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Kennan and Containment, 1947
George F. Kennan, a career Foreign Service Officer, formulated the policy of ācontainment,ā the basic United States strategy for fighting the cold war (1947ā1989) with the Soviet Union.
Kennanās ideas, which became the basis of the Truman administrationās foreign policy, first came to public attention in 1947 in the form of an anonymous contribution to the journal Foreign Affairs, the so-called āX-Article.ā āThe main element of any United States policy toward the Soviet Union,ā Kennan wrote, āmust be that of a long-term, patient but firm and vigilant containment of Russian expansive tendencies.ā To that end, he called for countering āSoviet pressure against the free institutions of the Western worldā through the āadroit and vigilant application of counter-force at a series of constantly shifting geographical and political points, corresponding to the shifts and maneuvers of Soviet policy.ā Such a policy, Kennan predicted, would āpromote tendencies which must eventually find their outlet in either the break-up or the gradual mellowing of Soviet power.ā
Kennanās policy was controversial from the very beginning. Columnist Walter Lippmann attacked the X-Article for failing to differentiate between vital and peripheral interests. The United States, Kennanās article implied, should face down the Soviet Union and its Communist allies whenever and wherever they posed a risk of gaining influence. In fact, Kennan advocated defending above all else the worldās major centers of industrial power against Soviet expansion: Western Europe, Japan, and the United States. Others criticized Kennanās policy for being too defensive. Most notably, John Foster Dulles declared during the 1952 election campaign that the United Statesā policy should not be containment, but the ārollbackā of Soviet power and the eventual āliberationā of Eastern Europe. Even within the Truman administration there was a rift over containment between Kennan and Paul Nitze, Kennanās successor as director of the Policy Planning Staff. Nitze, who saw the Soviet threat primarily in military terms, interpreted Kennanās call for āthe adroit and vigilant application of counter-forceā to mean the use of military power. In contrast, Kennan, who considered the Soviet threat to be primarily political, advocated above all else economic assistance (e.g., the Marshall Plan) and āpsychological warfareā (overt propaganda and covert operations) to counter the spread of Soviet influence. In 1950, Nitzeās conception of containment won out over Kennanās. NSC 68, a policy document prepared by the National Security Council and signed by Truman, called for a drastic expansion of the U.S. military budget. The paper also expanded containmentās scope beyond the defense of major centers of industrial power to encompass the entire world. āIn the context of the present polarization of power,ā it read, āa defeat of free institutions anywhere is a defeat everywhere.ā
Despite all the criticisms and the various policy defeats that Kennan suffered in the early 1950ās, containment in the more general sense of blocking the expansion of Soviet influence remained the basic strategy of the United States throughout the cold war. On the one hand, the United States did not withdraw into isolationism; on the other, it did not move to āroll backā Soviet power, as John Foster Dulles briefly advocated. It is possible to say that each succeeding administration after Trumanās, until the collapse of communism in 1989, adopted a variation of Kennanās containment policy and made it their own.