Benn Steil is senior fellow and director of international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of The Marshall Plan: Dawn of the Cold War, winner of the New York Historical Society's Barbara and David Zalaznick Book Prize in American History and the American Academy of Diplomacy's Douglas Dillon Award. His previous book, the prizewinning Battle of Bretton Woods: John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter White, and the Making of a New World Order, was called "a triumph of economic and diplomatic history" by the Financial Times, "a superb history" by The Wall Street Journal, and "the gold standard on its subject" by The New York Times. He lives in New York with his two boys.
"The Marshall Plan is a remarkably insightful and beautifully
written work of diplomatic and economic history. Leaders and
pundits keep calling for new 'Marshall Plans' around the globe, but
how many actually understand what the real one was about, how it
was created, and what it achieved? This book will open eyes and
minds."--Alan Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve
"The Marshall Plan is a very good book, driven by a compelling
narrative with excellent profiles of complicated, impressive people
and institutions."--The Washington Diplomat
"The Marshall Plan is elegant in style and impressive in insights.
Steil . . . has an enviable gift for presenting complex economic
and geopolitical issues in crisp, readable prose." --Tony Barber,
The Financial Times
"[An] immensely erudite book."--Literary Review
"[An] important examination of the Marshall Plan....an excellent
recounting of an ambitious, huge program that helped rebuild and
transform Europe."--Booklist
"[A] brilliant book . . . The story of the Marshall Plan has been
recounted many times before, including by those who were its
architects and thus, like Dean Acheson, "Present at the Creation."
But Mr. Steil's is by far the best study yet, because it is so wise
and so balanced in its judgments. . . . The maturity and surety of
Mr. Steil's book is nowhere more in evidence than in his final
chapter." --Paul Kennedy, The Wall Street Journal
"[A] refreshingly heterodox new history." --London Review of
Books
"[B]ig, serious, and thoroughly intelligent . . . Steil embeds [the
Marshall Plan] in a sharp and critical political history of the
first years of the cold war itself. In his final chapters, he looks
far beyond the period of the Marshall Plan and discusses parallels
and contrasts with the twenty-first century scene."--Neal
Ascherson, New York Review of Books
"A fresh perspective on the Marshall Plan....Though scholars have
covered the subject many times before, general readers will do well
to choose this lively, astute account....Steil writes a vivid,
opinionated narrative full of colorful characters, dramatic
scenarios, villains, and genuine heroes, and the good guys won. It
will be the definitive account for years to come."--Kirkus, Starred
Review
"An excellent new book...Steil's account picks its way through
[the] arguments and counter-arguments with a quiet skill...Steil's
mastery of both the sources and the narrative is exemplary."--Keith
Lowe, The Telegraph (UK)
"Benn Steil has made clarifying complex subjects a specialty: first
with his well-received Battle of Bretton Woods, and now with this
comprehensive history of the Marshall Plan. Drawing on an equally
keen grasp of diplomacy, economics and grand strategy, Steil sets a
new standard for our understanding, not just of the Cold War, but
also the post-Cold War era, where the future of Europe and the role
of the United States in it are once again at stake. An
outstanding--and certainly timely--accomplishment."--John Lewis
Gaddis, Robert A. Lovett Professor of Military and Naval History,
Yale University
"Benn Steil's carefully researched new book reminds us of the
economic uncertainties and political turmoil that surrounded U.S.
foreign policy-making in the aftermath of World War II. In the end,
the right choices were made, first in developing the Marshall Plan
providing economic support for economically devastated European
allies, and then building in NATO a strong Western military
alliance. Here we are seventy years later in very different
circumstances, economic and military. The United States and its
allies are strongly challenged to find new approaches to renewing
the alliances. May our leaders benefit from the practical wisdom
and ideas of seventy years ago."--Paul Volcker, former chairman of
the Federal Reserve
"Benn Steil's fascinating book places the transformative design and
huge impact of the Marshall Plan in the context of the early Cold
War drama. Engaging, detailed, and well researched, it takes us
behind closed doors in both Europe and the United States,
illuminating how the plan was created and how it changed the world.
The book's relevance extends well beyond its new historical
insights, showing how offshoots of the plan continue to shape
modern-day Europe. It also sheds light on how open mindsets and
intelligent economic architecture can help anchor an increasingly
fluid and uncertain global economy."--Mohamed El-Erian, Chief
Economic Advisor at Allianz, former CEO of PIMCO, and author of The
Only Game in Town
"Compelling and authoritative, The Marshall Plan is a first-rate
work of history. But it also bears powerfully on the present,
reminding us that if soft power is the power to attract, the
Marshall Plan is a stunningly successful example of it."--Fredrik
Logevall, Professor of International Affairs and History, Harvard
University
"Compelling, authoritative and lucid... Steil's superb narrative
combines diplomatic, economic and political history with
descriptions of such episodes as the Berlin Airlift, along with
vivid portraits of the diverse primary personalities... this
dramatic and engaging account of one of the most complex but
enduring achievements of American foreign policy deserves a wide
readership."--Bookpage
"Drawing extensively on U.S. archival material as well as some
Russian, British, French, German, Serbian and Czech sources, Steil
tells the story of not just the development of the Marshall Plan
but also the division of Germany, the founding of NATO and, as the
subtitle of his book indicates, the dawn of the Cold War. Steil's
account is the most detailed yet. . . . Steil is at his best when
describing the myriad agencies and policies that oversaw and
executed the Marshall Plan. . . . He writes elegantly on economics,
explaining complicated mechanisms used to fuel the Western European
recovery, such as implementation of counterpart funds, the creation
of the European Payments Union and the cancellation of German
debt." --Washington Post
"Even readers who consider themselves well-versed on what became
the Marshall Plan will be gripped by the details in Benn Steil's
retelling of just how Mr. Truman's idea became reality. . . . Mr.
Steil, an economist for the Council on Foreign Relations, is at his
narrative best in recounting how the program was put together."
--Washington Times
"In his new book, Benn Steil tells a double story: that of the
launch of the Marshall Plan, the unprecedented American program to
help rebuild Europe after World War II, and also of the various
Soviet attempts to thwart and counter it. Enlivened by
brilliantly-wrought pen portraits, this gripping narrative adds a
whole new perspective on one of the most fateful periods in world
history."--Liaquat Ahamed, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Lords
of Finance
"In this fascinating book, Benn Steil returns to one of the
enduring achievements of American diplomacy: the Marshall Plan to
rebuild European allies that were close to collapse after World War
II. A lucid and engaging writer, Steil has a rare gift for blending
economic and political history, showing how the Marshall Plan
dashed Soviet hopes that the United States would retreat from
Europe. At a time when the radical Trump administration is trashing
American alliances around the globe, this book is a powerful
reminder of how hard it was to build them, and how dangerous the
world can be without them."--Gary J. Bass, author of The Blood
Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide
"It may be hard to imagine someone hurrying home to curl up with a
work of political history, but Benn Steil's fascinating new book
The Marshall Plan could change that. Steil, author of the acclaimed
The Battle of Bretton Woods, has given us a thoroughly researched
and well-written account of the crucial years of 1947-49 and
formation of the Marshall Plan.... his expertise energizes his
thoughtful and meticulous writing style....will appeal to history
buffs in general and those seeking a definitive record of America's
first diplomatic confrontation with Soviet Russia in
particular."--USA Today
"Painstakingly researched and well-written. . . . A resounding
success." --Financial History
"Steil's fresh perspective on a well-tilled subject will be
appreciated by specialists for its wide-ranging analysis and
welcomed by general readers for its engrossing style and
accessibility."--Publishers Weekly
"Steil's lucid reminder of US political history should . . .
energize and focus citizens of democracies today, to help them
recognize what a world in dramatic geopolitical flux in looks like.
And how smart policy and strategy, well executed, can pay dividends
for decades to come."--The Cold War Daily
"The Marshall Plan has become a favorite analogy for policymakers.
Yet few know much about it. Finally, Benn Steil provides a
readable, authoritative account of what it was, what it did, and
what it achieved."--Graham T. Allison, Douglas Dillon Professor of
Government, Harvard Kennedy School
"The Marshall Plan is one of the great success stories of U.S.
foreign policy. Benn Steil's well-researched and insightful account
reminds us that this iconic example of strategic foresight and
imagination was anything but inevitable. On the contrary, his book
shows that the Plan's creation, refinement, implementation, and
eventual success required perseverance, political savvy, and plenty
of plain good luck. The moral for our era is clear: successful
foreign policies require creative and dedicated public servants and
do not emerge without them."--Stephen Walt, Belfer Professor of
International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School
"This is a gripping, complex, and critically important story that
is told with clarity and precision. The book is superbly documented
and reflects an extraordinary level of research."--Christian
Science Monitor
"Trenchant and timely . . . builds intellectual excitement . . .
Steil has written an ambitious, deeply researched narrative that
not only delineates the interlocking gears of international
politics and economics in early post-war Europe but also introduces
a large cast of statesmen, spies and economists that perhaps only
Dickens could have corralled with ease." --The New York Times Book
Review
"What is interesting and important in Steil's account is his
emphasis on U.S. initiative. . . . Steil's well-crafted new book .
. . puts the initiative in grand strategic perspective. . . . In
his retelling of the story of the Marshall Plan, Steil makes an
important contribution by emphasizing the U.S. role in Germany's
recovery and the political and strategic consequences that flowed
from it. . . . In his concluding chapter, Steil draws some
surprising comparisons between the 1940s and the post-Cold War
years." --Foreign Affairs
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