Excerpted from Six Months in 1945 by Michael Dobbs. Copyright © 2012 by Michael Dobbs. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Now a U.S. citizen, Michael Dobbs was born and educated in Britain, with fellowships at Princeton and Harvard. He spent much of his career as a reporter for The Washington Post, for which he covered the collapse of communism. His previous books include One Minute to Midnight, and Down with Big Brother: The Fall of the Soviet Empire, a finalist for the 1997 PEN award for nonfiction.
A conversation with
Michael Dobbs
author of
SIX MONTHS IN 1945
Q: Why did you decide to write a book with the title Six Months in 1945?
A: I am interested in hinge moments in history, the time when one era ends and another begins. One such moment was the collapse of communism, which I witnessed myself as a reporter for The Washington Post, culminating in the fall of the Berlin wall and the breakup of the Soviet Union. I described this moment in my book Down with Big Brother. The previous such moment was the end of World War II and the beginning of the Cold War, which also marked the beginning of the nuclear age. Six Months in 1945 tells the story of how Americans and Russians met in the heart of Europe, and divided up the continent.
Q: What about your last book, One Minute to Midnight, on the Cuban missile crisis?
A: You could say that was about the ultimate hinge moment, when human civilization almost came to an end. Fortunately, everything turned out all right, but it was much too close for comfort.
Q: So you argue that the Cold War began in 1945?
A: I trace the start of the global competition between the United States and the Soviet Union back to the first few months after the allied victory over Nazi Germany. What we now call the Cold War became inevitable with the American development of the atomic bomb, and its use against Japan. Once the Americans had the bomb, Stalin also wanted the bomb. The nuclear arms race, which was the key feature of the Cold War, began in August 1945. Winston Churchill was already talking about an “iron curtain” being “drawn down across the continent” a few weeks earlier, in May 1945.
Q: Who are your favorite characters in this book?
A: The principals—Roosevelt, Stalin, Churchill, and Truman—are all wonderful characters. Churchill is a gift to any writer: he is so colorful, with so many quirky personal habits: heroic, endearing and infuriating all at the same time. His associates left behind some wonderful diaries and letters that allowed me to recreate some particularly vivid scenes. Stalin fascinated me because least is known about him in the West. I try to explain how this son of a shoemaker, born on the fringes of the Russian empire, came to control half of Europe. These six months are a real window into his personality as he spent a lot of time with western politicians. We see him interacting with two very different American presidents: the wily, aristocratic FDR, who tried to charm and flatter him, and the plain-spoken Truman, who saw him as the representative of the common man.
Q: Who do you think was responsible for the Cold War?
A: This is an old historical controversy among diplomatic historians that I sidestep in my book. My view is that none of the leaders wanted the Cold War but it happened despite them because of the deep-seated ideological, economic, and cultural differences between East and West. You see this very clearly when you look at encounters between ordinary Russians and Americans. Take Berlin, in July 1945, for example. While the politicians were talking peace at the Potsdam conference, Russian and American soldiers were shooting at each other a few miles down the road in Berlin. It did not take very long at all for hugs to turn into scowls.
Q: How do you carry out your research?
A: I immerse myself in the documents, archives, and memoirs of the time. Some of the most interesting material in Six Months in 1945 comes from letters that have never been published before—for example, from American and Russian soldiers serving in Berlin. But I also make a point of visiting all the places that I write about in my books. For example, I spent two months in Berlin researching the chapters about the Potsdam conference. I visited the Kremlin on many occasions while based in Moscow as a journalist. I need to have a picture of a place in my mind in order to bring it alive for readers. I want readers to feel as if they are there, on the spot, eavesdropping on history as it is being made. My method is similar to that of a film-maker, shooting scenes to make a movie.
Q: Have any of your books ever been made into a movie?
A: Not yet, but Fox is planning a movie based on my book about the Cuban missile crisis, One Minute to Midnight.
"[S]uperbly evocative . . . So vivid is the writing that you can practically feel the shuddering vibration and turbulence in what was then the state-of-the-art aircraft carrying Roosevelt on the first visit by an American president to the Soviet Union."
—Martin Rubin, San Francisco Chronicle
"Favoring a journalistic style that embeds the issues, such as Poland and German reparations, in atmospheric descriptions of the Yalta and Potsdam conferences' interior decor and meal menus, Dobbs lends the subject an immediacy that will engage history readers, who will be within earshot of leaders and their aides as they meet, adjourn, dine, and wrangle over the affairs of defeated Germany and its former empire ... Dobbs delivers a readily accessible presentation of the onset of the Cold War."
—Gilbert Taylor, Booklist
"A confident and rewarding survey of a hinge point in 20th-century history."
—Kirkus Reviews
"This extraordinary and well-documented account of a short period in history illustrates how just a few men in a closed room can influence history in a monumental and sometimes devastating way. Six Months in 1945 is an important book to read to better understand how such negotiations influence us for decades. It illustrates that events and decisions made on the world stage affect us all, without most of us being aware of the decisions."
—Free Lance-Star
"An astute narrative of the six months that changed the world."
—Publishers Weekly
“Superb . . . Dobbs tells the story with the precision of a fine historian and the verve of a first-rate journalist.”
—Philip Seib, Dallas News
“Dobbs is a gifted writer. His characterizations of powerful men are well judged and rounded, as are his evaluations of the fateful choices they faced.”
—Lawrence D. Freedman, Foreign Affairs
“A gifted storyteller and thorough researcher with an eye for detail . . . tension and suspense aplenty.”
—Seth Mandel, Washington Times
“Dobbs brings these ‘six months in 1945’ to life better than anyone before him. In brisk, engrossing chapters, he weaves between the Big Three decision-makers . . . and sketches their stratagems, illusions, strengths and weaknesses.”
—Geoffrey Wawro, Military Book Club
“Dobbs delivers a propulsive read, replete with the sort of telling details that bring his subjects into high resolution. There are stretches of Six Months in 1945 that read like a taut World War II thriller.”
—Meredith Hindley, Barnes and Noble Reviews
“Elegant.”
—Keith Lowe, Washington Post
“Had we been seated at the Yalta conference ourselves, we might not have come away with the layer of detail and personal observation that Dobbs imbues in a mesmerizing sequence of events . . . [Dobbs] is the only writer who could have simultaneously provided the narrative drive and historical accuracy to such a monumental era in world history. . . . [K]inetic. Simple conversations that would sink in lesser hands are shot through with immediacy and candor . . . Dobbs has written much more than an intensely researched, riveting account of six crucial months in history; he’s brought our world closer by examining the remote details of our past.”
—Scott Elingburg, Pop Matters
“[R]iveting . . . [I]ntelligent, dramatic and insightful . . . [Dobbs] has the uncanny ability to include the perfect amount of detail, just the right measure of vivid color, into these momentous international events.”
—Edward Cuddihy, Buffalo News
“Well-written and filled with interesting stories and excellent character sketches, Six Months in 1945 is a great read . . . It graphically shows that no matter how much good will Roosevelt and the United States put forth, Stalin was determined to take control of Eastern Europe and Roosevelt’s belief that he could work with Stalin was based on a false hope.”
—J.W. Thacker, Bowling Green Daily News
“An exciting history . . . [Dobbs] provides fascinating insights and new interpretations that hold the reader’s interest . . . This is popular history that sparkles.”
—D.J. Dunn, CHOICE
“[R]iveting . . . [I]ntelligent, dramatic and insightful . . . [Dobbs] has the uncanny ability to include the perfect amount of detail, just the right measure of vivid color, into these momentous international events.”
—Edward Cuddihy, Buffalo News