fbpx
Wikipedia

Zbigniew Brzezinski

Zbigniew Kazimierz Brzeziński (/ˈzbɪɡnjɛf brəˈzɪnski/ ZBIG-nyef brə-ZIN-skee,[1] Polish: [ˈzbiɡɲɛf kaˈʑimjɛʐ bʐɛˈʑij̃skʲi] ;[a] March 28, 1928 – May 26, 2017), known as Zbig, was a Polish-American diplomat and political scientist. He served as a counselor to President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1966 to 1968 and was President Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor from 1977 to 1981. As a scholar, Brzezinski belonged to the realist school of international relations, standing in the geopolitical tradition of Halford Mackinder and Nicholas J. Spykman,[2][3] while elements of liberal idealism have also been identified in his outlook.[4] Brzezinski was the primary organizer of The Trilateral Commission.[5]

Zbigniew Brzezinski
Brzezinski in 1977
9th United States National Security Advisor
In office
January 20, 1977 – January 20, 1981
PresidentJimmy Carter
DeputyDavid L. Aaron
Preceded byBrent Scowcroft
Succeeded byRichard V. Allen
Personal details
Born
Zbigniew Kazimierz Brzeziński

(1928-03-28)March 28, 1928
Warsaw, Poland
DiedMay 26, 2017(2017-05-26) (aged 89)
Falls Church, Virginia, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
(m. 1961)
Children
Parents
RelativesMatthew Brzezinski (nephew)
Education

Major foreign policy events during his time in office included the normalization of relations with the People's Republic of China (and the severing of ties with the Republic of China on Taiwan); the signing of the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT II) with the Soviet Union; the brokering of the Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel; the overthrow of the US-friendly Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the start of the Iranian Revolution; the United States' encouragement of dissidents in Eastern Europe and championing of human rights[6] in order to undermine the influence of the Soviet Union;[7] supporting the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet-backed Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and, ultimately, Soviet troops during the Soviet–Afghan War;[8] and the signing of the Torrijos–Carter Treaties relinquishing U.S. control of the Panama Canal after 1999.

Brzezinski's personal views have been described as "progressive", "international",[7] political liberal, and strongly anti-communist.[4] He was an advocate for anti-Soviet containment, for human rights organizations, and for "cultivating a strong West".[7] He has been praised for his ability to see "the big picture". Critics described him as hawkish or a "foreign policy hardliner" on some issues, such as Poland–Russia relations.[9]

Brzezinski served as the Robert E. Osgood Professor of American Foreign Policy at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies, a scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and a member of various boards and councils. He frequently appeared as an expert on the PBS program The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, ABC News' This Week with Christiane Amanpour, and MSNBC's Morning Joe, where his daughter, Mika Brzezinski, is co-anchor. He supported the Prague Process.[10] His elder son, Ian, is a foreign policy expert, and his younger son, Mark, is the current United States Ambassador to Poland and previously served as the United States Ambassador to Sweden from 2011 to 2015.

Early years edit

Zbigniew Brzezinski was born in Warsaw, Poland, on March 28, 1928[11] into an aristocratic Roman Catholic[12] family originally from Brzeżany, Tarnopol Voivodeship (then part of Poland, currently in Ukraine). The town of Brzeżany is thought to be the source of the family name. Brzezinski's parents were Leonia (née Roman) Brzezińska and Tadeusz Brzeziński, a Polish diplomat who was posted to Germany from 1931 to 1935; Zbigniew Brzezinski thus spent some of his earliest years witnessing the rise of the Nazis.[13] From 1936 to 1938, Tadeusz Brzeziński was posted to the Soviet Union during Joseph Stalin's Great Purge,[14] and was later praised by Israel for his work helping Jews escape from the Nazis.[15]

In 1938, Tadeusz Brzeziński was posted to Montreal as a consul general.[15] The Brzezinski family lived near the Polish Consulate-General, on Stanley Street.[16] In 1939, the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was agreed to by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union; subsequently the two powers invaded Poland. The 1945 Yalta Conference among the Allies allotted Poland to the Soviet sphere of influence. The Second World War had a profound effect on Brzezinski, who stated in an interview: "The extraordinary violence that was perpetrated against Poland did affect my perception of the world, and made me much more sensitive to the fact that a great deal of world politics is a fundamental struggle."[17]

Academia edit

After attending Loyola College in Montreal,[18] Brzezinski entered McGill University in 1945 to obtain both his Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees (received in 1949 and 1950 respectively). His Master's thesis focused on the various nationalities within the Soviet Union.[19][20] Brzezinski's plan for pursuing further studies in the United Kingdom in preparation for a diplomatic career in Canada fell through, principally because he was ruled ineligible for a scholarship he had won that was only open to British subjects. Brzezinski then attended Harvard University to work on a doctorate with Merle Fainsod, focusing on the Soviet Union and the relationship between the October Revolution, Vladimir Lenin's state, and the actions of Joseph Stalin. He received his Ph.D. in 1953; the same year, he traveled to Munich and met Jan Nowak-Jezioranski, head of the Polish desk of Radio Free Europe. He later collaborated with Carl J. Friedrich to develop the concept of totalitarianism as a way to more accurately and powerfully characterize and criticize the Soviets in 1956.[21]

Brzezinski was on the faculty of Harvard University from 1953 to 1960, and of Columbia University from 1960 to 1972 where he headed the Institute on Communist Affairs. He was Senior Research Professor of International Relations at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, D.C.[22]

For historical background on major events during this period, see:

As a Harvard professor, he argued against Dwight Eisenhower's and John Foster Dulles's policy of rollback, saying that antagonism would push Eastern Europe further toward the Soviets.[23] The Polish protests followed by the Polish October and the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 lent some support to Brzezinski's idea that the Eastern Europeans could gradually counter Soviet domination. In 1957, he visited Poland for the first time since he left as a child, and his visit reaffirmed his judgement that splits within the Eastern bloc were profound. He developed ideas that he called "peaceful engagement".[23] Brzezinski became a naturalized American citizen in 1958.[24]

Very soon after Harvard awarded an associate professorship in 1959 to Henry Kissinger instead of to him,[11] Brzezinski moved to New York City to teach at Columbia University.[21] Here he wrote Soviet Bloc: Unity and Conflict, which focused on Eastern Europe since the beginning of the Cold War. He also taught future Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who like Brzezinski's wife Emilie was of Czech descent, and whom he also mentored during her early years in Washington.[25] He also became a member of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York and joined the Bilderberg Group.[26]

During the 1960 U.S. presidential elections, Brzezinski was an advisor to the John F. Kennedy campaign, urging a non-antagonistic policy toward Eastern European governments. Seeing the Soviet Union as having entered a period of stagnation, both economic and political, Brzezinski predicted a future breakup of the Soviet Union along lines of nationality (expanding on his master's thesis).[19]

As a scholar, he developed his thoughts over the years, fashioning fundamental theories on international relations and geostrategy. During the 1950s he worked on the theory of totalitarianism. His thought in the 1960s focused on wider Western understanding of disunity in the Soviet Bloc, as well as developing the thesis of intensified degeneration of the Soviet Union. During the 1970s he proposed that the Soviet system was incapable of evolving beyond the industrial phase into the "technetronic" age.

Brzezinski continued to argue for and support détente for the next few years, publishing "Peaceful Engagement in Eastern Europe" in Foreign Affairs,[27] and he continued to support non-antagonistic policies after the Cuban Missile Crisis on the grounds that such policies might disabuse Eastern European nations of their fear of an aggressive Germany, and pacify Western Europeans fearful of a superpower compromise along the lines of the Yalta Conference. In a 1962 book Brzezinski argued against the possibility of a Sino-Soviet split, saying their alignment was "not splitting and is not likely to split."[11]

 
The conference venue at the Hotel Regina during the second Wehrkunde-Begegnung in 1964. Pictured are, among others, Zbigniew Brzezinski (far left) as well as Ewald von Kleist and Franz-Josef Strauss (center).

In 1964, Brzezinski supported Lyndon Johnson's presidential campaign and the Great Society and civil rights policies, while on the other hand he saw Soviet leadership as having been purged of any creativity following the ousting of Khrushchev. Through Jan Nowak-Jezioranski, Brzezinski met with Adam Michnik, future Polish Solidarity activist.[citation needed]

Brzezinski continued to support engagement with Eastern European governments, while warning against De Gaulle's vision of a "Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals." He also supported the Vietnam War. In 1966, Brzezinski was appointed to the Policy Planning Council of the U.S. Department of State (President Johnson's October 7, 1966, "Bridge Building" speech was a product of Brzezinski's influence). In 1968, Brzezinski resigned from the council in protest of President Johnson's expansion of the war.[11] Next, he became a foreign policy advisor to Vice President Hubert Humphrey.[11]

For historical background on events during this period, see:

Events in Czechoslovakia further reinforced Brzezinski's criticisms of the right's aggressive stance toward Eastern European governments. His service to the Johnson administration, and his fact-finding trip to Vietnam, made him an enemy of the New Left.

For the 1968 U.S. presidential campaign, Brzezinski was chairman of the Humphrey's Foreign Policy Task Force.

Brzezinski called for a pan-European conference, an idea that would eventually find fruition in 1973 as the Conference for Security and Co-operation in Europe.[28] Meanwhile, he became a leading critic of both the Nixon-Kissinger détente condominium, as well as George McGovern's pacifism.[29]

The Trilateral Commission edit

 
The Trilateral Commission emblem.

In his 1970 piece Between Two Ages: America's Role in the Technetronic Era, Brzezinski argued that a coordinated policy among developed nations was necessary in order to counter global instability erupting from increasing economic inequality. Out of this thesis, Brzezinski co-founded the Trilateral Commission with David Rockefeller, serving as director from 1973 to 1976.[5] The Trilateral Commission is a group of prominent political and business leaders and academics primarily from the United States, Western Europe and Japan. Its purpose was to strengthen relations among the three most industrially advanced regions of the capitalist world. In 1974, Brzezinski selected Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter as a member.[11][5]

Advisor to President Carter edit

 
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and National Security Council Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski (1977)

Carter announced his candidacy for the 1976 presidential campaign to a skeptical media and proclaimed himself an "eager student" of Brzezinski.[30] Brzezinski became Carter's principal foreign policy advisor by late 1975. He became an outspoken critic of the Nixon-Kissinger over-reliance on détente, a situation preferred by the Soviet Union, favoring the Helsinki process instead, which focused on human rights, international law and peaceful engagement in Eastern Europe. Brzezinski was considered to be the Democrats' response to Republican Henry Kissinger.[31] Carter engaged his incumbent opponent for the presidency, Gerald Ford, in foreign policy debates by contrasting the Trilateral vision with Ford's détente.[32]

After his victory in 1976, Carter made Brzezinski National Security Advisor. Earlier that year, major labor riots broke out in Poland, laying the foundations for Solidarity. Brzezinski began by emphasizing the "Basket III" human rights in the Helsinki Final Act, which inspired Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia shortly thereafter.[33]

Brzezinski assisted with writing parts of Carter's inaugural address, and this served his purpose of sending a positive message to Soviet dissidents.[34] The Soviet Union and Western European leaders both complained that this kind of rhetoric ran against the "code of détente" that Nixon and Kissinger had established.[35][36] Brzezinski ran up against members of his own Democratic Party who disagreed with this interpretation of détente, including Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. Vance argued for less emphasis on human rights in order to gain Soviet agreement to Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), whereas Brzezinski favored doing both at the same time. Brzezinski then ordered Radio Free Europe transmitters to increase the power and area of their broadcasts, a provocative reversal of Nixon-Kissinger policies.[37] West German chancellor Helmut Schmidt objected to Brzezinski's agenda, even calling for the removal of Radio Free Europe from German soil.[38]

The State Department was alarmed by Brzezinski's support for dissidents in East Germany and objected to his suggestion that Carter's first overseas visit be to Poland. He visited Warsaw and met with Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski (against the objection of the U.S. Ambassador to Poland), recognizing the Roman Catholic Church as the legitimate opposition to communist rule in Poland.[39]

By 1978, Brzezinski and Vance were more and more at odds over the direction of Carter's foreign policy. Vance sought to continue the style of détente engineered by Nixon-Kissinger, with a focus on arms control. Brzezinski believed that détente emboldened the Soviets in Angola and the Middle East, and so he argued for increased military strength and an emphasis on human rights. Vance, the State Department, and the media criticized Brzezinski publicly as seeking to revive the Cold War. Brzezinski advised Carter in 1978 to engage the People's Republic of China and traveled to Beijing to lay the groundwork for the normalization of relations between the two countries. This also resulted in the severing of ties with the United States' longtime anti-Communist ally the Republic of China (Taiwan).[40][41]

For historical background on this period of history, see:

1979 saw two major strategically important events: the overthrow of U.S. ally the Shah of Iran, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The Iranian Revolution precipitated the Iran hostage crisis, which would last for the rest of Carter's presidency. Brzezinski anticipated the Soviet invasion, and, with the support of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and the People's Republic of China, he created a strategy to undermine the Soviet presence. Using this atmosphere of insecurity, Brzezinski led the United States toward a new arms buildup and the development of the Rapid Deployment Forces—policies that are both more generally associated with Reagan's presidency now.[citation needed]

In 1979, the Soviets intervened in the Second Yemenite War. The Soviet backing of South Yemen constituted a "smaller shock", in tandem with tensions that were rising due to the Iranian Revolution. This played a role in shifting Carter's viewpoint on the Soviet Union to a more assertive one, a shift that finalized with the Soviet-Afghan War.[42]

Brzezinski constantly urged either the restoration of the Shah of Iran to power or a military takeover, whatever the short-term costs in terms of values.[43]

On November 9, 1979, Brzezinski was awakened at 3 am by a phone call with a startling message: The Soviets had just launched 250 nuclear weapons at the United States. Minutes later, Brzezinski received another call: The early-warning system actually showed 2,000 missiles heading toward the United States.[44] As Brzezinski prepared to phone President Jimmy Carter to plan a full-scale response, he received a third call: It was a false alarm. An early warning training tape generating indications of a large-scale Soviet nuclear attack had somehow transferred to the actual early warning network, which triggered an all-too-real scramble.[44]

Brzezinski, acting under a lame duck Carter presidency—but encouraged that Solidarity in Poland had vindicated his style of engagement with Eastern Europe—took a hard-line stance against what seemed like an imminent Soviet invasion of Poland. He even made a midnight phone call to Pope John Paul II (whose visit to Poland in 1979 had foreshadowed the emergence of Solidarity) warning him in advance. The U.S. stance was a significant change from previous reactions to Soviet repression in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968.[citation needed]

Brzezinski developed the Carter Doctrine, which committed the U.S. to use military force in defense of the Persian Gulf.[15] In 1981 President Carter presented Brzezinski with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

National Security Advisor edit

 
National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski with Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff General David C. Jones and Deputy National Security Advisor David L. Aaron, following National Security Council meeting at The White House, December 20, 1978.
 
National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski accompanying President Jimmy Carter during a visit to Strategic Air Command's Headquarters in Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska.

President Carter chose Brzezinski for the position of National Security Adviser (NSA) because he wanted an assertive intellectual at his side to provide him with day-to-day advice and guidance on foreign policy decisions. Brzezinski would preside over a reorganized National Security Council (NSC) structure, fashioned to ensure that the NSA would be only one of many players in the foreign policy process.[45]

Initially, Carter reduced the NSC staff by one-half, and decreased the number of standing NSC committees from eight to two. All issues referred to the NSC were reviewed by one of the two new committees, either the Policy Review Committee (PRC) or the Special Coordinating Committee (SCC). The PRC focused on specific issues, and its chairmanship rotated. The SCC was always chaired by Brzezinski, a circumstance he had to negotiate with Carter to achieve. Carter believed that by making the NSA chairman of only one of the two committees, he would prevent the NSC from being the overwhelming influence on foreign policy decisions it had been under Kissinger's chairmanship during the Nixon administration.[46]

The SCC was charged with considering issues that cut across several departments, including oversight of intelligence activities, arms control evaluation, and crisis management. Much of the SCC's time during the Carter years was spent on SALT issues. The Council held few formal meetings, convening only 10 times, compared with 125 meetings during the eight years of the Nixon and Ford administrations. Instead, Carter used frequent, informal meetings as a decision-making device—typically his Friday breakfasts—usually attended by the Vice President, the secretaries of State and Defense, Brzezinski, and the chief domestic adviser.[46]

No agendas were prepared and no formal records were kept of these meetings, sometimes resulting in differing interpretations of the decisions actually agreed upon. Brzezinski was careful, in managing his own weekly luncheons with secretaries Vance and Brown in preparation for NSC discussions, to maintain a complete set of notes. Brzezinski also sent weekly reports to the President on major foreign policy undertakings and problems, with recommendations for courses of action. President Carter enjoyed these reports and frequently annotated them with his own views. Brzezinski and the NSC used these presidential notes (159 of them) as the basis for NSC actions.[46]

From the beginning, Brzezinski made sure that the new NSC institutional relationships would assure him a major voice in the shaping of foreign policy. While he knew that Carter would not want him to be another Kissinger, Brzezinski also felt confident that the President did not want Secretary of State Vance to become another Dulles and would want his own input on key foreign policy decisions. Brzezinski's power gradually expanded into the operational area during the Carter Presidency. He increasingly assumed the role of a presidential emissary. In 1978, for example, Brzezinski traveled to Beijing to lay the groundwork for normalizing U.S.–PRC relations.[47]

Like Kissinger before him, Brzezinski maintained his own personal relationship with Soviet Ambassador to the United States Anatoly Dobrynin. Brzezinski had NSC staffers monitor State Department cable traffic through the Situation Room and call back to the State Department if the President preferred to revise or take issue with outgoing State Department instructions. He also appointed his own press spokesman, and his frequent press briefings and appearances on television interview shows made him a prominent public figure, although perhaps not nearly as much as Kissinger had been under Nixon.[47]

The Soviet military invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 significantly damaged the already tenuous relationship between Vance and Brzezinski. Vance felt that Brzezinski's linkage of SALT to other Soviet activities and the MX, together with the growing domestic criticisms in the United States of the SALT II Accord, convinced Brezhnev to decide on military intervention in Afghanistan. Brzezinski, however, later recounted that he advanced proposals to maintain Afghanistan's independence but was frustrated by the Department of State's opposition. An NSC working group on Afghanistan wrote several reports on the deteriorating situation in 1979, but Carter ignored them until the Soviet intervention destroyed his illusions. Only then did he decide to abandon SALT II ratification and pursue the anti-Soviet policies that Brzezinski proposed.[48]

The Iranian revolution was the last straw for the disintegrating relationship between Vance and Brzezinski. As the upheaval developed, the two advanced fundamentally different positions. Brzezinski wanted to control the revolution and increasingly suggested military action to prevent Ayatollah Khomeini from coming to power, while Vance wanted to come to terms with the new Islamic Republic of Iran. As a consequence, Carter failed to develop a coherent approach to the Iranian situation. Vance's resignation following the unsuccessful mission to rescue the American hostages in March 1980, undertaken over his objections, was the final result of the deep disagreement between Brzezinski and Vance.[49]

Major policies edit

During the 1960s, Brzezinski articulated the strategy of peaceful engagement for undermining the Soviet bloc, and while serving on the State Department Policy Planning Council, persuaded President Lyndon B. Johnson to adopt (in October 1966) peaceful engagement as U.S. strategy, placing détente ahead of German reunification and thus reversing prior U.S. priorities.[citation needed]

During the 1970s and 1980s, at the height of his political involvement, Brzezinski participated in the formation of the Trilateral Commission in order to more closely cement U.S.–Japanese–European relations. As the three most economically advanced sectors of the world, the people of the three regions could be brought together in cooperation that would give them a more cohesive stance against the communist world.[50]

While serving in the White House, Brzezinski emphasized the centrality of human rights as a means of placing the Soviet Union on the ideological defensive. With Jimmy Carter in Camp David, he assisted in the attainment of the Egypt–Israel peace treaty.[51]

He actively supported Polish Solidarity and the Afghan resistance to Soviet invasion, and provided covert support for national independence movements in the Soviet Union. He played a leading role in normalizing U.S.–PRC relations and in the development of joint strategic cooperation, cultivating a relationship with Deng Xiaoping, for which he is thought very highly of in mainland China to this day.[citation needed]

In the 1990s he formulated the strategic case for buttressing the independent statehood of Ukraine, partially as a means to prevent a resurgence of the Russian Empire,[citation needed] and to drive Russia toward integration with the West, promoting instead "geopolitical pluralism" in the space of the former Soviet Union. He developed "a plan for Europe" urging the expansion of NATO, making the case for the expansion of NATO to the Baltic countries.

He served as Bill Clinton's emissary to Azerbaijan in order to promote the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline. Subsequently, he became a member of Honorary Council of Advisors of U.S.-Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce (USACC). Further, he led, together with Lane Kirkland, the effort to increase the endowment for the U.S.-sponsored Polish-American Freedom Foundation from the proposed $112 million to an eventual total of well over $200 million.[citation needed]

Afghanistan edit

 
Carter, Brzezinski and Prince Fahd of Saudi Arabia

Communists under the leadership of Nur Muhammad Taraki seized power in Afghanistan on April 27, 1978.[52] The new regime—divided between Taraki's extremist Khalq faction and the more moderate Parcham—signed a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union in December of that year.[52][53] Taraki's efforts to improve secular education and redistribute land were accompanied by mass executions (including of many conservative religious leaders) and political oppression unprecedented in Afghan history, igniting a revolt by mujahideen rebels.[52]

Following a general uprising in April 1979, Taraki was deposed by Khalq rival Hafizullah Amin in September.[52][53] Amin was considered a "brutal psychopath" by foreign observers; even the Soviets were alarmed by the brutality of the Afghan communists, and suspected Amin of being an agent of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), although that was not the case.[52][53][54][55] By December, Amin's government had lost control of much of the country, prompting the Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan, execute Amin, and install Parcham leader Babrak Karmal as president.[52][53]

President Carter was surprised by the invasion, as the consensus of the U.S. intelligence community during 1978 and 1979—reiterated as late as September 29, 1979—was that "Moscow would not intervene in force even if it appeared likely that the Khalq government was about to collapse." Indeed, Carter's diary entries from November 1979 until the Soviet invasion in late December contain only two short references to Afghanistan, and are instead preoccupied with the ongoing hostage crisis in Iran.[56] In the West, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was considered a threat to global security and the oil supplies of the Persian Gulf.[53]

Moreover, the failure to accurately predict Soviet intentions caused American officials to reappraise the Soviet threat to both Iran and Pakistan, although it is now known that those fears were overblown. For example, U.S. intelligence closely followed Soviet exercises for an invasion of Iran throughout 1980, while an earlier warning from Brzezinski that "if the Soviets came to dominate Afghanistan, they could promote a separate Baluchistan  ... [thus] dismembering Pakistan and Iran" took on new urgency.[54][56]

These concerns were a major factor in the unrequited efforts of both the Carter and Reagan administrations to improve relations with Iran, and resulted in massive aid to Pakistan's Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. Zia's ties with the U.S. had been strained during Carter's presidency due to Pakistan's nuclear program and the execution of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in April 1979, but Carter told Brzezinski and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance as early as January 1979 that it was vital to "repair our relationships with Pakistan" in light of the unrest in Iran.[56]

One initiative Carter authorized to achieve this goal was a collaboration between the CIA and Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI); through the ISI, the CIA began providing some $695,000[8] worth of non-lethal assistance to the mujahideen on July 3, 1979—several months prior to the Soviet invasion. The modest scope of this early collaboration was likely influenced by the understanding, later recounted by CIA official Robert Gates, "that a substantial U.S. covert aid program" might have "raise[d] the stakes" thereby causing "the Soviets to intervene more directly and vigorously than otherwise intended".[56][57][58] The first shipment of U.S.weapons intended for the mujahideen reached Pakistan on January 10, 1980, shortly following the Soviet invasion.[54]

In the aftermath of the invasion, Carter was determined to respond vigorously to what he considered a dangerous provocation. In a televised speech, he announced sanctions on the Soviet Union, promised renewed aid to Pakistan, and committed the U.S. to the Persian Gulf's defense.[56][57] The thrust of U.S. policy for the duration of the war was determined by Carter in early 1980: Carter initiated a program to arm the mujahideen through Pakistan's ISI and secured a pledge from Saudi Arabia to match U.S. funding for this purpose. U.S. support for the mujahideen accelerated under Carter's successor, Ronald Reagan, at a final cost to U.S. taxpayers of some $3 billion. The Soviets were unable to quell the insurgency and withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989, precipitating the dissolution of the Soviet Union itself.[56]

However, the decision to route U.S. aid through Pakistan led to massive fraud, as weapons sent to Karachi were frequently sold on the local market rather than delivered to the Afghan rebels; Karachi soon "became one of the most violent cities in the world". Pakistan also controlled which rebels received assistance: of the seven mujahideen groups supported by Zia's government, four espoused Islamic fundamentalist beliefs—and these fundamentalists received most of the funding.[53] Years later, in a 1997 CNN/National Security Archive interview, Brzezinski detailed the strategy taken by the Carter administration against the Soviets in 1979:

We immediately launched a twofold process when we heard that the Soviets had entered Afghanistan. The first involved direct reactions and sanctions focused on the Soviet Union, and both the State Department and the National Security Council prepared long lists of sanctions to be adopted, of steps to be taken to increase the international costs to the Soviet Union of their actions. And the second course of action led to my going to Pakistan a month or so after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, for the purpose of coordinating with the Pakistanis a joint response, the purpose of which would be to make the Soviets bleed for as much and as long as is possible; and we engaged in that effort in a collaborative sense with the Saudis, the Egyptians, the British, the Chinese, and we started providing weapons to the Mujaheddin, from various sources again—for example, some Soviet arms from the Egyptians and the Chinese. We even got Soviet arms from the Czechoslovak communist government, since it was obviously susceptible to material incentives; and at some point we started buying arms for the Mujaheddin from the Soviet army in Afghanistan, because that army was increasingly corrupt.[59]

"Afghan Trap" theory edit

Following the September 11 attacks, a theory that Brzezinski intentionally provoked the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 was widely repeated,[60] with some adherents blaming Brzezinski (and the Carter administration) for the decades-long Afghanistan conflict (1978–present), the September 11 attacks, and the 2016 Orlando nightclub shooting. A 2020 review of declassified U.S. documents by Conor Tobin in the journal Diplomatic History contends that this theory—referred to as the "Afghan Trap" theory by the author—is a misrepresentation of the historical record based almost entirely on a "caricature" of Brzezinski as an anti-communist fanatic, a disputed statement attributed to Brzezinski by a Le Nouvel Observateur journalist in 1998 (which was "repeatedly den[ied]" by Brzezinski himself), "and the circumstantial fact that U.S. support antedated the invasion."[8] In addition to Tobin, several academic or journalistic sources have questioned the veracity of aspects of the "Afghan Trap" theory,[61][62][63][64] as have at least two former high-ranking Carter administration officials.[8]

While it is true that the March 1979 Herat uprising in Afghanistan and a desire to rebuild strained U.S. relations with Pakistani leader Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq in light of the Iranian Revolution prompted Carter to sign presidential findings in July 1979 permitting the CIA to spend $695,000 on non-military assistance (e.g., "cash, medical equipment, and radio transmitters") to Afghan mujahideen insurgents (and on a propaganda campaign targeting the Soviet-backed leadership of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan or DRA), internal deliberations show that "U.S. policies were almost wholly reactive ... to the Soviets' escalating military presence" with policymakers rejecting "a substantial covert aid program" (including lethal provisions) "to avoid provoking Moscow." (The Soviet military and political presence in Afghanistan steadily increased throughout 1979, including "tens of millions of dollars in military aid provided by Moscow to the DRA.")[8]

According to Tobin, Brzezinski went to considerable lengths to dissuade the Soviets from invading Afghanistan, urging the Carter administration to publicize information regarding the growing Soviet military role in Afghanistan's nascent civil war and to explicitly warn the Soviets of severe sanctions in the event of an invasion; when his warnings were watered-down by the State Department under the leadership of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, Brzezinski leaked information to a journalist, resulting in an August 1979 article in The New York Times headlined "U.S. Is Indirectly Pressing Russians to Halt Afghanistan Intervention." (Ironically, Soviet general Valentin Varennikov complained in 1995 that American officials had never made Afghanistan's strategic significance clear to their Soviet counterparts prior to December 1979, speculating—in line with the "Afghan Trap" theory—that this omission may have been deliberate as the U.S. "had an interest in us getting stuck in Afghanistan, and paying the greatest possible price for that.")[8] Furthermore, Brzezinski attempted to discretely negotiate a withdrawal of Soviet troops with Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin during 1980, privately conceding that the country would likely remain within the Soviet sphere of influence following a diplomatic settlement, as he had little confidence in the mujahideen's ability to inflict a military defeat on the Red Army.[8][63]

Carter administration officials Robert Gates and Vice President Walter Mondale criticized the "Afghan Trap" theory between 2010 and 2012, the former stating that it had "no basis in fact" and the latter calling it "a huge, unwarranted leap".[8] Tobin concludes: "The small-scale covert program that developed in response to the increasing Soviet influence was part of a contingency plan if the Soviets did intervene militarily, as Washington would be in a better position to make it difficult for them to consolidate their position, but not designed to induce an intervention."[8] Historian Robert Rakove wrote, the notion of a U.S. effort to entrap the Soviet Union in Afghanistan has been "methodically and effectively refuted by Conor Tobin".[65] Steve Coll had previously stated in 2004 that "[c]ontemporary memos—particularly those written in the first days after the Soviet invasion—make clear that while Brzezinski was determined to confront the Soviets in Afghanistan through covert action, he was also very worried the Soviets would prevail. ... Given this evidence and the enormous political and security costs that the invasion imposed on the Carter administration, any claim that Brzezinski lured the Soviets into Afghanistan warrants deep skepticism."[61] Coll's "specific debunking of the Brzezinski Nouvel Observateur interview" was cited by the National Security Archive in 2019.[62] In 2016, Justin Vaïsse referred to "[t]he thesis according to which a trap was set having been dismissed" as "[s]uch a position would not be compatible with the archives".[63] Elisabeth Leake, writing in 2022, agreed that "the original provision was certainly inadequate to force a Soviet armed intervention. Instead it adhered to broader US practices of providing limited covert support to anti-communist forces worldwide."[64]

Iran edit

 
The Iranian Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, meeting with Alfred Atherton, William H. Sullivan, Cyrus Vance, President Jimmy Carter, and Zbigniew Brzezinski, in 1977

In November 1979, revolutionary students stormed the Embassy of the United States, Tehran and took American diplomats hostage. Brzezinski argued against Secretary of State Cyrus Vance's proposed diplomatic solutions to the Iran hostage crisis, insisting they "would deliver Iran to the Soviets."[11] Vance, struggling with gout, went to Florida on Thursday, April 10, 1980, for a long weekend.[66]

On Friday, Brzezinski held a newly scheduled meeting of the National Security Council and authorized Operation Eagle Claw, a military expedition into Tehran to rescue the hostages.[66] Deputy Secretary Warren Christopher, who attended the meeting in Vance's place, did not inform Vance.[66] Furious, Vance handed in his resignation on principle, calling Brzezinski "evil".[66]

President Carter aborted the operation after three of the eight helicopters he had sent into the Dasht-e Kavir desert crashed, and a fourth then collided with a transport plane, causing a fire that killed eight servicemen.[66] The hostages were ultimately released on the day of the first inauguration of Ronald Reagan, after 444 days in captivity.[67]

Along with Kissinger and David Rockefeller, Brzezinski played a role in convincing Carter to admit the exiled Shah into the U.S.[7]

Brzezinski has compared complaints by US officials about Iran's alleged nuclear ambitions to similar statements made before the Iraq war began. He told: "I think the administration, the President and the Vice President particularly, are trying to hype the atmosphere, and that is reminiscent of what preceded the war in Iraq."[68]

China edit

 
Brzezinski hosts a dinner for Chinese Communist leader Deng Xiaoping in 1979

Shortly after taking office in 1977, President Carter again reaffirmed the United States' position of upholding the Shanghai Communiqué. In May 1978, Brzezinski overcame concerns from the State Department and traveled to Beijing, where he began talks that seven months later led to full diplomatic relations.[11] The United States and People's Republic of China announced on December 15, 1978, that the two governments would establish diplomatic relations on January 1, 1979. This required that the United States sever relations with the Republic of China on Taiwan. Consolidating U.S. gains in befriending Communist China was a major priority stressed by Brzezinski during his time as National Security Advisor.

Brzezinski "denied reports that he encouraged China to support the genocidal dictator Pol Pot in Cambodia, because Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge were the enemies of communist Vietnam."[69] However, following the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia which toppled the Khmer Rouge, Brzezinski prevailed in having the administration refuse to recognize the new Cambodian government due to its support by the Soviet Union.[70]

The most important strategic aspect of the new U.S.–Chinese relationship was in its effect on the Cold War. China was no longer considered part of a larger Sino-Soviet bloc but instead a third pole of power due to the Sino-Soviet Split, helping the United States against the Soviet Union.[71]

In the Joint Communiqué on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations dated January 1, 1979, the United States transferred diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing. The United States reiterated the Shanghai Communiqué's acknowledgment of the PRC position that there is only one China and that Taiwan is a part of China; Beijing acknowledged that the United States would continue to carry on commercial, cultural, and other unofficial contacts with Taiwan. The Taiwan Relations Act made the necessary changes in U.S. law to permit unofficial relations with Taiwan to continue.

In addition the severing relations with the Republic of China, the Carter administration also agreed to unilaterally pull out of the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty, withdraw U.S. military personnel from Taiwan, and gradually reduce arms sales to the Republic of China. There was widespread opposition in Congress, notably from Republicans, due to the Republic of China's status as an anti-Communist ally in the Cold War. In Goldwater v. Carter, Barry Goldwater made a failed attempt to stop Carter from terminating the mutual defense treaty.

 
U.S. President Jimmy Carter with Brzezinski and Cyrus Vance at Camp David in 1977

Arab-Israeli conflict edit

 
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin engages Brzezinski in a game of chess at Camp David

On October 10, 2007, Brzezinski along with other influential signatories sent a letter to President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice titled "Failure Risks Devastating Consequences." The letter was partly an advice and a warning of the failure of an upcoming[72] U.S.-sponsored Middle East conference scheduled for November 2007 between representatives of Israelis and Palestinians. The letter also suggested to engage in "a genuine dialogue with Hamas" rather than to isolate it further.[73]

Ending Soviet détente edit

Presidential Directive 18 on U.S. National Security, signed early in Carter's term, signaled a fundamental reassessment of the value of détente, and set the United States on a course to quietly end Kissinger's strategy.[74]

Zbigniew Brzezinski played a major role in organizing Jimmy Carter's policies on the Soviet Union as a grand strategy.[7] Brzezinski was a liberal Democrat and a committed anti-communist, favoring social justice while seeing world events in substantially Cold War terms.[75] Additionally, according to Foreign Policy, "Brzezinski’s outlook was anti-Soviet, but he also insisted, like George Kennan before him, on the necessity of cultivating a strong West."[7]

Brzezinski stated that human rights could be used to put the Soviet Union ideologically on the defensive:

I felt strongly that in the U.S.-Soviet competition the appeal of America as a free society could become an important asset, and I saw in human rights an opportunity to put the Soviet Union ideologically on the defensive....by actively pursuing this' commitment we could mobilize far greater global support and focus global attention on the glaring internal weaknesses of the Soviet system.[76]

Brzezinski's policy on Iran was thoroughly connected to the Soviet Union, because it was observed that each coup and revolution in 1979 had advanced Soviet power towards the Persian Gulf.[77][78] Brzezinski advised President Carter that the United States's "greatest vulnerability" lay on an arc "stretching from Chittagong through Islamabad to Aden."[79] This played a role in the Carter Doctrine.[77]

Nuclear strategy edit

Presidential Directive 59, "Nuclear Employment Policy", dramatically changed U.S. targeting of nuclear weapons aimed at the Soviet Union. Implemented with the aid of Defense Secretary Harold Brown, this directive officially set the United States on a countervailing strategy.[clarification needed][80]

Arms control edit

Zbigniew Brzezinski utilized the United States' need to stability and progress in political relations with the Soviet Union to spur on the call for a new strategic arms treaty. On April 5, 1979, Brzezinski made a speech at the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations where he stated that competition between the two powers and the nuclear arms race would not simply end because of the accord. According to him, the projected strategic arms treaty that would intend to impose limits on power such as missiles and bombers through the year 1989, would be what contributes to the progress and confidence in Soviet-American relations.[81]

He aimed to frame his arms control policy in a way that portrayed it as favorable to create, ensure, and maintain Soviet-American relations.[82] Leading up to the presidential election in 1980, the Carter administration set sight on confronting Ronald Reagan on arms control agreements with Moscow. On this issue, Brzezinski believed that to continue moving safely ahead with talks to control atomic arms with Moscow, despite Soviet troops holding position in Afghanistan, the United States needed to remain firm in containing Soviet expansionism.[83]

Overall, Zbigniew Brzezinski’s arms control views leaned skeptical and mistrusting of Soviet motives in general and emphasized the central importance of the East-West competition. On the other hand, other officials such as the Secretary of State Cyrus Vance worked to pave a way for a wider US-Soviet relationship. Arms control in Brzezinski’s terms would take any opportunity to halt or reduce the momentum of the Soviet buildup.[84]

 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff with National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski and the other members of Joint Chiefs of Staff during a National Security Council Meeting at The White House on October 5, 1978.
 
President Jimmy Carter and Soviet General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev sign the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT II) treaty, June 18, 1979, in Vienna (Austria). Brzezinski is directly behind President Carter.

After power edit

Brzezinski left office concerned about the internal division within the Democratic party, arguing that the dovish McGovernite wing would send the Democrats into permanent minority. Ronald Reagan invited him to stay on as his National Security Adviser, but Brzezinski declined, feeling that the new president needed a fresh perspective on which to build his foreign policy.[85] He had mixed relations with the Reagan administration. On the one hand, he supported it as an alternative to the Democrats' pacifism. On the other hand, he also criticized it as seeing foreign policy in overly black-and-white terms.[citation needed]

By the 1980s, Brzezinski argued that the general crisis of the Soviet Union foreshadowed communism's end.

He remained involved in Polish affairs, critical of the imposition of martial law in Poland in 1981, and more so of the Western European acquiescence to its imposition in the name of stability. Brzezinski briefed U.S. vice president George H. W. Bush before his 1987 trip to Poland that aided in the revival of the Solidarity movement.[citation needed]

In 1985, under the Reagan administration, Brzezinski served as a member of the President's Chemical Warfare Commission. From 1987 to 1988, he worked on the U.S. National Security CouncilDefense Department Commission on Integrated Long-Term Strategy. From 1987 to 1989 he also served on the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board.[86]

In 1988, Brzezinski was co-chairman of the Bush National Security Advisory Task Force, endorsing Bush for president, and breaking with the Democratic party. Brzezinski published The Grand Failure the same year, predicting the failure of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms, and the collapse of the Soviet Union in a few more decades. He said there were five possibilities for the Soviet Union: successful pluralization, protracted crisis, renewed stagnation, coup (by the KGB or Soviet military), or the explicit collapse of the Communist regime. He called collapse "at this stage a much more remote possibility" than protracted crisis.

He also predicted that the chance of some form of communism existing in the Soviet Union in 2017 was a little more than 50% and that when the end did come it would be "most likely turbulent". Conflicts such as Nagorno-Karabakh crisis and Soviet attempts to reinstate its authority in Lithuania and other republics were much less violent than Brzezinski and other observers anticipated.[citation needed] In the event, the Soviet system collapsed totally after the abortive August coup of 1991 launched against Gorbachev failed.

In 1989, the Communists failed to mobilize support in Poland, and Solidarity swept the general elections. Later the same year, Brzezinski toured Russia and visited a memorial to the Katyn Massacre. This served as an opportunity for him to ask the Soviet government to acknowledge the truth about the event, for which he received a standing ovation in the Soviet Academy of Sciences. Ten days later, the Berlin Wall fell, and Soviet-supported governments in Eastern Europe began to totter. Strobe Talbott, one of Brzezinski's long-time critics, conducted an interview with him for TIME magazine entitled "Vindication of a Hardliner".[87]

In 1990, Brzezinski warned against post–Cold War euphoria. He publicly opposed the Gulf War,[citation needed] arguing that the United States would squander the international goodwill it had accumulated by defeating the Soviet Union, and that it could trigger wide resentment throughout the Arab world. He expanded upon these views in his 1992 work Out of Control.[citation needed]

Brzezinski was prominently critical of the Clinton administration's hesitation to intervene against the Serb forces in the Bosnian war.[88] He also began to speak out against Russia's First Chechen War, forming the American Committee for Peace in Chechnya. Wary of a move toward the reinvigoration of Russian power, Brzezinski negatively viewed the succession of former KGB agent Vladimir Putin after Boris Yeltsin. In this vein, he became one of the foremost advocates of NATO expansion. He wrote in 1998 that "Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be a Eurasian empire."[89] He later came out in support of the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia during the Kosovo war.[90]

Later years edit

 
Former National Security Advisers meet with President Barack Obama in 2010. Seated at the table, from left, are Brent Scowcroft, Bud McFarlane, Colin Powell, Dennis Ross, Sandy Berger, Frank Carlucci, and Brzezinski.

After his role as National Security Adviser came to a close, Brzezinski returned to teaching, but remained an influential voice in international relations. Polish politician Radek Sikorski wrote that to Poles, Brzezinski was considered "our statesman" and his was one of the most revered voices in Poland: "During the decades when Poland was stuck against her will behind the Iron Curtain, he and the Polish pope were the two most important voices for a free Poland abroad. After liberation, he acted as an adviser and champion of the new democracies on their way to rejoining Western institutions."[91]

Though he rose to national prominence as a member of the Carter administration, Brzezinski avoided partisan politics and sometimes later voted Republican. In the 1988 election, he endorsed George H. W. Bush for president over Democrat Michael Dukakis.[92]

Brzezinski argued against the 2003 invasion of Iraq and was outspoken in the then-unpopular opinion that the invasion would be a mistake. As recalled by David Ignatius, "Brzezinski paid a cost in the insular, self-reinforcing world of Washington foreign policy opinion, until it became clear to nearly everyone that he (joined in this Iraq War opposition by Scowcroft) had been right."[93] He later called President George W. Bush's foreign policy "catastrophic."[11]

Brzezinski was a leading critic of the George W. Bush administration's conduct of the War on Terror. In 2004, Brzezinski wrote The Choice, which expanded upon his earlier work,The Grand Chessboard (1997), and sharply criticized George W. Bush's foreign policy. In 2007, in a column in The Washington Post, Brzezinski excoriated the Bush administration, arguing that their post-9/11 actions had damaged the reputation of the United States "infinitely greater than any wild dreams entertained by the fanatical perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks" and destroyed any chance of uniting the world to defeat extremism and terrorism.[94] He later stated that he had "visceral contempt" for British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who supported Bush's actions in Iraq.[92] In September 2007, he defended the book The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy by John Mearsheimer.[95]

In August 2007, Brzezinski endorsed Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. He stated that Obama "recognizes that the challenge is a new face, a new sense of direction, a new definition of America's role in the world"[96] and that "What makes Obama attractive to me is that he understands that we live in a very different world where we have to relate to a variety of cultures and people."[97] In September 2007 during a speech on the Iraq war, Obama introduced Brzezinski as "one of our most outstanding thinkers," but some pro-Israel commentators questioned his criticism of the Israel lobby in the United States.[95]

In a September 2009 interview with The Daily Beast, Brzezinski replied to a question about how aggressive President Obama should be in insisting Israel not conduct an air strike on Iran, saying: "We are not exactly impotent little babies. They have to fly over our airspace in Iraq. Are we just going to sit there and watch?"[98] This was interpreted by some supporters of Israel as supporting the downing of Israeli jets by the United States in order to prevent an attack on Iran.[99][100]

On October 1, 2009, Brzezinski delivered the Waldo Family Lecture on International Relations at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia.[101] In 2011, Brzezinski supported the NATO intervention against the forces of Muammar Gaddafi in the Libyan Civil War, calling non-intervention "morally dubious" and "politically questionable".[102]

In early 2012, Brzezinski expressed disappointment and said he was confused by some of Obama's actions, such as the decision to send 2,500 U.S. troops to Australia, but supported him for re-election.[92]

 
Brzezinski at the Munich Security Conference, 2014

On March 3, 2014, between the February 22 ousting of Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych and the March 16, Crimean referendum, Brzezinski authored an op-ed piece for The Washington Post entitled "What is to be done? Putin's aggression in Ukraine needs a response."[103] He led with a link on Russian aggression; he compared Russian President Vladimir Putin's "thuggish tactics in seizing Crimea" and "thinly camouflaged invasion" to Adolf Hitler's occupation of the Sudetenland in 1938, and characterized Putin as a cartoon Benito Mussolini, but stopped well short of advocating that the U.S. go to war. Rather, he suggested that NATO should be put on high alert and recommended "to avert miscalculations". He explicitly stated that reassurances be given to "Russia that it is not seeking to draw Ukraine into NATO."[103]

According to Ignatius and Sikorski, Brzezinski was "deeply troubled" by the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States and worried over the future. Two days after the election, on November 10, 2016, Brzezinski warned of "coming turmoil in the nation and the world" in a brief speech after he was awarded the Medal for Distinguished Public Service from the Department of Defense.[93] On May 4, 2017, he sent out his final Tweet, saying, "Sophisticated US leadership is the sine qua non of a stable world order. However, we lack the former while the latter is getting worse."[91]

Piotr Pietrzak argued that "Brzezinski never trusted Putin and saw him as the post-Soviet man, a product of Soviet imperialist indoctrination, who felt deeply humiliated by how the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact collapsed, but he predicted the escalation of the situation in the East long before Putin took power and much earlier than most of us, possibly because his geopolitical insights were strongly influenced by the work of Alfred Thayer Mahan, Halford J. Mackinder, Nickolas J. Spykman, and Friedrich Ratzel.".[104]

Pietrzak also suggested that "Although Zbigniew Brzezinski is dead, his work is very much alive; the Biden administration follows Brzezinski’s geostrategic blueprint, which supports Ukraine militarily, logistically, diplomatically, and politically. Zbigniew Brzezinski’s son Mark Brzezinski serves as the United States Ambassador to Poland and helps his superiors implement his father’s geostrategic vision on the ground thanks to which the Ukrainian army is still standing and is capable of not only repelling the Russian offensive but actually launching a successful counter-offensive. The question is what constitutes the Brzezinski Doctrine today? Would Brzezinski see Ukraine as a potential NATO member or a frozen buffer zone between the transatlantic community and an increasingly assertive, hawkish, and unpredictable Russian giant?".[104]

Personal life edit

Brzezinski was married to Czech-American sculptor Emilie Benes (grand-niece of the second Czechoslovak president, Edvard Beneš), with whom he had three children. His younger son, Mark Brzezinski (b. 1965), is a lawyer who served on President Clinton's National Security Council as an expert on Russia and Southeastern Europe, and has served as the U.S. ambassador to Sweden (2011–2015) and Poland (from 2022). His daughter, Mika Brzezinski (b. 1967), is a television news presenter and co-host of MSNBC's weekday morning program, Morning Joe, where she provides regular commentary and reads the news headlines for the program. His elder son, Ian Brzezinski (b. 1963), is a Senior Fellow in the International Security Program and is on the Atlantic Council's Strategic Advisors Group. Ian also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Europe and NATO (2001–2005) and was a principal at Booz Allen Hamilton.[105]

Public life edit

Brzezinski was a past member of the Atlantic Council and the National Endowment for Democracy.[106] At the time of his death, he was a member of the Council on Foreign Relations[107] and the International Honorary Council[108] of the European Academy of Diplomacy.

He was also referred to by the nickname "Zbig".[109][110][4]

Film appearances edit

Brzezinski appeared as himself in several documentary films and TV series, such as: the 1997 film Eternal Memory: Voices from the Great Terror, directed by David Pultz; Episodes 17 (Good Guys, Bad Guys), 19 (Freeze) and 20 (Soldiers of God) of the 1998 CNN series Cold War produced by Jeremy Isaacs; the 2009 documentary Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace; and the 2014 Polish biographical film Strateg (The Strategist) directed by Katarzyna Kolenda-Zaleska and produced by TVN. The 2014 Polish film Jack Strong features Krzysztof Pieczyński as Brzezinski.

Death edit

Brzezinski died at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, Virginia, on May 26, 2017, at the age of 89.[111][112] His funeral was held June 9 at the Cathedral of St. Matthew in Washington, D.C.[113] Former President Carter and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright were among those who gave eulogies, while attendees included international diplomats and emissaries; journalists Carl Bernstein, Chuck Todd and David Ignatius; 100-year-old Gen. Edward Rowny; former National Security Adviser Susan E. Rice; and former National Security Advisor, Lt. Gen. H. R. McMaster.[114]

"If I could choose my seatmate, it would be Dr. Brzezinski," Carter said of his international flights on Air Force One. Former National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger, aged 94, was unable to attend, but a note he sent was read during a eulogy: "The world is an emptier place without Zbig pushing the limits of his insights."[114]

Honors edit

Honorary degrees edit

Location Date School Degree
  New York (state) 1979 Fordham University Doctorate[120]
  Massachusetts June 9, 1986 Williams College Doctor of Law (LL.D)[121][122]
  Poland 1990 John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin Doctorate[123]
  Lithuania 1998 Vilnius University Doctorate[124]
  Azerbaijan November 7, 2003 Baku State University Doctorate[123]

Works edit

Major works by Brzezinski edit

Other books and monographs edit

Book contributions edit

Selected articles and essays edit

  • "Peaceful Engagement in Eastern Europe", with William Griffith. Foreign Affairs, vol. 39, no. 4 (Spring 1961), p. 647. doi:10.2307/20029518. JSTOR 20029518.
  • "Cincinnatus and the Apparatchik", with Samuel P. Huntington. World Politics, vol. 16, no. 1 (October 1963), pp. 52–78. doi:10.2307/2009251. JSTOR 2009251.
  • "The Implications of Change for United States Foreign Policy." Department of State Bulletin, vol. LVII (57), no. 1462 [8255] (July 3, 1967), pp. 19–23. U.S. Department of State.
  • "U.S. Foreign Policy: The Search for Focus." Foreign Affairs, vol. 51, no. 4 (July 1973), pp. 708–727. doi:10.2307/20038014. JSTOR 20038014.
  • "A Geostrategy for Eurasia." Foreign Affairs, vol. 76, no. 5 (September/October 1997), pp. 50–64.
  • "Russia Would Gain by Losing Chechnya." New York Times (November 1999), p. A35.
  • Foreign Affairs, vol. 91, no. 1 (January/February 2012), pp. 97–104.
  • "Toward a Global Realignment." American Interest, vol. 11, no. 6 (July/August 2016). Full issue.

Reports edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ In isolation, Kazimierz is pronounced [kaˈʑimjɛʂ].

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski And His Life On The World Stage". Morning Joe. MSNBC. May 30, 2017. Event occurs at 4:12. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021.
  2. ^ Sabine Feiner: Weltordnung durch US-Leadership? Die Konzeption Zbigniew K. Brzezinskis. Westdeutscher Verlag, Wiesbaden 2001
  3. ^ Seiple, Chris (November 27, 2006). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 28, 2017. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c "Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary". The Guardian. May 28, 2017. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c Sklar, Holly. "Founding the Trilateral Commission: Chronology 1970–1977". Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and Elite Planning for World Management. Boston: South End Press, 1980. ISBN 0-89608-103-6 ISBN 0-89608-104-4 OCLC 6958001 604 pages. Excerpts available.
  6. ^ Schmitz, David F.; Walker, Vanessa (2004). "Jimmy Carter and the Foreign Policy of Human Rights: The Development of a Post-Cold War Foreign Policy". Diplomatic History. 28 (1): 113–143. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2004.00400.x. ISSN 0145-2096. JSTOR 24914773. The call to overcome the nation's 'inordinate fear of communism' was not, [Brzezinski] wrote, 'a dismissal of the reality of Soviet power but an optimistic recognition of the greater appeal of liberty and of the superiority of the democratic system.'
  7. ^ a b c d e f Sargent, Daniel (July 24, 2021). "Postmodern America Didn't Deserve Jimmy Carter". Foreign Policy. Retrieved November 21, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Tobin, Conor (April 2020). "The Myth of the "Afghan Trap": Zbigniew Brzezinski and Afghanistan, 1978–1979". Diplomatic History. 44 (2). Oxford University Press: 237–264. doi:10.1093/dh/dhz065.
  9. ^ "The last hawk: Zbigniew Brzezinski (1928–2017)". openDemocracy. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
  10. ^ (Press release). Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. June 9, 2008. Archived from the original on May 18, 2011. Retrieved May 10, 2011.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lewis, Daniel (May 27, 2017). "Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Adviser to Jimmy Carter, Dies at 89". The New York Times. p. A1. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  12. ^ "Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary". The Guardian. May 28, 2017. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
  13. ^ "Tadeusz Brzezinski, Former Polish Consul-General, Dies". Associated Press. Retrieved May 25, 2016.
  14. ^ Gati (2013) p. 237
  15. ^ a b c Hoagland, Jim (May 26, 2017). "Zbigniew Brzezinski, foreign policy intellectual who served as Carter's national security adviser, dies at 89". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 27, 2017.
  16. ^ "USA: Zbigniew Brzeziński nie żyje". poland.us (in Polish). May 26, 2017. Retrieved July 1, 2021.
  17. ^ Al Jazeera: One on One – Zbigniew Brzezinski on YouTube
  18. ^ Luce, Edward (January 13, 2012). "Lunch with the FT: Zbigniew Brzezinski". Financial Times. Retrieved November 16, 2020.
  19. ^ a b Yong, Tang (March 20, 2006). ""Agenda for constructive American-Chinese dialogue huge": Brzezinski". People's Daily. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
  20. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew (July 1950). Russo-Soviet Nationalism (M.A. thesis). McGill University.
  21. ^ a b Gati (2013) p. 208
  22. ^ . Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies. Archived from the original on October 25, 2015. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  23. ^ a b Gati (2013) p. xxi
  24. ^ "Brzezinski, Zbigniew 1928–." In: Social networks and archival context. University of Virginia.
  25. ^ Albright, Madeleine (2003), Madam Secretary: A Memoir. Hyperion. p. 57. ISBN 978-1401399474. OCLC 439810833.
  26. ^ Gati (2013) p. 12
  27. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew; Griffith, William (Spring 1961). "Peaceful Engagement in Eastern Europe". Foreign Affairs. 39 (4): 647. doi:10.2307/20029518. JSTOR 20029518.
  28. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew (January 3, 1970). "Détente in the '70s." The New Republic. p. 18.
  29. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew (December 16, 1968). "Meeting Moscow's Limited Coexistence." The New Leader, vol. 51, no. 24. pp. 11–13.
  30. ^ Brauer, Carl (November 1, 1988). "Lost In Transition". The Atlantic. Washington, D.C.: Atlantic Media. Retrieved March 27, 2014.
  31. ^ John Maclean, "Advisers Key to Foreign Policy Views", The Boston Evening Globe (October 5, 1976)
  32. ^ Vaughan, Patrick G. (2008). "Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Helsinki Final Act". In Nuti, Leopoldo (ed.). The Crisis of Détente in Europe: From Helsinki to Gorbachev, 1975–1985. Taylor & Francis. pp. 11–25. ISBN 978-0-415-46051-4.
  33. ^ Michael Getler, "Dissidents Challenge Prague – Tension Builds Following Demand for Freedom and Democracy", The Washington Post (January 21, 1977).
  34. ^ Zbigniew Brzezinski, Power and Principle: Memoirs of the National Security Adviser, 1977–1981 (New York, 1983), p. 123.
  35. ^ Seyom Brown, Faces of Power (New York, 1983), p. 539.
  36. ^ "Giscard, Schmidt on Détente", The Washington Post (July 19, 1977).
  37. ^ David Binder, "Carter Requests Funds for Big Increase in Broadcasts to Soviet Bloc", The New York Times (March 23, 1977).
  38. ^ Brzezinski, Power and Principle, p. 293.
  39. ^ David A. Andelman, "Brzezinski and Mrs. Carter Hold Discussion with Polish Cardinal", The New York Times (December 29, 1977).
  40. ^ Kevin V. Mulcahy, "The secretary of State and the national security adviser: Foreign policymaking in the Carter and Reagan administrations." Presidential Studies Quarterly 16.2 (1986): 280-299.
  41. ^ Jerel A. Rosati, "Continuity and change in the foreign policy beliefs of political leaders: Addressing the controversy over the Carter administration." Political Psychology (1988): 471-505.
  42. ^ "Jimmy Carter and the Second Yemenite War: A Smaller Shock of 1979? | Wilson Center". www.wilsoncenter.org. Retrieved November 21, 2021.
  43. ^ Vaïsse, Justin (2018). Zbigniew Brzezinski : America's grand strategist. Catherine Porter. Cambridge, Massachusetts. ISBN 978-0-674-91950-1. OCLC 1041140127.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  44. ^ a b "The 3 A.M. Phone Call". National Security Archive. George Washington University. March 1, 2012. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  45. ^ Justin Vaïsse, Zbigniew Brzezinski: America's Grand Strategist (2018) ch 6.
  46. ^ a b c Vaïsse, Zbigniew Brzezinski (2018) ch 6.
  47. ^ a b Gerry Argyris Andrianopoulos (2016). Kissinger and Brzezinski: The NSC and the Struggle for Control of US National Security Policy. Springer. pp. 143–44. ISBN 9781349217410.
  48. ^ Brian J. Auten (2008). Carter's Conversion: The Hardening of American Defense Policy. University of Missouri Press. p. 276. ISBN 9780826218162.
  49. ^ Gary Sick, All fall down: America's fateful encounter with Iran (IB Tauris, 1985).
  50. ^ "Books". dinoknudsen.dk.
  51. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew (August 31, 1978). "Strategy for Camp David" (PDF). CIA. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  52. ^ a b c d e f Kaplan, Robert D. (2008). Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Knopf Doubleday. pp. 115–117. ISBN 978-0-307-54698-2.
  53. ^ a b c d e f Kepel, Gilles (2006). Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam. I.B. Tauris. pp. 138–139, 142–144. ISBN 978-1-84511-257-8.
  54. ^ a b c Blight, James G.; et al. (2012). Becoming Enemies: U.S.–Iran Relations and the Iran–Iraq War, 1979–1988. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 66, 69–70. ISBN 978-1-4422-0830-8.
  55. ^ Coll, Steve (2004). Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. Penguin Group. pp. 47–49. ISBN 9781594200076. Frustrated and hoping to discredit him, the KGB initially planted false stories that Amin was a CIA agent. In the autumn these rumors rebounded on the KGB in a strange case of "blowback," the term used by spies to describe planted propaganda that filters back to confuse the country that first set the story loose.
  56. ^ a b c d e f Riedel, Bruce (2014). What We Won: America's Secret War in Afghanistan, 1979–1989. Brookings Institution Press. pp. ix–xi, 21–22, 93, 98–99, 105. ISBN 978-0-8157-2595-4.
  57. ^ a b Gates, Robert (2007). From the Shadows: The Ultimate Insider's Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War. Simon and Schuster. pp. 145–147. ISBN 978-1-4165-4336-7. When asked whether he expected that the revelations in his memoir (combined with an apocryphal quote attributed to Brzezinski) would inspire "a mind-bending number of conspiracy theories which adamantly—and wrongly—accuse the Carter Administration of luring the Soviets into Afghanistan", Gates replied: "No, because there was no basis in fact for an allegation the administration tried to draw the Soviets into Afghanistan militarily." See Gates, email communication with John Bernell White, Jr., October 15, 2011, as cited in White, John Bernell (May 2012). "The Strategic Mind Of Zbigniew Brzezinski: How A Native Pole Used Afghanistan To Protect His Homeland". pp. 45–46, 82. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  58. ^ Coll, Steve (2004). Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. Penguin Group. pp. 87, 581. ISBN 978-1-59420-007-6. Contemporary memos—particularly those written in the first days after the Soviet invasion—make clear that while Brzezinski was determined to confront the Soviets in Afghanistan through covert action, he was also very worried the Soviets would prevail.  ... Given this evidence and the enormous political and security costs that the invasion imposed on the Carter administration, any claim that Brzezinski lured the Soviets into Afghanistan warrants deep skepticism.
  59. ^ . June 13, 1997. Archived from the original on August 29, 2000. Retrieved May 25, 2016.
  60. ^ See, for example, "NOTES FROM THE EDITORS". Monthly Review. 73 (11). April 2022. Retrieved October 4, 2022. Brzezinski ... had laid the trap for the Soviets in Afghanistan. It was under Brzezinski's direction, following a secret directive signed by Carter in July 1979, that the CIA, working together with the arc of political Islam stretching from Muhammad Zia-ul Haq's Pakistan to the Saudi royals, recruited, armed, and trained the Mujahideen in Afghanistan. The CIA's buildup of the Mujahideen and various terrorist groups in Afghanistan precipitated the Soviet intervention, leading to an endless war that contributed to the destabilization of the Soviet Union itself. To queries as to whether he regretted establishing the arc of terrorism that was to lead to 9/11 and beyond, Brzezinski (who posed in photos with Mujahideen fighters) responded by simply saying that the destruction of the Soviet Union was worth it.
  61. ^ a b Coll, Steve (2004). Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. Penguin Group. p. 593. ISBN 9781594200076. cf. Brzezinski, Zbigniew (December 26, 1979). "Reflections on Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan" (PDF). Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  62. ^ a b Blanton, Tom; Savranskaya, Svetlana (January 29, 2019). "The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan, 1979: Not Trump's Terrorists, Nor Zbig's Warm Water Ports". National Security Archive. Retrieved October 4, 2022.
  63. ^ a b c Vaïsse, Justin (2018). "In the White House". Zbigniew Brzezinski: America's Grand Strategist. Translated by Catherine Porter. Harvard University Press. pp. 307–311. ISBN 9780674919488. (First published in 2016 as Zbigniew Brzezinski: Stratège de l’empire in French.)
  64. ^ a b Leake, Elisabeth (2022). Afghan Crucible: The Soviet Invasion and the Making of Modern Afghanistan. Oxford University Press. p. 178. ISBN 9780198846017.
  65. ^ Rakove, Robert B. (2023). Days of Opportunity: The United States and Afghanistan Before the Soviet Invasion. Columbia University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-231-55842-6.
  66. ^ a b c d e Douglas Brinkley (December 29, 2002). "The Lives They Lived; Out of the Loop". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  67. ^ Marilyn Berger (January 13, 2002). "Cyrus R. Vance, a Confidant Of Presidents, Is Dead at 84". The New York Times. p. A1. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  68. ^ "Brzezinski: U.S. in danger of 'stampeding' to war with Iran".
  69. ^ Hodgson, Godfrey (May 28, 2017). "Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved May 28, 2017.
  70. ^ Glad, Betty (2009). An Outsider in the White House: Jimmy Carter, His Advisors, and the Making of American Foreign Policy. Cornell University Press. pp. 237–239. ISBN 9780801448157.
  71. ^ Cai Xia. "China-US Relations In The Eyes Of The Chinese Communist Party: An Insider's Perspective". Hoover Institution. Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  72. ^ Jackson, David (July 17, 2007). "Bush announces Mideast peace conference". USA Today.
  73. ^ Paul Volcker (November 8, 2007). "'Failure Risks Devastating Consequences' by Zbigniew Brzezinski". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved May 25, 2016.
  74. ^ (PDF). Jimmycarterlibrary.org. August 27, 1977. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2011. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  75. ^ "Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary". The Guardian. May 28, 2017. Retrieved October 21, 2021.
  76. ^ Zbigniew Brzezinski. National Security Adviser to Jimmy Carter, US President (1977-1981). Power and Principle. Chapter 5.
  77. ^ a b "Jimmy Carter and the Second Yemenite War: A Smaller Shock of 1979? | Wilson Center". www.wilsoncenter.org. Retrieved November 21, 2021.
  78. ^ "INTERVIEW WITH DR ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI-(13/6/97)". nsarchive2.gwu.edu. Retrieved September 29, 2022. I think the crisis in Iran heightened our sense of vulnerability in so far as that part of the world is concerned. After all, Iran was one of the two pillars on which both stability and our political preeminence in the Persian Gulf rested. Once the Iranian pillar had collapsed, we were faced with the possibility that one way or another, before too long, we may have either a hostile Iran on the northern shore of the Persian Gulf facing us, or we might even have the Soviets there; and that possibility arose very sharply when the Soviets marched into Afghanistan. If they succeed in occupying it, Iran would be even more vulnerable to the Soviet Union, and in any case, the Persian Gulf would be accessible even to Soviet tactical air force from bases in Afghanistan. Therefore, the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan was viewed by us as of serious strategic consequence, irrespective of whatever may have been the Soviet motives for it. Our view was the objective consequences would be very serious, irrespective of what may or may not have been the subjective motives for the Soviet action.
  79. ^ "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1977–1980, Volume I, Foundations of Foreign Policy – Office of the Historian". history.state.gov. Retrieved November 21, 2021.
  80. ^ Nuclear Employment Policy April 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine[failed verification]" (PDF)
  81. ^ Times, Richard Burt Special to The New York (April 5, 1979). "BRZEZINSKI DEFENDS ARMS TREATY IMPACT". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  82. ^ Garrison, Jean A. (December 2001). "Framing Foreign Policy Alternatives in the Inner Circle: President Carter, His Advisors, and the Struggle for the Arms Control Agenda". Political Psychology. 22 (4): 775–807. doi:10.1111/0162-895X.00262. ISSN 0162-895X.
  83. ^ Getler, Michael (July 23, 1980). "Administration Willing to Confront Reagan on Arms Limits". The Washington Post.
  84. ^ Garrison, Jean A. (2001). "Framing Foreign Policy Alternatives in the Inner Circle: President Carter, His Advisors, and the Struggle for the Arms Control Agenda". Political Psychology. 22 (4): 775–807. doi:10.1111/0162-895X.00262. ISSN 0162-895X. JSTOR 3792486.
  85. ^ "Reagan poprosił Brzezińskiego, by został także jego doradcą". TVN24.pl. May 29, 2017. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  86. ^ "PRESIDENT'S FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE ADVISORY BOARD: Records, 1981-1989" (PDF). Reagan Library Archives.
  87. ^ Talbott, Strobe; Zintl, Robert (December 18, 1989). "Vindications of a hardliner". Time.
  88. ^ "Brzezinski on isolation: former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brezinski warns of the failures of Clinton foreign policy", Insight on the News, August 21, 1995
  89. ^ "". Bloomberg. February 27, 2014.
  90. ^ "A conversation about Kosovo with Zbigniew Brzezinski" October 8, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Charlie Rose, March 25, 1999
  91. ^ a b Sikorski, Radek (May 27, 2017). "For Poles, Zbigniew Brzezinski was our American statesman". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  92. ^ a b c Luce, Edward (January 13, 2012). "Lunch with the FT: Zbigniew Brzezinski". Financial Times. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  93. ^ a b Ignatius, David (May 29, 2017). "Zbigniew Brzezinski was an intrepid advocate of the 'liberal international order'". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  94. ^ Brzezinski, Zbigniew (March 25, 2007). "Terrorized by 'War on Terror'". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  95. ^ a b Obama advisor raises concerns, Ynet, September 15, 2007.
  96. ^ Alec MacGillis, Brzezinski Backs Obama, The Washington Post, August 25, 2007.
  97. ^ Eric Walberg, The real power behind the throne-to-be September 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Al-Ahram, July 24–30, 2008.
  98. ^ Gerald Posner, How Obama Flubbed His Missile Message, The Daily Beast, undated.
  99. ^ Brzezinski: U.S. must deny Israel airspace September 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, September 21, 2009.
  100. ^ Jake Tapper, Zbig Brzezinski: Obama Administration Should Tell Israel U.S. Will Attack Israeli Jets if They Try to Attack Iran October 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, ABC News, September 20, 2009.
  101. ^ Tayla. "Thursday, September 24". Hearsay.org. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
  102. ^ "PBS: Turmoil in Arab World: Deepening Divisions or Turning a New Page?". PBS.
  103. ^ a b "Zbigniew Brzezinski: After Putin's aggression in Ukraine, the West must be ready to respond". The Washington Post. March 3, 2014. Retrieved May 25, 2016.
  104. ^ a b Piotr Pietrzak (January 12, 2023). The Brzezinski Doctrine And NATO’s Response To Russia’s Assault On Ukraine. Modern Diplomacy. https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2023/01/12/the-brzezinski-doctrine-and-natos-response-to-russias-assault-on-ukraine/
  105. ^ "Ian Brzezinski". Atlantic Council. 2016. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  106. ^ . National Endowment for Democracy. October 15, 2009. Archived from the original on March 28, 2014. Retrieved March 27, 2014.
  107. ^ "Membership Roster – Council on Foreign Relations". Cfr.org. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
  108. ^ . Archived from the original on February 2, 2014.
  109. ^ Gati, Charles (September 2013). Zbig | Johns Hopkins University Press Books. JHU Press. ISBN 9781421409764. Retrieved December 4, 2021. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  110. ^ Kaplan, Fred (November 5, 2003). "Bush is in Zbig trouble". Slate Magazine. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
  111. ^ "Carter adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski dies at 89". Politico. May 26, 2017.
  112. ^ James Fallows (May 26, 2017). "Zbigniew Brzezinski". The Atlantic.
  113. ^ "Pogrzeb Zbigniewa Brzezińskiego odbędzie się 9 czerwca" (in Polish). TVN24.pl. June 1, 2017. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  114. ^ a b Flegenheimer, Matt (June 9, 2017). "Washington Remembers Brzezinski, and a Very Different Era". The New York Times. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  115. ^ "Jimmy Carter: Presidential Medal of Freedom Remarks at the Presentation Ceremony". The American Presidency Project. January 16, 1981. Retrieved June 10, 2017.
  116. ^ "Seznam vyznamenaných". hrad.cz (in Czech). Retrieved June 9, 2022.
  117. ^ "Brzezinski gets highest Polish order". UPI. December 19, 1995. Retrieved June 10, 2017.
  118. ^ "Prezident SR - Kríž prezidenta Slovenskej republiky, II. stupeň". archiv.prezident.sk. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  119. ^ "Apbalvotie un statistika" (in Latvian). president.lv. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
  120. ^ Shen, Vivian. "Research Guides @ Fordham: Fordham University History: Fordham Commencement Speakers 1941–present". fordham.libguides.com.
  121. ^ "Williams College: Caution on Science Is Offered". The New York Times. June 9, 1986.
  122. ^ "Honorary Degrees". Commencement.
  123. ^ a b "KUL – University – Honorary Doctorates".
  124. ^ "Honorary Doctors". Vilnius University.

Further reading edit

External links edit

External media
Audio
  Interview for Vietnam: A Television History at WGBH Open Vault (July 11, 1983)
  Interview for Center for Strategic & International Studies (2012)
Video
  Interview for Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr. (March 31, 1983)
  Interview for War and Peace in the Nuclear Age at WGBH Open Vault (November 19, 1986)
  Interview for Rutherford Living History at Duke University (March 29, 2007)
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Zbigniew Brzezinski on Charlie Rose
  • Zbigniew Brzezinski at IMDb
  • Zbigniew Brzezinski collected news and commentary at The New York Times
  • Neal Conan. "Brzezinski discusses his participation in the 1978 Camp David". Talk of the Nation, NPR, September 16, 2003.
  • ISSF Roundtable 7-4, Zbig: The Strategy and Statecraft of Zbigniew Brzezinski, 2014 (Proceedings).
  • , by John Bernell White, Jr.
  • Brzezinski formulating a New Foreign Policy Approach toward Russia at the Center for Strategic & International Studies.
  • "Iran: The Crescent of Crisis" November 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Time, January 1979.
  • Keynote Address – Inaugural Forum of the Brzezinski Chair August 17, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
Political offices
Preceded by National Security Advisor
1977–1981
Succeeded by

zbigniew, brzezinski, zbigniew, kazimierz, brzeziński, zbig, nyef, brə, skee, polish, ˈzbiɡɲɛf, kaˈʑimjɛʐ, bʐɛˈʑij, skʲi, march, 1928, 2017, known, zbig, polish, american, diplomat, political, scientist, served, counselor, president, lyndon, johnson, from, 196. Zbigniew Kazimierz Brzezinski ˈ z b ɪ ɡ n j ɛ f b r e ˈ z ɪ n s k i ZBIG nyef bre ZIN skee 1 Polish ˈzbiɡɲɛf kaˈʑimjɛʐ bʐɛˈʑij skʲi a March 28 1928 May 26 2017 known as Zbig was a Polish American diplomat and political scientist He served as a counselor to President Lyndon B Johnson from 1966 to 1968 and was President Jimmy Carter s National Security Advisor from 1977 to 1981 As a scholar Brzezinski belonged to the realist school of international relations standing in the geopolitical tradition of Halford Mackinder and Nicholas J Spykman 2 3 while elements of liberal idealism have also been identified in his outlook 4 Brzezinski was the primary organizer of The Trilateral Commission 5 Zbigniew BrzezinskiBrzezinski in 19779th United States National Security AdvisorIn office January 20 1977 January 20 1981PresidentJimmy CarterDeputyDavid L AaronPreceded byBrent ScowcroftSucceeded byRichard V AllenPersonal detailsBornZbigniew Kazimierz Brzezinski 1928 03 28 March 28 1928Warsaw PolandDiedMay 26 2017 2017 05 26 aged 89 Falls Church Virginia U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseEmilie Benes m 1961 wbr ChildrenIan Mark MikaParentsTadeusz Brzezinski father Leonia Roman Brzezinska mother RelativesMatthew Brzezinski nephew EducationMcGill University BA MA Harvard University PhD Major foreign policy events during his time in office included the normalization of relations with the People s Republic of China and the severing of ties with the Republic of China on Taiwan the signing of the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty SALT II with the Soviet Union the brokering of the Camp David Accords between Egypt and Israel the overthrow of the US friendly Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the start of the Iranian Revolution the United States encouragement of dissidents in Eastern Europe and championing of human rights 6 in order to undermine the influence of the Soviet Union 7 supporting the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet backed Democratic Republic of Afghanistan and ultimately Soviet troops during the Soviet Afghan War 8 and the signing of the Torrijos Carter Treaties relinquishing U S control of the Panama Canal after 1999 Brzezinski s personal views have been described as progressive international 7 political liberal and strongly anti communist 4 He was an advocate for anti Soviet containment for human rights organizations and for cultivating a strong West 7 He has been praised for his ability to see the big picture Critics described him as hawkish or a foreign policy hardliner on some issues such as Poland Russia relations 9 Brzezinski served as the Robert E Osgood Professor of American Foreign Policy at Johns Hopkins University s School of Advanced International Studies a scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and a member of various boards and councils He frequently appeared as an expert on the PBS program The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer ABC News This Week with Christiane Amanpour and MSNBC s Morning Joe where his daughter Mika Brzezinski is co anchor He supported the Prague Process 10 His elder son Ian is a foreign policy expert and his younger son Mark is the current United States Ambassador to Poland and previously served as the United States Ambassador to Sweden from 2011 to 2015 Contents 1 Early years 2 Academia 3 The Trilateral Commission 4 Advisor to President Carter 5 National Security Advisor 5 1 Major policies 5 1 1 Afghanistan 5 1 1 1 Afghan Trap theory 5 1 2 Iran 5 1 3 China 5 1 4 Arab Israeli conflict 5 1 5 Ending Soviet detente 5 1 6 Nuclear strategy 5 1 7 Arms control 6 After power 7 Later years 8 Personal life 9 Public life 10 Film appearances 11 Death 12 Honors 12 1 Honorary degrees 13 Works 13 1 Major works by Brzezinski 13 2 Other books and monographs 13 3 Book contributions 13 4 Selected articles and essays 13 5 Reports 14 Explanatory notes 15 Citations 16 Further reading 17 External linksEarly years editMain articles History of Poland 1918 39 Second Polish Republic Weimar Republic Nazi Germany History of the Soviet Union 1927 53 and Great Purge Zbigniew Brzezinski was born in Warsaw Poland on March 28 1928 11 into an aristocratic Roman Catholic 12 family originally from Brzezany Tarnopol Voivodeship then part of Poland currently in Ukraine The town of Brzezany is thought to be the source of the family name Brzezinski s parents were Leonia nee Roman Brzezinska and Tadeusz Brzezinski a Polish diplomat who was posted to Germany from 1931 to 1935 Zbigniew Brzezinski thus spent some of his earliest years witnessing the rise of the Nazis 13 From 1936 to 1938 Tadeusz Brzezinski was posted to the Soviet Union during Joseph Stalin s Great Purge 14 and was later praised by Israel for his work helping Jews escape from the Nazis 15 In 1938 Tadeusz Brzezinski was posted to Montreal as a consul general 15 The Brzezinski family lived near the Polish Consulate General on Stanley Street 16 In 1939 the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was agreed to by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union subsequently the two powers invaded Poland The 1945 Yalta Conference among the Allies allotted Poland to the Soviet sphere of influence The Second World War had a profound effect on Brzezinski who stated in an interview The extraordinary violence that was perpetrated against Poland did affect my perception of the world and made me much more sensitive to the fact that a great deal of world politics is a fundamental struggle 17 Academia editAfter attending Loyola College in Montreal 18 Brzezinski entered McGill University in 1945 to obtain both his Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees received in 1949 and 1950 respectively His Master s thesis focused on the various nationalities within the Soviet Union 19 20 Brzezinski s plan for pursuing further studies in the United Kingdom in preparation for a diplomatic career in Canada fell through principally because he was ruled ineligible for a scholarship he had won that was only open to British subjects Brzezinski then attended Harvard University to work on a doctorate with Merle Fainsod focusing on the Soviet Union and the relationship between the October Revolution Vladimir Lenin s state and the actions of Joseph Stalin He received his Ph D in 1953 the same year he traveled to Munich and met Jan Nowak Jezioranski head of the Polish desk of Radio Free Europe He later collaborated with Carl J Friedrich to develop the concept of totalitarianism as a way to more accurately and powerfully characterize and criticize the Soviets in 1956 21 Brzezinski was on the faculty of Harvard University from 1953 to 1960 and of Columbia University from 1960 to 1972 where he headed the Institute on Communist Affairs He was Senior Research Professor of International Relations at the Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington D C 22 For historical background on major events during this period see History of Poland Gomulka s road to socialism 1956 70 and 1956 Hungarian Revolution As a Harvard professor he argued against Dwight Eisenhower s and John Foster Dulles s policy of rollback saying that antagonism would push Eastern Europe further toward the Soviets 23 The Polish protests followed by the Polish October and the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 lent some support to Brzezinski s idea that the Eastern Europeans could gradually counter Soviet domination In 1957 he visited Poland for the first time since he left as a child and his visit reaffirmed his judgement that splits within the Eastern bloc were profound He developed ideas that he called peaceful engagement 23 Brzezinski became a naturalized American citizen in 1958 24 Very soon after Harvard awarded an associate professorship in 1959 to Henry Kissinger instead of to him 11 Brzezinski moved to New York City to teach at Columbia University 21 Here he wrote Soviet Bloc Unity and Conflict which focused on Eastern Europe since the beginning of the Cold War He also taught future Secretary of State Madeleine Albright who like Brzezinski s wife Emilie was of Czech descent and whom he also mentored during her early years in Washington 25 He also became a member of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York and joined the Bilderberg Group 26 During the 1960 U S presidential elections Brzezinski was an advisor to the John F Kennedy campaign urging a non antagonistic policy toward Eastern European governments Seeing the Soviet Union as having entered a period of stagnation both economic and political Brzezinski predicted a future breakup of the Soviet Union along lines of nationality expanding on his master s thesis 19 As a scholar he developed his thoughts over the years fashioning fundamental theories on international relations and geostrategy During the 1950s he worked on the theory of totalitarianism His thought in the 1960s focused on wider Western understanding of disunity in the Soviet Bloc as well as developing the thesis of intensified degeneration of the Soviet Union During the 1970s he proposed that the Soviet system was incapable of evolving beyond the industrial phase into the technetronic age Brzezinski continued to argue for and support detente for the next few years publishing Peaceful Engagement in Eastern Europe in Foreign Affairs 27 and he continued to support non antagonistic policies after the Cuban Missile Crisis on the grounds that such policies might disabuse Eastern European nations of their fear of an aggressive Germany and pacify Western Europeans fearful of a superpower compromise along the lines of the Yalta Conference In a 1962 book Brzezinski argued against the possibility of a Sino Soviet split saying their alignment was not splitting and is not likely to split 11 nbsp The conference venue at the Hotel Regina during the second Wehrkunde Begegnung in 1964 Pictured are among others Zbigniew Brzezinski far left as well as Ewald von Kleist and Franz Josef Strauss center In 1964 Brzezinski supported Lyndon Johnson s presidential campaign and the Great Society and civil rights policies while on the other hand he saw Soviet leadership as having been purged of any creativity following the ousting of Khrushchev Through Jan Nowak Jezioranski Brzezinski met with Adam Michnik future Polish Solidarity activist citation needed Brzezinski continued to support engagement with Eastern European governments while warning against De Gaulle s vision of a Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals He also supported the Vietnam War In 1966 Brzezinski was appointed to the Policy Planning Council of the U S Department of State President Johnson s October 7 1966 Bridge Building speech was a product of Brzezinski s influence In 1968 Brzezinski resigned from the council in protest of President Johnson s expansion of the war 11 Next he became a foreign policy advisor to Vice President Hubert Humphrey 11 For historical background on events during this period see Six Day War Prague Spring and Socialism with a human face Tet offensive Events in Czechoslovakia further reinforced Brzezinski s criticisms of the right s aggressive stance toward Eastern European governments His service to the Johnson administration and his fact finding trip to Vietnam made him an enemy of the New Left For the 1968 U S presidential campaign Brzezinski was chairman of the Humphrey s Foreign Policy Task Force Brzezinski called for a pan European conference an idea that would eventually find fruition in 1973 as the Conference for Security and Co operation in Europe 28 Meanwhile he became a leading critic of both the Nixon Kissinger detente condominium as well as George McGovern s pacifism 29 The Trilateral Commission edit nbsp The Trilateral Commission emblem In his 1970 piece Between Two Ages America s Role in the Technetronic Era Brzezinski argued that a coordinated policy among developed nations was necessary in order to counter global instability erupting from increasing economic inequality Out of this thesis Brzezinski co founded the Trilateral Commission with David Rockefeller serving as director from 1973 to 1976 5 The Trilateral Commission is a group of prominent political and business leaders and academics primarily from the United States Western Europe and Japan Its purpose was to strengthen relations among the three most industrially advanced regions of the capitalist world In 1974 Brzezinski selected Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter as a member 11 5 Advisor to President Carter edit nbsp Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and National Security Council Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski 1977 Carter announced his candidacy for the 1976 presidential campaign to a skeptical media and proclaimed himself an eager student of Brzezinski 30 Brzezinski became Carter s principal foreign policy advisor by late 1975 He became an outspoken critic of the Nixon Kissinger over reliance on detente a situation preferred by the Soviet Union favoring the Helsinki process instead which focused on human rights international law and peaceful engagement in Eastern Europe Brzezinski was considered to be the Democrats response to Republican Henry Kissinger 31 Carter engaged his incumbent opponent for the presidency Gerald Ford in foreign policy debates by contrasting the Trilateral vision with Ford s detente 32 After his victory in 1976 Carter made Brzezinski National Security Advisor Earlier that year major labor riots broke out in Poland laying the foundations for Solidarity Brzezinski began by emphasizing the Basket III human rights in the Helsinki Final Act which inspired Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia shortly thereafter 33 Brzezinski assisted with writing parts of Carter s inaugural address and this served his purpose of sending a positive message to Soviet dissidents 34 The Soviet Union and Western European leaders both complained that this kind of rhetoric ran against the code of detente that Nixon and Kissinger had established 35 36 Brzezinski ran up against members of his own Democratic Party who disagreed with this interpretation of detente including Secretary of State Cyrus Vance Vance argued for less emphasis on human rights in order to gain Soviet agreement to Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT whereas Brzezinski favored doing both at the same time Brzezinski then ordered Radio Free Europe transmitters to increase the power and area of their broadcasts a provocative reversal of Nixon Kissinger policies 37 West German chancellor Helmut Schmidt objected to Brzezinski s agenda even calling for the removal of Radio Free Europe from German soil 38 The State Department was alarmed by Brzezinski s support for dissidents in East Germany and objected to his suggestion that Carter s first overseas visit be to Poland He visited Warsaw and met with Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski against the objection of the U S Ambassador to Poland recognizing the Roman Catholic Church as the legitimate opposition to communist rule in Poland 39 By 1978 Brzezinski and Vance were more and more at odds over the direction of Carter s foreign policy Vance sought to continue the style of detente engineered by Nixon Kissinger with a focus on arms control Brzezinski believed that detente emboldened the Soviets in Angola and the Middle East and so he argued for increased military strength and an emphasis on human rights Vance the State Department and the media criticized Brzezinski publicly as seeking to revive the Cold War Brzezinski advised Carter in 1978 to engage the People s Republic of China and traveled to Beijing to lay the groundwork for the normalization of relations between the two countries This also resulted in the severing of ties with the United States longtime anti Communist ally the Republic of China Taiwan 40 41 For historical background on this period of history see Iranian Revolution Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and Solidarity 1979 saw two major strategically important events the overthrow of U S ally the Shah of Iran and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan The Iranian Revolution precipitated the Iran hostage crisis which would last for the rest of Carter s presidency Brzezinski anticipated the Soviet invasion and with the support of Saudi Arabia Pakistan and the People s Republic of China he created a strategy to undermine the Soviet presence Using this atmosphere of insecurity Brzezinski led the United States toward a new arms buildup and the development of the Rapid Deployment Forces policies that are both more generally associated with Reagan s presidency now citation needed In 1979 the Soviets intervened in the Second Yemenite War The Soviet backing of South Yemen constituted a smaller shock in tandem with tensions that were rising due to the Iranian Revolution This played a role in shifting Carter s viewpoint on the Soviet Union to a more assertive one a shift that finalized with the Soviet Afghan War 42 Brzezinski constantly urged either the restoration of the Shah of Iran to power or a military takeover whatever the short term costs in terms of values 43 On November 9 1979 Brzezinski was awakened at 3 am by a phone call with a startling message The Soviets had just launched 250 nuclear weapons at the United States Minutes later Brzezinski received another call The early warning system actually showed 2 000 missiles heading toward the United States 44 As Brzezinski prepared to phone President Jimmy Carter to plan a full scale response he received a third call It was a false alarm An early warning training tape generating indications of a large scale Soviet nuclear attack had somehow transferred to the actual early warning network which triggered an all too real scramble 44 Brzezinski acting under a lame duck Carter presidency but encouraged that Solidarity in Poland had vindicated his style of engagement with Eastern Europe took a hard line stance against what seemed like an imminent Soviet invasion of Poland He even made a midnight phone call to Pope John Paul II whose visit to Poland in 1979 had foreshadowed the emergence of Solidarity warning him in advance The U S stance was a significant change from previous reactions to Soviet repression in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968 citation needed Brzezinski developed the Carter Doctrine which committed the U S to use military force in defense of the Persian Gulf 15 In 1981 President Carter presented Brzezinski with the Presidential Medal of Freedom National Security Advisor editFurther information Presidency of Jimmy Carter Foreign policy Main article History of the United States National Security Council 1977 81 nbsp National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski with Chairman of The Joint Chiefs of Staff General David C Jones and Deputy National Security Advisor David L Aaron following National Security Council meeting at The White House December 20 1978 nbsp National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski accompanying President Jimmy Carter during a visit to Strategic Air Command s Headquarters in Offutt Air Force Base Nebraska President Carter chose Brzezinski for the position of National Security Adviser NSA because he wanted an assertive intellectual at his side to provide him with day to day advice and guidance on foreign policy decisions Brzezinski would preside over a reorganized National Security Council NSC structure fashioned to ensure that the NSA would be only one of many players in the foreign policy process 45 Initially Carter reduced the NSC staff by one half and decreased the number of standing NSC committees from eight to two All issues referred to the NSC were reviewed by one of the two new committees either the Policy Review Committee PRC or the Special Coordinating Committee SCC The PRC focused on specific issues and its chairmanship rotated The SCC was always chaired by Brzezinski a circumstance he had to negotiate with Carter to achieve Carter believed that by making the NSA chairman of only one of the two committees he would prevent the NSC from being the overwhelming influence on foreign policy decisions it had been under Kissinger s chairmanship during the Nixon administration 46 The SCC was charged with considering issues that cut across several departments including oversight of intelligence activities arms control evaluation and crisis management Much of the SCC s time during the Carter years was spent on SALT issues The Council held few formal meetings convening only 10 times compared with 125 meetings during the eight years of the Nixon and Ford administrations Instead Carter used frequent informal meetings as a decision making device typically his Friday breakfasts usually attended by the Vice President the secretaries of State and Defense Brzezinski and the chief domestic adviser 46 No agendas were prepared and no formal records were kept of these meetings sometimes resulting in differing interpretations of the decisions actually agreed upon Brzezinski was careful in managing his own weekly luncheons with secretaries Vance and Brown in preparation for NSC discussions to maintain a complete set of notes Brzezinski also sent weekly reports to the President on major foreign policy undertakings and problems with recommendations for courses of action President Carter enjoyed these reports and frequently annotated them with his own views Brzezinski and the NSC used these presidential notes 159 of them as the basis for NSC actions 46 From the beginning Brzezinski made sure that the new NSC institutional relationships would assure him a major voice in the shaping of foreign policy While he knew that Carter would not want him to be another Kissinger Brzezinski also felt confident that the President did not want Secretary of State Vance to become another Dulles and would want his own input on key foreign policy decisions Brzezinski s power gradually expanded into the operational area during the Carter Presidency He increasingly assumed the role of a presidential emissary In 1978 for example Brzezinski traveled to Beijing to lay the groundwork for normalizing U S PRC relations 47 Like Kissinger before him Brzezinski maintained his own personal relationship with Soviet Ambassador to the United States Anatoly Dobrynin Brzezinski had NSC staffers monitor State Department cable traffic through the Situation Room and call back to the State Department if the President preferred to revise or take issue with outgoing State Department instructions He also appointed his own press spokesman and his frequent press briefings and appearances on television interview shows made him a prominent public figure although perhaps not nearly as much as Kissinger had been under Nixon 47 The Soviet military invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 significantly damaged the already tenuous relationship between Vance and Brzezinski Vance felt that Brzezinski s linkage of SALT to other Soviet activities and the MX together with the growing domestic criticisms in the United States of the SALT II Accord convinced Brezhnev to decide on military intervention in Afghanistan Brzezinski however later recounted that he advanced proposals to maintain Afghanistan s independence but was frustrated by the Department of State s opposition An NSC working group on Afghanistan wrote several reports on the deteriorating situation in 1979 but Carter ignored them until the Soviet intervention destroyed his illusions Only then did he decide to abandon SALT II ratification and pursue the anti Soviet policies that Brzezinski proposed 48 The Iranian revolution was the last straw for the disintegrating relationship between Vance and Brzezinski As the upheaval developed the two advanced fundamentally different positions Brzezinski wanted to control the revolution and increasingly suggested military action to prevent Ayatollah Khomeini from coming to power while Vance wanted to come to terms with the new Islamic Republic of Iran As a consequence Carter failed to develop a coherent approach to the Iranian situation Vance s resignation following the unsuccessful mission to rescue the American hostages in March 1980 undertaken over his objections was the final result of the deep disagreement between Brzezinski and Vance 49 Major policies edit During the 1960s Brzezinski articulated the strategy of peaceful engagement for undermining the Soviet bloc and while serving on the State Department Policy Planning Council persuaded President Lyndon B Johnson to adopt in October 1966 peaceful engagement as U S strategy placing detente ahead of German reunification and thus reversing prior U S priorities citation needed During the 1970s and 1980s at the height of his political involvement Brzezinski participated in the formation of the Trilateral Commission in order to more closely cement U S Japanese European relations As the three most economically advanced sectors of the world the people of the three regions could be brought together in cooperation that would give them a more cohesive stance against the communist world 50 While serving in the White House Brzezinski emphasized the centrality of human rights as a means of placing the Soviet Union on the ideological defensive With Jimmy Carter in Camp David he assisted in the attainment of the Egypt Israel peace treaty 51 He actively supported Polish Solidarity and the Afghan resistance to Soviet invasion and provided covert support for national independence movements in the Soviet Union He played a leading role in normalizing U S PRC relations and in the development of joint strategic cooperation cultivating a relationship with Deng Xiaoping for which he is thought very highly of in mainland China to this day citation needed In the 1990s he formulated the strategic case for buttressing the independent statehood of Ukraine partially as a means to prevent a resurgence of the Russian Empire citation needed and to drive Russia toward integration with the West promoting instead geopolitical pluralism in the space of the former Soviet Union He developed a plan for Europe urging the expansion of NATO making the case for the expansion of NATO to the Baltic countries He served as Bill Clinton s emissary to Azerbaijan in order to promote the Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan pipeline Subsequently he became a member of Honorary Council of Advisors of U S Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce USACC Further he led together with Lane Kirkland the effort to increase the endowment for the U S sponsored Polish American Freedom Foundation from the proposed 112 million to an eventual total of well over 200 million citation needed Afghanistan edit Main article Operation Cyclone nbsp Carter Brzezinski and Prince Fahd of Saudi ArabiaCommunists under the leadership of Nur Muhammad Taraki seized power in Afghanistan on April 27 1978 52 The new regime divided between Taraki s extremist Khalq faction and the more moderate Parcham signed a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union in December of that year 52 53 Taraki s efforts to improve secular education and redistribute land were accompanied by mass executions including of many conservative religious leaders and political oppression unprecedented in Afghan history igniting a revolt by mujahideen rebels 52 Following a general uprising in April 1979 Taraki was deposed by Khalq rival Hafizullah Amin in September 52 53 Amin was considered a brutal psychopath by foreign observers even the Soviets were alarmed by the brutality of the Afghan communists and suspected Amin of being an agent of the U S Central Intelligence Agency CIA although that was not the case 52 53 54 55 By December Amin s government had lost control of much of the country prompting the Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan execute Amin and install Parcham leader Babrak Karmal as president 52 53 President Carter was surprised by the invasion as the consensus of the U S intelligence community during 1978 and 1979 reiterated as late as September 29 1979 was that Moscow would not intervene in force even if it appeared likely that the Khalq government was about to collapse Indeed Carter s diary entries from November 1979 until the Soviet invasion in late December contain only two short references to Afghanistan and are instead preoccupied with the ongoing hostage crisis in Iran 56 In the West the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was considered a threat to global security and the oil supplies of the Persian Gulf 53 Moreover the failure to accurately predict Soviet intentions caused American officials to reappraise the Soviet threat to both Iran and Pakistan although it is now known that those fears were overblown For example U S intelligence closely followed Soviet exercises for an invasion of Iran throughout 1980 while an earlier warning from Brzezinski that if the Soviets came to dominate Afghanistan they could promote a separate Baluchistan thus dismembering Pakistan and Iran took on new urgency 54 56 These concerns were a major factor in the unrequited efforts of both the Carter and Reagan administrations to improve relations with Iran and resulted in massive aid to Pakistan s Muhammad Zia ul Haq Zia s ties with the U S had been strained during Carter s presidency due to Pakistan s nuclear program and the execution of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in April 1979 but Carter told Brzezinski and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance as early as January 1979 that it was vital to repair our relationships with Pakistan in light of the unrest in Iran 56 One initiative Carter authorized to achieve this goal was a collaboration between the CIA and Pakistan s Inter Services Intelligence ISI through the ISI the CIA began providing some 695 000 8 worth of non lethal assistance to the mujahideen on July 3 1979 several months prior to the Soviet invasion The modest scope of this early collaboration was likely influenced by the understanding later recounted by CIA official Robert Gates that a substantial U S covert aid program might have raise d the stakes thereby causing the Soviets to intervene more directly and vigorously than otherwise intended 56 57 58 The first shipment of U S weapons intended for the mujahideen reached Pakistan on January 10 1980 shortly following the Soviet invasion 54 In the aftermath of the invasion Carter was determined to respond vigorously to what he considered a dangerous provocation In a televised speech he announced sanctions on the Soviet Union promised renewed aid to Pakistan and committed the U S to the Persian Gulf s defense 56 57 The thrust of U S policy for the duration of the war was determined by Carter in early 1980 Carter initiated a program to arm the mujahideen through Pakistan s ISI and secured a pledge from Saudi Arabia to match U S funding for this purpose U S support for the mujahideen accelerated under Carter s successor Ronald Reagan at a final cost to U S taxpayers of some 3 billion The Soviets were unable to quell the insurgency and withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989 precipitating the dissolution of the Soviet Union itself 56 However the decision to route U S aid through Pakistan led to massive fraud as weapons sent to Karachi were frequently sold on the local market rather than delivered to the Afghan rebels Karachi soon became one of the most violent cities in the world Pakistan also controlled which rebels received assistance of the seven mujahideen groups supported by Zia s government four espoused Islamic fundamentalist beliefs and these fundamentalists received most of the funding 53 Years later in a 1997 CNN National Security Archive interview Brzezinski detailed the strategy taken by the Carter administration against the Soviets in 1979 We immediately launched a twofold process when we heard that the Soviets had entered Afghanistan The first involved direct reactions and sanctions focused on the Soviet Union and both the State Department and the National Security Council prepared long lists of sanctions to be adopted of steps to be taken to increase the international costs to the Soviet Union of their actions And the second course of action led to my going to Pakistan a month or so after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan for the purpose of coordinating with the Pakistanis a joint response the purpose of which would be to make the Soviets bleed for as much and as long as is possible and we engaged in that effort in a collaborative sense with the Saudis the Egyptians the British the Chinese and we started providing weapons to the Mujaheddin from various sources again for example some Soviet arms from the Egyptians and the Chinese We even got Soviet arms from the Czechoslovak communist government since it was obviously susceptible to material incentives and at some point we started buying arms for the Mujaheddin from the Soviet army in Afghanistan because that army was increasingly corrupt 59 Afghan Trap theory edit Following the September 11 attacks a theory that Brzezinski intentionally provoked the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 was widely repeated 60 with some adherents blaming Brzezinski and the Carter administration for the decades long Afghanistan conflict 1978 present the September 11 attacks and the 2016 Orlando nightclub shooting A 2020 review of declassified U S documents by Conor Tobin in the journal Diplomatic History contends that this theory referred to as the Afghan Trap theory by the author is a misrepresentation of the historical record based almost entirely on a caricature of Brzezinski as an anti communist fanatic a disputed statement attributed to Brzezinski by a Le Nouvel Observateur journalist in 1998 which was repeatedly den ied by Brzezinski himself and the circumstantial fact that U S support antedated the invasion 8 In addition to Tobin several academic or journalistic sources have questioned the veracity of aspects of the Afghan Trap theory 61 62 63 64 as have at least two former high ranking Carter administration officials 8 While it is true that the March 1979 Herat uprising in Afghanistan and a desire to rebuild strained U S relations with Pakistani leader Muhammad Zia ul Haq in light of the Iranian Revolution prompted Carter to sign presidential findings in July 1979 permitting the CIA to spend 695 000 on non military assistance e g cash medical equipment and radio transmitters to Afghan mujahideen insurgents and on a propaganda campaign targeting the Soviet backed leadership of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan or DRA internal deliberations show that U S policies were almost wholly reactive to the Soviets escalating military presence with policymakers rejecting a substantial covert aid program including lethal provisions to avoid provoking Moscow The Soviet military and political presence in Afghanistan steadily increased throughout 1979 including tens of millions of dollars in military aid provided by Moscow to the DRA 8 According to Tobin Brzezinski went to considerable lengths to dissuade the Soviets from invading Afghanistan urging the Carter administration to publicize information regarding the growing Soviet military role in Afghanistan s nascent civil war and to explicitly warn the Soviets of severe sanctions in the event of an invasion when his warnings were watered down by the State Department under the leadership of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance Brzezinski leaked information to a journalist resulting in an August 1979 article in The New York Times headlined U S Is Indirectly Pressing Russians to Halt Afghanistan Intervention Ironically Soviet general Valentin Varennikov complained in 1995 that American officials had never made Afghanistan s strategic significance clear to their Soviet counterparts prior to December 1979 speculating in line with the Afghan Trap theory that this omission may have been deliberate as the U S had an interest in us getting stuck in Afghanistan and paying the greatest possible price for that 8 Furthermore Brzezinski attempted to discretely negotiate a withdrawal of Soviet troops with Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin during 1980 privately conceding that the country would likely remain within the Soviet sphere of influence following a diplomatic settlement as he had little confidence in the mujahideen s ability to inflict a military defeat on the Red Army 8 63 Carter administration officials Robert Gates and Vice President Walter Mondale criticized the Afghan Trap theory between 2010 and 2012 the former stating that it had no basis in fact and the latter calling it a huge unwarranted leap 8 Tobin concludes The small scale covert program that developed in response to the increasing Soviet influence was part of a contingency plan if the Soviets did intervene militarily as Washington would be in a better position to make it difficult for them to consolidate their position but not designed to induce an intervention 8 Historian Robert Rakove wrote the notion of a U S effort to entrap the Soviet Union in Afghanistan has been methodically and effectively refuted by Conor Tobin 65 Steve Coll had previously stated in 2004 that c ontemporary memos particularly those written in the first days after the Soviet invasion make clear that while Brzezinski was determined to confront the Soviets in Afghanistan through covert action he was also very worried the Soviets would prevail Given this evidence and the enormous political and security costs that the invasion imposed on the Carter administration any claim that Brzezinski lured the Soviets into Afghanistan warrants deep skepticism 61 Coll s specific debunking of the Brzezinski Nouvel Observateur interview was cited by the National Security Archive in 2019 62 In 2016 Justin Vaisse referred to t he thesis according to which a trap was set having been dismissed as s uch a position would not be compatible with the archives 63 Elisabeth Leake writing in 2022 agreed that the original provision was certainly inadequate to force a Soviet armed intervention Instead it adhered to broader US practices of providing limited covert support to anti communist forces worldwide 64 Iran edit nbsp The Iranian Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi meeting with Alfred Atherton William H Sullivan Cyrus Vance President Jimmy Carter and Zbigniew Brzezinski in 1977In November 1979 revolutionary students stormed the Embassy of the United States Tehran and took American diplomats hostage Brzezinski argued against Secretary of State Cyrus Vance s proposed diplomatic solutions to the Iran hostage crisis insisting they would deliver Iran to the Soviets 11 Vance struggling with gout went to Florida on Thursday April 10 1980 for a long weekend 66 On Friday Brzezinski held a newly scheduled meeting of the National Security Council and authorized Operation Eagle Claw a military expedition into Tehran to rescue the hostages 66 Deputy Secretary Warren Christopher who attended the meeting in Vance s place did not inform Vance 66 Furious Vance handed in his resignation on principle calling Brzezinski evil 66 President Carter aborted the operation after three of the eight helicopters he had sent into the Dasht e Kavir desert crashed and a fourth then collided with a transport plane causing a fire that killed eight servicemen 66 The hostages were ultimately released on the day of the first inauguration of Ronald Reagan after 444 days in captivity 67 Along with Kissinger and David Rockefeller Brzezinski played a role in convincing Carter to admit the exiled Shah into the U S 7 Brzezinski has compared complaints by US officials about Iran s alleged nuclear ambitions to similar statements made before the Iraq war began He told I think the administration the President and the Vice President particularly are trying to hype the atmosphere and that is reminiscent of what preceded the war in Iraq 68 China edit nbsp Brzezinski hosts a dinner for Chinese Communist leader Deng Xiaoping in 1979Shortly after taking office in 1977 President Carter again reaffirmed the United States position of upholding the Shanghai Communique In May 1978 Brzezinski overcame concerns from the State Department and traveled to Beijing where he began talks that seven months later led to full diplomatic relations 11 The United States and People s Republic of China announced on December 15 1978 that the two governments would establish diplomatic relations on January 1 1979 This required that the United States sever relations with the Republic of China on Taiwan Consolidating U S gains in befriending Communist China was a major priority stressed by Brzezinski during his time as National Security Advisor Brzezinski denied reports that he encouraged China to support the genocidal dictator Pol Pot in Cambodia because Pol Pot s Khmer Rouge were the enemies of communist Vietnam 69 However following the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia which toppled the Khmer Rouge Brzezinski prevailed in having the administration refuse to recognize the new Cambodian government due to its support by the Soviet Union 70 The most important strategic aspect of the new U S Chinese relationship was in its effect on the Cold War China was no longer considered part of a larger Sino Soviet bloc but instead a third pole of power due to the Sino Soviet Split helping the United States against the Soviet Union 71 In the Joint Communique on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations dated January 1 1979 the United States transferred diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing The United States reiterated the Shanghai Communique s acknowledgment of the PRC position that there is only one China and that Taiwan is a part of China Beijing acknowledged that the United States would continue to carry on commercial cultural and other unofficial contacts with Taiwan The Taiwan Relations Act made the necessary changes in U S law to permit unofficial relations with Taiwan to continue In addition the severing relations with the Republic of China the Carter administration also agreed to unilaterally pull out of the Sino American Mutual Defense Treaty withdraw U S military personnel from Taiwan and gradually reduce arms sales to the Republic of China There was widespread opposition in Congress notably from Republicans due to the Republic of China s status as an anti Communist ally in the Cold War In Goldwater v Carter Barry Goldwater made a failed attempt to stop Carter from terminating the mutual defense treaty nbsp U S President Jimmy Carter with Brzezinski and Cyrus Vance at Camp David in 1977Arab Israeli conflict edit Main article Camp David Accords nbsp Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin engages Brzezinski in a game of chess at Camp DavidOn October 10 2007 Brzezinski along with other influential signatories sent a letter to President George W Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice titled Failure Risks Devastating Consequences The letter was partly an advice and a warning of the failure of an upcoming 72 U S sponsored Middle East conference scheduled for November 2007 between representatives of Israelis and Palestinians The letter also suggested to engage in a genuine dialogue with Hamas rather than to isolate it further 73 Ending Soviet detente edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Presidential Directive 18 on U S National Security signed early in Carter s term signaled a fundamental reassessment of the value of detente and set the United States on a course to quietly end Kissinger s strategy 74 Zbigniew Brzezinski played a major role in organizing Jimmy Carter s policies on the Soviet Union as a grand strategy 7 Brzezinski was a liberal Democrat and a committed anti communist favoring social justice while seeing world events in substantially Cold War terms 75 Additionally according to Foreign Policy Brzezinski s outlook was anti Soviet but he also insisted like George Kennan before him on the necessity of cultivating a strong West 7 Brzezinski stated that human rights could be used to put the Soviet Union ideologically on the defensive I felt strongly that in the U S Soviet competition the appeal of America as a free society could become an important asset and I saw in human rights an opportunity to put the Soviet Union ideologically on the defensive by actively pursuing this commitment we could mobilize far greater global support and focus global attention on the glaring internal weaknesses of the Soviet system 76 Brzezinski s policy on Iran was thoroughly connected to the Soviet Union because it was observed that each coup and revolution in 1979 had advanced Soviet power towards the Persian Gulf 77 78 Brzezinski advised President Carter that the United States s greatest vulnerability lay on an arc stretching from Chittagong through Islamabad to Aden 79 This played a role in the Carter Doctrine 77 Nuclear strategy edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2012 Presidential Directive 59 Nuclear Employment Policy dramatically changed U S targeting of nuclear weapons aimed at the Soviet Union Implemented with the aid of Defense Secretary Harold Brown this directive officially set the United States on a countervailing strategy clarification needed 80 Arms control edit See also Arms controlZbigniew Brzezinski utilized the United States need to stability and progress in political relations with the Soviet Union to spur on the call for a new strategic arms treaty On April 5 1979 Brzezinski made a speech at the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations where he stated that competition between the two powers and the nuclear arms race would not simply end because of the accord According to him the projected strategic arms treaty that would intend to impose limits on power such as missiles and bombers through the year 1989 would be what contributes to the progress and confidence in Soviet American relations 81 He aimed to frame his arms control policy in a way that portrayed it as favorable to create ensure and maintain Soviet American relations 82 Leading up to the presidential election in 1980 the Carter administration set sight on confronting Ronald Reagan on arms control agreements with Moscow On this issue Brzezinski believed that to continue moving safely ahead with talks to control atomic arms with Moscow despite Soviet troops holding position in Afghanistan the United States needed to remain firm in containing Soviet expansionism 83 Overall Zbigniew Brzezinski s arms control views leaned skeptical and mistrusting of Soviet motives in general and emphasized the central importance of the East West competition On the other hand other officials such as the Secretary of State Cyrus Vance worked to pave a way for a wider US Soviet relationship Arms control in Brzezinski s terms would take any opportunity to halt or reduce the momentum of the Soviet buildup 84 nbsp Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff with National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski and the other members of Joint Chiefs of Staff during a National Security Council Meeting at The White House on October 5 1978 nbsp President Jimmy Carter and Soviet General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev sign the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT II treaty June 18 1979 in Vienna Austria Brzezinski is directly behind President Carter After power editBrzezinski left office concerned about the internal division within the Democratic party arguing that the dovish McGovernite wing would send the Democrats into permanent minority Ronald Reagan invited him to stay on as his National Security Adviser but Brzezinski declined feeling that the new president needed a fresh perspective on which to build his foreign policy 85 He had mixed relations with the Reagan administration On the one hand he supported it as an alternative to the Democrats pacifism On the other hand he also criticized it as seeing foreign policy in overly black and white terms citation needed By the 1980s Brzezinski argued that the general crisis of the Soviet Union foreshadowed communism s end He remained involved in Polish affairs critical of the imposition of martial law in Poland in 1981 and more so of the Western European acquiescence to its imposition in the name of stability Brzezinski briefed U S vice president George H W Bush before his 1987 trip to Poland that aided in the revival of the Solidarity movement citation needed In 1985 under the Reagan administration Brzezinski served as a member of the President s Chemical Warfare Commission From 1987 to 1988 he worked on the U S National Security Council Defense Department Commission on Integrated Long Term Strategy From 1987 to 1989 he also served on the President s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board 86 In 1988 Brzezinski was co chairman of the Bush National Security Advisory Task Force endorsing Bush for president and breaking with the Democratic party Brzezinski published The Grand Failure the same year predicting the failure of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev s reforms and the collapse of the Soviet Union in a few more decades He said there were five possibilities for the Soviet Union successful pluralization protracted crisis renewed stagnation coup by the KGB or Soviet military or the explicit collapse of the Communist regime He called collapse at this stage a much more remote possibility than protracted crisis He also predicted that the chance of some form of communism existing in the Soviet Union in 2017 was a little more than 50 and that when the end did come it would be most likely turbulent Conflicts such as Nagorno Karabakh crisis and Soviet attempts to reinstate its authority in Lithuania and other republics were much less violent than Brzezinski and other observers anticipated citation needed In the event the Soviet system collapsed totally after the abortive August coup of 1991 launched against Gorbachev failed In 1989 the Communists failed to mobilize support in Poland and Solidarity swept the general elections Later the same year Brzezinski toured Russia and visited a memorial to the Katyn Massacre This served as an opportunity for him to ask the Soviet government to acknowledge the truth about the event for which he received a standing ovation in the Soviet Academy of Sciences Ten days later the Berlin Wall fell and Soviet supported governments in Eastern Europe began to totter Strobe Talbott one of Brzezinski s long time critics conducted an interview with him for TIME magazine entitled Vindication of a Hardliner 87 In 1990 Brzezinski warned against post Cold War euphoria He publicly opposed the Gulf War citation needed arguing that the United States would squander the international goodwill it had accumulated by defeating the Soviet Union and that it could trigger wide resentment throughout the Arab world He expanded upon these views in his 1992 work Out of Control citation needed Brzezinski was prominently critical of the Clinton administration s hesitation to intervene against the Serb forces in the Bosnian war 88 He also began to speak out against Russia s First Chechen War forming the American Committee for Peace in Chechnya Wary of a move toward the reinvigoration of Russian power Brzezinski negatively viewed the succession of former KGB agent Vladimir Putin after Boris Yeltsin In this vein he became one of the foremost advocates of NATO expansion He wrote in 1998 that Without Ukraine Russia ceases to be a Eurasian empire 89 He later came out in support of the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia during the Kosovo war 90 Later years edit nbsp Former National Security Advisers meet with President Barack Obama in 2010 Seated at the table from left are Brent Scowcroft Bud McFarlane Colin Powell Dennis Ross Sandy Berger Frank Carlucci and Brzezinski After his role as National Security Adviser came to a close Brzezinski returned to teaching but remained an influential voice in international relations Polish politician Radek Sikorski wrote that to Poles Brzezinski was considered our statesman and his was one of the most revered voices in Poland During the decades when Poland was stuck against her will behind the Iron Curtain he and the Polish pope were the two most important voices for a free Poland abroad After liberation he acted as an adviser and champion of the new democracies on their way to rejoining Western institutions 91 Though he rose to national prominence as a member of the Carter administration Brzezinski avoided partisan politics and sometimes later voted Republican In the 1988 election he endorsed George H W Bush for president over Democrat Michael Dukakis 92 Brzezinski argued against the 2003 invasion of Iraq and was outspoken in the then unpopular opinion that the invasion would be a mistake As recalled by David Ignatius Brzezinski paid a cost in the insular self reinforcing world of Washington foreign policy opinion until it became clear to nearly everyone that he joined in this Iraq War opposition by Scowcroft had been right 93 He later called President George W Bush s foreign policy catastrophic 11 Brzezinski was a leading critic of the George W Bush administration s conduct of the War on Terror In 2004 Brzezinski wrote The Choice which expanded upon his earlier work The Grand Chessboard 1997 and sharply criticized George W Bush s foreign policy In 2007 in a column in The Washington Post Brzezinski excoriated the Bush administration arguing that their post 9 11 actions had damaged the reputation of the United States infinitely greater than any wild dreams entertained by the fanatical perpetrators of the 9 11 attacks and destroyed any chance of uniting the world to defeat extremism and terrorism 94 He later stated that he had visceral contempt for British Prime Minister Tony Blair who supported Bush s actions in Iraq 92 In September 2007 he defended the book The Israel Lobby and U S Foreign Policy by John Mearsheimer 95 In August 2007 Brzezinski endorsed Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama He stated that Obama recognizes that the challenge is a new face a new sense of direction a new definition of America s role in the world 96 and that What makes Obama attractive to me is that he understands that we live in a very different world where we have to relate to a variety of cultures and people 97 In September 2007 during a speech on the Iraq war Obama introduced Brzezinski as one of our most outstanding thinkers but some pro Israel commentators questioned his criticism of the Israel lobby in the United States 95 In a September 2009 interview with The Daily Beast Brzezinski replied to a question about how aggressive President Obama should be in insisting Israel not conduct an air strike on Iran saying We are not exactly impotent little babies They have to fly over our airspace in Iraq Are we just going to sit there and watch 98 This was interpreted by some supporters of Israel as supporting the downing of Israeli jets by the United States in order to prevent an attack on Iran 99 100 On October 1 2009 Brzezinski delivered the Waldo Family Lecture on International Relations at Old Dominion University in Norfolk Virginia 101 In 2011 Brzezinski supported the NATO intervention against the forces of Muammar Gaddafi in the Libyan Civil War calling non intervention morally dubious and politically questionable 102 In early 2012 Brzezinski expressed disappointment and said he was confused by some of Obama s actions such as the decision to send 2 500 U S troops to Australia but supported him for re election 92 nbsp Brzezinski at the Munich Security Conference 2014On March 3 2014 between the February 22 ousting of Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych and the March 16 Crimean referendum Brzezinski authored an op ed piece for The Washington Post entitled What is to be done Putin s aggression in Ukraine needs a response 103 He led with a link on Russian aggression he compared Russian President Vladimir Putin s thuggish tactics in seizing Crimea and thinly camouflaged invasion to Adolf Hitler s occupation of the Sudetenland in 1938 and characterized Putin as a cartoon Benito Mussolini but stopped well short of advocating that the U S go to war Rather he suggested that NATO should be put on high alert and recommended to avert miscalculations He explicitly stated that reassurances be given to Russia that it is not seeking to draw Ukraine into NATO 103 According to Ignatius and Sikorski Brzezinski was deeply troubled by the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States and worried over the future Two days after the election on November 10 2016 Brzezinski warned of coming turmoil in the nation and the world in a brief speech after he was awarded the Medal for Distinguished Public Service from the Department of Defense 93 On May 4 2017 he sent out his final Tweet saying Sophisticated US leadership is the sine qua non of a stable world order However we lack the former while the latter is getting worse 91 Piotr Pietrzak argued that Brzezinski never trusted Putin and saw him as the post Soviet man a product of Soviet imperialist indoctrination who felt deeply humiliated by how the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact collapsed but he predicted the escalation of the situation in the East long before Putin took power and much earlier than most of us possibly because his geopolitical insights were strongly influenced by the work of Alfred Thayer Mahan Halford J Mackinder Nickolas J Spykman and Friedrich Ratzel 104 Pietrzak also suggested that Although Zbigniew Brzezinski is dead his work is very much alive the Biden administration follows Brzezinski s geostrategic blueprint which supports Ukraine militarily logistically diplomatically and politically Zbigniew Brzezinski s son Mark Brzezinski serves as the United States Ambassador to Poland and helps his superiors implement his father s geostrategic vision on the ground thanks to which the Ukrainian army is still standing and is capable of not only repelling the Russian offensive but actually launching a successful counter offensive The question is what constitutes the Brzezinski Doctrine today Would Brzezinski see Ukraine as a potential NATO member or a frozen buffer zone between the transatlantic community and an increasingly assertive hawkish and unpredictable Russian giant 104 Personal life editBrzezinski was married to Czech American sculptor Emilie Benes grand niece of the second Czechoslovak president Edvard Benes with whom he had three children His younger son Mark Brzezinski b 1965 is a lawyer who served on President Clinton s National Security Council as an expert on Russia and Southeastern Europe and has served as the U S ambassador to Sweden 2011 2015 and Poland from 2022 His daughter Mika Brzezinski b 1967 is a television news presenter and co host of MSNBC s weekday morning program Morning Joe where she provides regular commentary and reads the news headlines for the program His elder son Ian Brzezinski b 1963 is a Senior Fellow in the International Security Program and is on the Atlantic Council s Strategic Advisors Group Ian also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Europe and NATO 2001 2005 and was a principal at Booz Allen Hamilton 105 Public life editBrzezinski was a past member of the Atlantic Council and the National Endowment for Democracy 106 At the time of his death he was a member of the Council on Foreign Relations 107 and the International Honorary Council 108 of the European Academy of Diplomacy He was also referred to by the nickname Zbig 109 110 4 Film appearances editBrzezinski appeared as himself in several documentary films and TV series such as the 1997 film Eternal Memory Voices from the Great Terror directed by David Pultz Episodes 17 Good Guys Bad Guys 19 Freeze and 20 Soldiers of God of the 1998 CNN series Cold War produced by Jeremy Isaacs the 2009 documentary Back Door Channels The Price of Peace and the 2014 Polish biographical film Strateg The Strategist directed by Katarzyna Kolenda Zaleska and produced by TVN The 2014 Polish film Jack Strong features Krzysztof Pieczynski as Brzezinski Death editBrzezinski died at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church Virginia on May 26 2017 at the age of 89 111 112 His funeral was held June 9 at the Cathedral of St Matthew in Washington D C 113 Former President Carter and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright were among those who gave eulogies while attendees included international diplomats and emissaries journalists Carl Bernstein Chuck Todd and David Ignatius 100 year old Gen Edward Rowny former National Security Adviser Susan E Rice and former National Security Advisor Lt Gen H R McMaster 114 If I could choose my seatmate it would be Dr Brzezinski Carter said of his international flights on Air Force One Former National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger aged 94 was unable to attend but a note he sent was read during a eulogy The world is an emptier place without Zbig pushing the limits of his insights 114 Honors edit nbsp Presidential Medal of Freedom 1981 115 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Tomas Garrigue Masaryk 1998 116 nbsp Order of the White Eagle 1995 117 nbsp Second Class of the Cross of the President of the Slovak Republic 2002 118 nbsp Grand Officer of the Order of the Star of Romania 2006 nbsp Honorary citizenship of the City of Gdansk 2002 nbsp Grand Officer of the Order of the Three Stars 2007 119 Honorary degrees edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items June 2018 Location Date School Degree nbsp New York state 1979 Fordham University Doctorate 120 nbsp Massachusetts June 9 1986 Williams College Doctor of Law LL D 121 122 nbsp Poland 1990 John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin Doctorate 123 nbsp Lithuania 1998 Vilnius University Doctorate 124 nbsp Azerbaijan November 7 2003 Baku State University Doctorate 123 Works editMajor works by Brzezinski edit The Permanent Purge Politics in Soviet Totalitarianism Cambridge Harvard University Press 1956 ISBN 978 0674732674 Soviet Bloc Unity and Conflict Cambridge Harvard University Press 1967 ISBN 978 0674825451 Between Two Ages America s Role in the Technetronic Era New York Viking Press 1970 ISBN 978 0313234989 Power and Principle Memoirs of the National Security Adviser 1977 1981 New York Farrar Straus Giroux 1983 ISBN 978 0374236632 Game Plan A Geostrategic Framework for the Conduct of the U S Soviet Contest Boston Atlantic Monthly Press 1986 ISBN 978 0871130846 Grand Failure The Birth and Death of Communism in the Twentieth Century New York Collier Books 1990 ISBN 978 0020307303 Out of Control Global Turmoil on the Eve of the 21st Century New York Collier Books 1993 ISBN 978 0684826363 The Grand Chessboard American Primacy and Its Geostrategic Imperatives New York Basic Books 1997 ISBN 0465027253 Translated and published in nineteen languages The Choice Global Domination or Global Leadership New York Basic Books 2004 ISBN 978 0465008001 Second Chance Three Presidents and the Crisis of American Superpower New York Basic Books 2007 ISBN 978 0465002528 America and the World Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy New York Basic Books 2008 ISBN 978 0465015016 Strategic Vision America and the Crisis of Global Power New York Basic Books 2012 ISBN 978 0465029549 Other books and monographs edit Russo Soviet Nationalism thesis Montreal Quebec McGill University 1950 Political Control in the Soviet Army A Study on Reports by Former Soviet Officers Studies on the USSR no 6 New York Research Program on the USSR 1954 OCLC 1743232 Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy with Carl J Friedrich Cambridge Harvard University Press 1956 OCLC 654233383 Ideology and Power in Soviet Politics New York Praeger 1962 Political Power USA USSR with Samuel Huntington New York Viking Press April 1963 ISBN 0670563188 Alternative to Partition For a Broader Conception of America s Role in Europe Atlantic Policy Studies New York McGraw Hill 1965 International Politics in the Technetronic Era Volume 1 of Research Papers series Tokyo Jōchi Daigaku Institute of International Relations Sofia University Press 1971 34 p The Fragile Blossom Crisis and Change in Japan New York Harper and Row 1972 ISBN 0060104686 American Security in an Interdependent World with P Edward Haley Rowman amp Littlefield September 1988 ISBN 0819170844 In Quest of National Security with Marin Strmecki Boulder Colorado Westview Press September 1988 ISBN 0813305756 The Soviet Political System Transformation or Degeneration Irvington Publishers August 1993 ISBN 0829035729 Zbigniew Brzezinski Bibliografia i Rysunki Zbigniew Brzezinski Bibliography and Drawings Lodz Correspondance des arts 1993 Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States Documents Data and Analysis with Paige Sullivan Armonk M E Sharpe 1996 ISBN 1563246376 The Geostrategic Triad Living with China Europe and Russia Washington DC Center for Strategic amp International Studies December 2000 ISBN 089206384X Book contributions edit After Srebrenica August 7 1995 In The Black Book of Bosnia The Consequences of Appeasement by the writers and editors of The New Republic Edited by Nader Mousavizadeh Afterword by Leon Wieseltier New York BasicBooks 1996 pp 153 157 ISBN 978 0465098354 Selected articles and essays edit Peaceful Engagement in Eastern Europe with William Griffith Foreign Affairs vol 39 no 4 Spring 1961 p 647 doi 10 2307 20029518 JSTOR 20029518 Cincinnatus and the Apparatchik with Samuel P Huntington World Politics vol 16 no 1 October 1963 pp 52 78 doi 10 2307 2009251 JSTOR 2009251 The Implications of Change for United States Foreign Policy Department of State Bulletin vol LVII 57 no 1462 8255 July 3 1967 pp 19 23 U S Department of State U S Foreign Policy The Search for Focus Foreign Affairs vol 51 no 4 July 1973 pp 708 727 doi 10 2307 20038014 JSTOR 20038014 A Geostrategy for Eurasia Foreign Affairs vol 76 no 5 September October 1997 pp 50 64 Russia Would Gain by Losing Chechnya New York Times November 1999 p A35 Balancing the East Upgrading the West U S Grand Strategy in an Age of Upheaval Foreign Affairs vol 91 no 1 January February 2012 pp 97 104 Toward a Global Realignment American Interest vol 11 no 6 July August 2016 Full issue Reports edit Democracy Must Work A Trilateral Agenda for the Decade with David Owen Michael Stewart Carol Hansen and Saburo Okita Trilateral Commission June 1984 ISBN 0814761615 Differentiated Containment U S Policy Toward Iran and Iraq with Brent Scowcroft and Richard W Murphy Council on Foreign Relations Press July 1997 ISBN 0876092024 The United States and the Persian Gulf with Anthony Lake F Gregory and III Gause Council on Foreign Relations Press December 2001 ISBN 0876092911 Iran Time for a New Approach with Robert M Gates Council on Foreign Relations Press February 2003 ISBN 0876093454 Explanatory notes edit In isolation Kazimierz is pronounced kaˈʑimjɛʂ Citations edit Dr Zbigniew Brzezinski And His Life On The World Stage Morning Joe MSNBC May 30 2017 Event occurs at 4 12 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Sabine Feiner Weltordnung durch US Leadership Die Konzeption Zbigniew K Brzezinskis Westdeutscher Verlag Wiesbaden 2001 Seiple Chris November 27 2006 Revisiting the Geo Political Thinking of Sir Halford John Mackinder United States Uzbekistan Relations 1991 2005 PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 28 2017 Retrieved August 18 2014 a b c Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary The Guardian May 28 2017 Retrieved December 17 2021 a b c Sklar Holly Founding the Trilateral Commission Chronology 1970 1977 Trilateralism The Trilateral Commission and Elite Planning for World Management Boston South End Press 1980 ISBN 0 89608 103 6 ISBN 0 89608 104 4 OCLC 6958001 604 pages Excerpts available Schmitz David F Walker Vanessa 2004 Jimmy Carter and the Foreign Policy of Human Rights The Development of a Post Cold War Foreign Policy Diplomatic History 28 1 113 143 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2004 00400 x ISSN 0145 2096 JSTOR 24914773 The call to overcome the nation s inordinate fear of communism was not Brzezinski wrote a dismissal of the reality of Soviet power but an optimistic recognition of the greater appeal of liberty and of the superiority of the democratic system a b c d e f Sargent Daniel July 24 2021 Postmodern America Didn t Deserve Jimmy Carter Foreign Policy Retrieved November 21 2021 a b c d e f g h i Tobin Conor April 2020 The Myth of the Afghan Trap Zbigniew Brzezinski and Afghanistan 1978 1979 Diplomatic History 44 2 Oxford University Press 237 264 doi 10 1093 dh dhz065 The last hawk Zbigniew Brzezinski 1928 2017 openDemocracy Retrieved December 17 2021 Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism Press release Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation June 9 2008 Archived from the original on May 18 2011 Retrieved May 10 2011 a b c d e f g h i Lewis Daniel May 27 2017 Zbigniew Brzezinski National Security Adviser to Jimmy Carter Dies at 89 The New York Times p A1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 27 2017 Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary The Guardian May 28 2017 Retrieved March 26 2022 Tadeusz Brzezinski Former Polish Consul General Dies Associated Press Retrieved May 25 2016 Gati 2013 p 237 a b c Hoagland Jim May 26 2017 Zbigniew Brzezinski foreign policy intellectual who served as Carter s national security adviser dies at 89 The Washington Post Retrieved May 27 2017 USA Zbigniew Brzezinski nie zyje poland us in Polish May 26 2017 Retrieved July 1 2021 Al Jazeera One on One Zbigniew Brzezinski on YouTube Luce Edward January 13 2012 Lunch with the FT Zbigniew Brzezinski Financial Times Retrieved November 16 2020 a b Yong Tang March 20 2006 Agenda for constructive American Chinese dialogue huge Brzezinski People s Daily Retrieved December 30 2010 Brzezinski Zbigniew July 1950 Russo Soviet Nationalism M A thesis McGill University a b Gati 2013 p 208 Zbigniew Brzezinski PhD Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies Archived from the original on October 25 2015 Retrieved February 11 2017 a b Gati 2013 p xxi Brzezinski Zbigniew 1928 In Social networks and archival context University of Virginia Albright Madeleine 2003 Madam Secretary A Memoir Hyperion p 57 ISBN 978 1401399474 OCLC 439810833 Gati 2013 p 12 Brzezinski Zbigniew Griffith William Spring 1961 Peaceful Engagement in Eastern Europe Foreign Affairs 39 4 647 doi 10 2307 20029518 JSTOR 20029518 Brzezinski Zbigniew January 3 1970 Detente in the 70s The New Republic p 18 Brzezinski Zbigniew December 16 1968 Meeting Moscow s Limited Coexistence The New Leader vol 51 no 24 pp 11 13 Brauer Carl November 1 1988 Lost In Transition The Atlantic Washington D C Atlantic Media Retrieved March 27 2014 John Maclean Advisers Key to Foreign Policy Views The Boston Evening Globe October 5 1976 Vaughan Patrick G 2008 Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Helsinki Final Act In Nuti Leopoldo ed The Crisis of Detente in Europe From Helsinki to Gorbachev 1975 1985 Taylor amp Francis pp 11 25 ISBN 978 0 415 46051 4 Michael Getler Dissidents Challenge Prague Tension Builds Following Demand for Freedom and Democracy The Washington Post January 21 1977 Zbigniew Brzezinski Power and Principle Memoirs of the National Security Adviser 1977 1981 New York 1983 p 123 Seyom Brown Faces of Power New York 1983 p 539 Giscard Schmidt on Detente The Washington Post July 19 1977 David Binder Carter Requests Funds for Big Increase in Broadcasts to Soviet Bloc The New York Times March 23 1977 Brzezinski Power and Principle p 293 David A Andelman Brzezinski and Mrs Carter Hold Discussion with Polish Cardinal The New York Times December 29 1977 Kevin V Mulcahy The secretary of State and the national security adviser Foreign policymaking in the Carter and Reagan administrations Presidential Studies Quarterly 16 2 1986 280 299 Jerel A Rosati Continuity and change in the foreign policy beliefs of political leaders Addressing the controversy over the Carter administration Political Psychology 1988 471 505 Jimmy Carter and the Second Yemenite War A Smaller Shock of 1979 Wilson Center www wilsoncenter org Retrieved November 21 2021 Vaisse Justin 2018 Zbigniew Brzezinski America s grand strategist Catherine Porter Cambridge Massachusetts ISBN 978 0 674 91950 1 OCLC 1041140127 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b The 3 A M Phone Call National Security Archive George Washington University March 1 2012 Retrieved February 11 2017 Justin Vaisse Zbigniew Brzezinski America s Grand Strategist 2018 ch 6 a b c Vaisse Zbigniew Brzezinski 2018 ch 6 a b Gerry Argyris Andrianopoulos 2016 Kissinger and Brzezinski The NSC and the Struggle for Control of US National Security Policy Springer pp 143 44 ISBN 9781349217410 Brian J Auten 2008 Carter s Conversion The Hardening of American Defense Policy University of Missouri Press p 276 ISBN 9780826218162 Gary Sick All fall down America s fateful encounter with Iran IB Tauris 1985 Books dinoknudsen dk Brzezinski Zbigniew August 31 1978 Strategy for Camp David PDF CIA Retrieved February 11 2017 a b c d e f Kaplan Robert D 2008 Soldiers of God With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan Knopf Doubleday pp 115 117 ISBN 978 0 307 54698 2 a b c d e f Kepel Gilles 2006 Jihad The Trail of Political Islam I B Tauris pp 138 139 142 144 ISBN 978 1 84511 257 8 a b c Blight James G et al 2012 Becoming Enemies U S Iran Relations and the Iran Iraq War 1979 1988 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 66 69 70 ISBN 978 1 4422 0830 8 Coll Steve 2004 Ghost Wars The Secret History of the CIA Afghanistan and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10 2001 Penguin Group pp 47 49 ISBN 9781594200076 Frustrated and hoping to discredit him the KGB initially planted false stories that Amin was a CIA agent In the autumn these rumors rebounded on the KGB in a strange case of blowback the term used by spies to describe planted propaganda that filters back to confuse the country that first set the story loose a b c d e f Riedel Bruce 2014 What We Won America s Secret War in Afghanistan 1979 1989 Brookings Institution Press pp ix xi 21 22 93 98 99 105 ISBN 978 0 8157 2595 4 a b Gates Robert 2007 From the Shadows The Ultimate Insider s Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War Simon and Schuster pp 145 147 ISBN 978 1 4165 4336 7 When asked whether he expected that the revelations in his memoir combined with an apocryphal quote attributed to Brzezinski would inspire a mind bending number of conspiracy theories which adamantly and wrongly accuse the Carter Administration of luring the Soviets into Afghanistan Gates replied No because there was no basis in fact for an allegation the administration tried to draw the Soviets into Afghanistan militarily See Gates email communication with John Bernell White Jr October 15 2011 as cited in White John Bernell May 2012 The Strategic Mind Of Zbigniew Brzezinski How A Native Pole Used Afghanistan To Protect His Homeland pp 45 46 82 Retrieved August 23 2017 Coll Steve 2004 Ghost Wars The Secret History of the CIA Afghanistan and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10 2001 Penguin Group pp 87 581 ISBN 978 1 59420 007 6 Contemporary memos particularly those written in the first days after the Soviet invasion make clear that while Brzezinski was determined to confront the Soviets in Afghanistan through covert action he was also very worried the Soviets would prevail Given this evidence and the enormous political and security costs that the invasion imposed on the Carter administration any claim that Brzezinski lured the Soviets into Afghanistan warrants deep skepticism Interview with Dr Zbigniew Brzezinski June 13 1997 Archived from the original on August 29 2000 Retrieved May 25 2016 See for example NOTES FROM THE EDITORS Monthly Review 73 11 April 2022 Retrieved October 4 2022 Brzezinski had laid the trap for the Soviets in Afghanistan It was under Brzezinski s direction following a secret directive signed by Carter in July 1979 that the CIA working together with the arc of political Islam stretching from Muhammad Zia ul Haq s Pakistan to the Saudi royals recruited armed and trained the Mujahideen in Afghanistan The CIA s buildup of the Mujahideen and various terrorist groups in Afghanistan precipitated the Soviet intervention leading to an endless war that contributed to the destabilization of the Soviet Union itself To queries as to whether he regretted establishing the arc of terrorism that was to lead to 9 11 and beyond Brzezinski who posed in photos with Mujahideen fighters responded by simply saying that the destruction of the Soviet Union was worth it a b Coll Steve 2004 Ghost Wars The Secret History of the CIA Afghanistan and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10 2001 Penguin Group p 593 ISBN 9781594200076 cf Brzezinski Zbigniew December 26 1979 Reflections on Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan PDF Retrieved April 30 2022 a b Blanton Tom Savranskaya Svetlana January 29 2019 The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan 1979 Not Trump s Terrorists Nor Zbig s Warm Water Ports National Security Archive Retrieved October 4 2022 a b c Vaisse Justin 2018 In the White House Zbigniew Brzezinski America s Grand Strategist Translated by Catherine Porter Harvard University Press pp 307 311 ISBN 9780674919488 First published in 2016 as Zbigniew Brzezinski Stratege de l empire in French a b Leake Elisabeth 2022 Afghan Crucible The Soviet Invasion and the Making of Modern Afghanistan Oxford University Press p 178 ISBN 9780198846017 Rakove Robert B 2023 Days of Opportunity The United States and Afghanistan Before the Soviet Invasion Columbia University Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 231 55842 6 a b c d e Douglas Brinkley December 29 2002 The Lives They Lived Out of the Loop The New York Times Magazine Retrieved May 3 2017 Marilyn Berger January 13 2002 Cyrus R Vance a Confidant Of Presidents Is Dead at 84 The New York Times p A1 Retrieved May 3 2017 Brzezinski U S in danger of stampeding to war with Iran Hodgson Godfrey May 28 2017 Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary The Guardian Retrieved May 28 2017 Glad Betty 2009 An Outsider in the White House Jimmy Carter His Advisors and the Making of American Foreign Policy Cornell University Press pp 237 239 ISBN 9780801448157 Cai Xia China US Relations In The Eyes Of The Chinese Communist Party An Insider s Perspective Hoover Institution Retrieved July 28 2021 Jackson David July 17 2007 Bush announces Mideast peace conference USA Today Paul Volcker November 8 2007 Failure Risks Devastating Consequences by Zbigniew Brzezinski The New York Review of Books Retrieved May 25 2016 Unclassified Memorandum from National Security Council PDF Jimmycarterlibrary org August 27 1977 Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2011 Retrieved December 31 2010 Zbigniew Brzezinski obituary The Guardian May 28 2017 Retrieved October 21 2021 Zbigniew Brzezinski National Security Adviser to Jimmy Carter US President 1977 1981 Power and Principle Chapter 5 a b Jimmy Carter and the Second Yemenite War A Smaller Shock of 1979 Wilson Center www wilsoncenter org Retrieved November 21 2021 INTERVIEW WITH DR ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI 13 6 97 nsarchive2 gwu edu Retrieved September 29 2022 I think the crisis in Iran heightened our sense of vulnerability in so far as that part of the world is concerned After all Iran was one of the two pillars on which both stability and our political preeminence in the Persian Gulf rested Once the Iranian pillar had collapsed we were faced with the possibility that one way or another before too long we may have either a hostile Iran on the northern shore of the Persian Gulf facing us or we might even have the Soviets there and that possibility arose very sharply when the Soviets marched into Afghanistan If they succeed in occupying it Iran would be even more vulnerable to the Soviet Union and in any case the Persian Gulf would be accessible even to Soviet tactical air force from bases in Afghanistan Therefore the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan was viewed by us as of serious strategic consequence irrespective of whatever may have been the Soviet motives for it Our view was the objective consequences would be very serious irrespective of what may or may not have been the subjective motives for the Soviet action Foreign Relations of the United States 1977 1980 Volume I Foundations of Foreign Policy Office of the Historian history state gov Retrieved November 21 2021 Nuclear Employment Policy Archived April 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine failed verification PDF Times Richard Burt Special to The New York April 5 1979 BRZEZINSKI DEFENDS ARMS TREATY IMPACT The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 4 2023 Garrison Jean A December 2001 Framing Foreign Policy Alternatives in the Inner Circle President Carter His Advisors and the Struggle for the Arms Control Agenda Political Psychology 22 4 775 807 doi 10 1111 0162 895X 00262 ISSN 0162 895X Getler Michael July 23 1980 Administration Willing to Confront Reagan on Arms Limits The Washington Post Garrison Jean A 2001 Framing Foreign Policy Alternatives in the Inner Circle President Carter His Advisors and the Struggle for the Arms Control Agenda Political Psychology 22 4 775 807 doi 10 1111 0162 895X 00262 ISSN 0162 895X JSTOR 3792486 Reagan poprosil Brzezinskiego by zostal takze jego doradca TVN24 pl May 29 2017 Retrieved June 1 2017 PRESIDENT S FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE ADVISORY BOARD Records 1981 1989 PDF Reagan Library Archives Talbott Strobe Zintl Robert December 18 1989 Vindications of a hardliner Time Brzezinski on isolation former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brezinski warns of the failures of Clinton foreign policy Insight on the News August 21 1995 The New Great Game Why Ukraine Matters to So Many Other Nations Bloomberg February 27 2014 A conversation about Kosovo with Zbigniew Brzezinski Archived October 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Charlie Rose March 25 1999 a b Sikorski Radek May 27 2017 For Poles Zbigniew Brzezinski was our American statesman The Washington Post Retrieved June 1 2017 a b c Luce Edward January 13 2012 Lunch with the FT Zbigniew Brzezinski Financial Times Retrieved June 1 2017 a b Ignatius David May 29 2017 Zbigniew Brzezinski was an intrepid advocate of the liberal international order The Washington Post Retrieved June 1 2017 Brzezinski Zbigniew March 25 2007 Terrorized by War on Terror The Washington Post Retrieved June 1 2017 a b Obama advisor raises concerns Ynet September 15 2007 Alec MacGillis Brzezinski Backs Obama The Washington Post August 25 2007 Eric Walberg The real power behind the throne to be Archived September 10 2009 at the Wayback Machine Al Ahram July 24 30 2008 Gerald Posner How Obama Flubbed His Missile Message The Daily Beast undated Brzezinski U S must deny Israel airspace Archived September 25 2009 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Telegraphic Agency September 21 2009 Jake Tapper Zbig Brzezinski Obama Administration Should Tell Israel U S Will Attack Israeli Jets if They Try to Attack Iran Archived October 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine ABC News September 20 2009 Tayla Thursday September 24 Hearsay org Retrieved August 14 2019 PBS Turmoil in Arab World Deepening Divisions or Turning a New Page PBS a b Zbigniew Brzezinski After Putin s aggression in Ukraine the West must be ready to respond The Washington Post March 3 2014 Retrieved May 25 2016 a b Piotr Pietrzak January 12 2023 The Brzezinski Doctrine And NATO s Response To Russia s Assault On Ukraine Modern Diplomacy https moderndiplomacy eu 2023 01 12 the brzezinski doctrine and natos response to russias assault on ukraine Ian Brzezinski Atlantic Council 2016 Retrieved February 11 2017 Democracy Totalitarianism and the Culture of Freedom National Endowment for Democracy October 15 2009 Archived from the original on March 28 2014 Retrieved March 27 2014 Membership Roster Council on Foreign Relations Cfr org Retrieved January 28 2012 Europejska Akademia Dyplomacji European Academy of Diplomacy diplomats pl Dyplomacja Zbigniew Brzezinski Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Gati Charles September 2013 Zbig Johns Hopkins University Press Books JHU Press ISBN 9781421409764 Retrieved December 4 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Kaplan Fred November 5 2003 Bush is in Zbig trouble Slate Magazine Retrieved December 4 2021 Carter adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski dies at 89 Politico May 26 2017 James Fallows May 26 2017 Zbigniew Brzezinski The Atlantic Pogrzeb Zbigniewa Brzezinskiego odbedzie sie 9 czerwca in Polish TVN24 pl June 1 2017 Retrieved June 1 2017 a b Flegenheimer Matt June 9 2017 Washington Remembers Brzezinski and a Very Different Era The New York Times Retrieved June 9 2017 Jimmy Carter Presidential Medal of Freedom Remarks at the Presentation Ceremony The American Presidency Project January 16 1981 Retrieved June 10 2017 Seznam vyznamenanych hrad cz in Czech Retrieved June 9 2022 Brzezinski gets highest Polish order UPI December 19 1995 Retrieved June 10 2017 Prezident SR Kriz prezidenta Slovenskej republiky II stupen archiv prezident sk Retrieved March 6 2024 Apbalvotie un statistika in Latvian president lv Retrieved May 30 2022 Shen Vivian Research Guides Fordham Fordham University History Fordham Commencement Speakers 1941 present fordham libguides com Williams College Caution on Science Is Offered The New York Times June 9 1986 Honorary Degrees Commencement a b KUL University Honorary Doctorates Honorary Doctors Vilnius University Further reading editAndrianopoulos Gerry Argyris June 1991 Kissinger and Brzezinski The NSC and the Struggle for Control of U S National Security Policy Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0312057431 Avner Yehuda 2010 The Prime Ministers An Intimate Narrative of Israeli Leadership The Toby Press ISBN 978 1592642786 Firestone Thomas Winter 1988 Four Sovietologists A Primer The National Interest no 14 pp 102 107 JSTOR 24027135 on the ideas of Zbigniew Brzezinski Stephen F Cohen Jerry F Hough and Richard Pipes Gati Charles ed 2013 Zbig The Strategy and Statecraft of Zbigniew Brzezinski Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 1421409763 Lubowski Andrzej 2013 Zbig The Man Who Cracked the Kremlin Thacker Innes 1980 Ideological Control and the Depoliticisation of Language Cencrastus no 2 Spring 1980 pp 30 33 ISSN 0264 0856 Vaughan Patrick 1999 Beyond Benign Neglect Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Polish Crisis of 1980 Polish Review no 1 pp 3 28 Vaisse Justin 2018 Zbigniew Brzezinski America s Grand Strategist scholarly biography Wallis Christopher 2018 The Thinker The Doer and The Decider Zbigniew Brzezinski Cyrus Vance and the Bureaucratic Wars of the Carter Administration PhD Thesis Northumbria University Ziolkowska Boehm Aleksandra 2018 Father and Son Tadeusz and Zbigniew Brzezinski chapter In Untold Stories of Polish Heroes from World War II Hamilton Books ISBN 978 0761869832 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zbigniew Brzezinski nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Zbigniew Brzezinski External mediaAudio nbsp Interview for Vietnam A Television History at WGBH Open Vault July 11 1983 nbsp Interview for Center for Strategic amp International Studies 2012 Video nbsp Interview for Firing Line with William F Buckley Jr March 31 1983 nbsp Interview for War and Peace in the Nuclear Age at WGBH Open Vault November 19 1986 nbsp Interview for Rutherford Living History at Duke University March 29 2007 Appearances on C SPAN Zbigniew Brzezinski on Charlie Rose Zbigniew Brzezinski at IMDb Zbigniew Brzezinski collected news and commentary at The New York Times Neal Conan Brzezinski discusses his participation in the 1978 Camp David Talk of the Nation NPR September 16 2003 ISSF Roundtable 7 4 Zbig The Strategy and Statecraft of Zbigniew Brzezinski 2014 Proceedings The Strategic Mind of Zbigniew Brzezinski by John Bernell White Jr Brzezinski formulating a New Foreign Policy Approach toward Russia at the Center for Strategic amp International Studies Iran The Crescent of Crisis Archived November 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine Time January 1979 Keynote Address Inaugural Forum of the Brzezinski Chair Archived August 17 2016 at the Wayback MachinePolitical officesPreceded byBrent Scowcroft National Security Advisor1977 1981 Succeeded byRichard Allen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zbigniew Brzezinski amp oldid 1212199107, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.