to the times when Cold War demonology was the norm 33 34 Following the demise of the USSR Pipes charged the revisionists with skewing their research by means of statistics to support their preconceived ideological interpretation of events which made the results of their research as unreadable as they were irrelevant for the understanding of the subject 35 to provide intellectual cover for Soviet terror and acting as simpletons and or communist dupes 36 He also stated that their attempt at history from below only obfuscated the fact that Soviet citizens were the helpless victims of a totalitarian regime driven primarily by a lust for power 37 Honors editPipes had an extensive list of honors including Honorary Consul of the Republic of Georgia Foreign Member of the Polish Academy of Learning PAU Commander s Cross of Merit of the Republic of Poland Honorary DHL at Adelphi College Honorary LLD at Muskingum College Doctor Honoris Causa from the University of Silesia Szczecin University and the University of Warsaw Honorary Doctor of Political Science from the Tbilisi Georgia School of Political Studies Annual Spring Lecturer of the Norwegian Nobel Peace Institute Walter Channing Cabot Fellow of Harvard University Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences Guggenheim Fellow twice Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies and recipient of the George Louis Beer Prize of the American Historical Association 38 He was a member of the Board of Advisors of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy He served on a number of editorial boards including that of the International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence He received one of the 2007 National Humanities Medals 39 40 and in 2009 he was awarded both the Truman Reagan Medal of Freedom by the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation 41 and the Brigham Kanner Property Rights Prize by the William amp Mary Law School 42 In 2010 Pipes received the medal Bene Merito awarded by the Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs From 2010 to 2014 he participated in the annual Valdai Discussion Club He was a member of the advisory council of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation 43 Personal life editPipes married Irene Eugenia Roth in 1946 the couple had two children Daniel and Steven Their son Daniel Pipes is a scholar of Middle Eastern affairs 44 45 Pipes died in Cambridge Massachusetts on May 17 2018 at the age of 94 1 2 Works editExternal videos nbsp Russia The More Things Change The More They Stay the Same Interview on The Open Mind 1990 nbsp Presentation by Pipes on The Unknown Lenin November 22 1996 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Pipes on Property and Freedom December 13 1999 C SPAN nbsp Interview with Pipes conducted by William F Buckley Jr on Communism A History November 1 2001 C SPAN nbsp Booknotes interview with Pipes on Vixi Memoirs of a Non Belonger December 7 2003 C SPAN Author The Formation of the Soviet Union Communism and Nationalism 1917 1923 1954 Social Democracy and the St Petersburg Labor Movement 1885 1897 1963 Struve Liberal on the Left 1970 Europe Since 1815 1970 Europe Since 1500 1971 With J H Hexter and A Molho Russia Under the Old Regime 1974 Soviet Strategy in Europe 1976 Struve Liberal on the Right 1905 1944 1980 U S Soviet Relations in the Era of Detente a Tragedy of Errors 1981 Survival is Not Enough Soviet Realities and America s Future 1984 Russia Observed Collected Essays on Russian and Soviet History 1989 The Russian Revolution 1990 Audiobook Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime 1919 1924 1993 Communism the Vanished Specter 1994 A Concise History of the Russian Revolution 1995 The Three Whys of the Russian Revolution 1995 Property and Freedom 1999 Communism A History 2001 Audiobook Vixi Memoirs of a Non Belonger 2003 The Degaev Affair Terror and Treason in Tsarist Russia 2003 Russian Conservatism and Its Critics 2006 Scattered Thoughts 2010 Russia s Itinerant Painters 2011 Uvarov A Life 2013 In Russian Alexander Yakovlev The Man Whose Ideas Delivered Russia from Communism 2015 Editor The Russian Intelligentsia 1961 Revolutionary Russia 1968 The Unknown Lenin From the Secret Archive 1996 Contributor The National Problem in Russia In Readings in Russian Civilization 1969 The Communist System In The Soviet System From Crisis to Collapse 1995 Essays The Russian Military Colonies 1810 1831 The Journal of Modern History Vol 22 No 3 September 1950 pp 205 219 JSTOR 1871751 The First Experiment in Soviet National Policy The Bashkir Republic 1917 1920 The Russian Review Vol 9 No 4 October 1950 pp 303 319 doi 10 2307 125989 JSTOR 125989 The Trial of Vera Z Russian History Vol 37 No 1 2010 pp v vii x 1 3 5 31 33 49 51 82 JSTOR 24664570 Filmography editWar and Peace in the Nuclear Age documentary mini series Episode 12 Reagan Reagan s Shield WGBH 1989 History s Mysteries documentary series Killer Submarine History Channel 2001 46 Beyond the Movie The Lord of the Rings Return of the King National Geographic 2003 47 The Power of Nightmares The Rise of the Politics of Fear documentary mini series Episode 1 Baby It s Cold Outside Written and directed by Adam Curtis 2004 48 References edit a b Nie zyje prof Richard Pipes in Polish Gremi Media Retrieved May 17 2018 a b Grimes William May 17 2018 Richard Pipes Historian of Russia and Reagan Aide Dies at 94 The New York Times Pipes Richard Vixi Memoirs of a Non Belonger 2006 pp 14 15 Uwazam Rze Historia Historia uwazamrze pl Archived from the original on February 16 2015 Retrieved February 23 2015 Cieszyn Zmarl Richard Pipes 2018 Polin Wirtualny Sztetl 18 May Pipes Richard March 7 2014 Need To Know with Mona Charen and Jay Nordlinger Interview Interviewed by Jay Nordlinger Romano Sergio 2005 Memorie di un conservatore TEA p 180 ISBN 88 304 2128 6 Notes on Professor Richard Pipes Persiancarpetguide com Retrieved January 28 2006 a b c Press Eyal May 2004 Neocon man Daniel Pipes has made his name inveighing against an academy overrun by political extremists but he is nothing if not extreme in his own views The Nation Archived from the original on November 13 2007 Retrieved August 17 2007 Kalinovsky Artemy M 2015 Encouraging Resistance Paul Henze the Bennigsen school and the crisis of detente Reassessing Orientalism Interlocking Orientologies During the Cold War doi 10 4324 9781315758619 8 Retrieved October 16 2018 a b Pipes Richard Vixi Memoirs of a Non Belonger Interview by Brian Lamb C SPAN Booknotes December 7 2003 Full transcript available Well because I attended I am a member of the Council on Foreign Relations I attended two Bilderberg meetings The Council on Foreign Relations is scholarly institute and you know it has a reputation of being very liberal but I am here I am I am a conservative and I lecture to it and I wrote for the Foreign Affairs its official organ and so on And secondly Bilderberg well those are very exclusive meetings they take place once a year in different locations Some 100 people attend And again I attended these two meetings and I have lectures people speaking about this and people speaking about that And nobody tried to make policy and nobody conspired about anything Bogle Lori Lyn Pipes Richard p 922 Betts Richard K and Mahnken Thomas G Paradoxes of Strategic Intelligence Essays in Honor of Michael I Handel 2003 p 68 Kaplan Fred September 7 2004 Can the CIA be saved Slate com Retrieved February 23 2015 1 Archived February 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine Tanenhaus Sam February 11 2003 The Hard Liner Harvard historian Richard Pipes shaped the Reagan administration s aggressive approach to the Soviet Union Boston Globe Retrieved July 30 2006 Anatomy of a Neo Conservative White House Canadian Dimension 39 3 46 May 1 2005 Tanenhaus Sam February 11 2003 The hard liner The Boston Globe Team B The Reality Behind the Myth Commentary Magazine Archived from the original on June 24 2006 Retrieved July 30 2006 Author Unknown March 19 1981 U S Repudiates a Hard Line Aide New York Times A8 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a author has generic name help Shribman David October 21 1981 Security Adviser Ousted for a Talk Hinting at War New York Times A1 Author Unknown November 2 1981 The Rogue General Newsweek a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a author has generic name help Pipes Richard Communism A History Modern Library pp 94 108 110 Pipes Richard 1998 The Three Whys of the Russian Revolution London Pimlico p 60 ISBN 0 7126 7362 8 what occurred in October 1917 was a classical modern coup d etat accomplished without mass support It was a surreptitious seizure of the nerve centres of the modern state carried out under false slogans in order to neutralise the population at large the true purpose of which was revealed only after the new claimants to power were firmly in the saddle Richard Pipes August 16 1992 The Past on Trial Russia One Year Later Washington Post Retrieved May 18 2018 David C Engerman Know your enemy The rise and fall of America s Soviet experts Oxford University Press 2009 p 305 Richard Pipes Walter C Clemens Jr 1983 U S Soviet Relations in the Era of Detente Slavic Review 42 1 Association for Slavic East European and Eurasian Studies 117 118 JSTOR 2497460 Raymond L Garthoff Foreign Affairs May 1995 p 197 a b Rabinowitch Alexander 1998 Richard Pipes s Lenin Russian Review 57 1 110 113 doi 10 1111 0036 0341 00011 JSTOR 131696 Richard Pipes Diane P Koenker 1993 The Russian Revolution The Journal of Modern History 65 2 The University of Chicago Press 432 435 doi 10 1086 244669 JSTOR 2124477 Richard Pipes Ronald Grigor Suny 1991 The Russian Revolution The American Historical Review 96 5 Oxford University Press 1581 1583 doi 10 2307 2165391 JSTOR 2165391 Peter Kenez 1995 The Prosecution of Soviet History Volume 2 The Russian Review 54 2 Wiley 265 269 doi 10 2307 130919 JSTOR 130919 Kenez Peter and Richard Pipe The Prosecution of Soviet History A Critique of Richard Pipes The Russian Revolution The Russian Review vol 50 no 3 1991 pp 345 351 JSTOR https www jstor org stable 131078 Accessed 4 June 2021 Lenin rediscovered what is to be done in context Volume 2005 Lars T Lih Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin 2006 pp 23 24 Flewers Paul 1997 Review The Unknown Lenin Merlin Press Alexander Rabinowitch Richard Pipes Lenin The Russian Review 57 January 1998 Pipes apud Ronald I Kowalski The Russian Revolution 1917 1921 London Routledge 1997 ISBN 0 415 12438 7 p 8 Richard Pipes 2003 Vixi Memoirs of a Non Belonger Fas harvard edu Retrieved February 23 2015 The Evil of Banality Yale edu Archived from the original on February 16 2015 Retrieved February 23 2015 book review of Lewis Siegelbaum Andrei Sokolov ru Stalinism As a Way of Life Twelve FAS Faculty Members to Retire Harvard Gazette Archives Archived from the original on September 3 2006 Retrieved July 30 2006 Breslow Jason M November 16 2007 6 Academics Receive National Honors in Arts and Humanities Faculty The Chronicle of Higher Education Chronicle com Retrieved February 23 2015 Humanities Medals Awarded by President Bush Recipients honored for outstanding cultural contributions Oct 15 2009 Dr Richard Pipes Receives Truman Reagan Medal of Freedom Victims of Communism Archived from the original on June 6 2013 News Archive National Endowment for the Humanities Neh gov Archived from the original on December 20 2007 Retrieved February 23 2015 National Advisory Council Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation Archived from the original on June 10 2011 Retrieved May 20 2011 Norton Anne Leo Strauss and the politics of American empire 2005 p 93 Steven M Chermak Frankie Y Bailey Michelle Brown Media representations of September 11 2003 p 22 Full Cast amp Crew IMDb Full Cast amp Crew IMDb Full Cast amp Crew IMDbFurther reading editBogle Lori Lyn Pipes Richard pp 922 923 in The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing edited by Kelly Boyd Vol 2 London Fitzroy Dearborn Publishing 1999 online Daly Jonathan The Pleiade Five Scholars Who Founded Russian Historical Studies in America Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 18 no 4 Fall 2017 785 826 Daly Jonathan ed Pillars of the Profession The Correspondence of Richard Pipes and Marc Raeff Leiden The Netherlands and Boston 2019 Firestone Thomas Four Sovietologists A Primer National Interest No 14 Winter 1988 9 pp 102 107 on the ideas of Zbigniew Brzezinski Stephen F Cohen Jerry F Hough and Richard Pipes Malia Martin Edward The Hunt for the True October pp 21 28 from Commentary Vol 92 1991 Pipes Richard Vixi The Memoirs of a Non Belonger 2003 Poe Marshall The Dissident Azure Spring 2008 Somin Ilya Riddles Mysteries and Enigmas Unanswered Questions of Communism s Collapse pp 84 88 from Policy Review Vol 70 1994 Stent Angela Review of U S Soviet Relations in the Era of Detente pp 91 92 from Russian Review Vol 41 1982 Szeftel Marc Two Negative Appraisals of Russian Pre Revolutionary Development pp 74 87 from Canadian American Slavic Studies 1980 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Richard Pipes Appearances on C SPAN Richard Pipes at IMDb Works by or about Richard Pipes at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Pipes amp oldid 1216527612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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