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Since Walter Lippmann blasted the policy of containment as a “strategic monstrosity” in 1947, George Kennan has been a controversial public figure alternately heralded and damned by numerous critics, including liberals and conservatives, diplomats, journalists, and scholars. To the historian Louis Halle, Kennan’s service during the Cold War was stunning and characterized by “Shakespearian insight and vision.” John Paton Davies, a career diplomat and one of the original members of the State Department’s Policy Planning Staff, has been especially impressed by Kennan’s “intuitive and creative mind, richly stored with knowledge, eloquent in expression, and disciplined by a scholarly respect for precision.” Though disappointed with some of his views, principally those regarding the Third World, the Harvard political scientist Stanley Hoffmann has likened Kennan’s mind to the exact mechanism of a fine watch. The trustees of the Albert Einstein Peace Prize and the German Booksellers Association have accorded him special recognition in the early 1980s as an outspoken, articulate opponent of the nuclear arms race. Yet, in the pages of The New Republic in 1977, Henry Fairlie has attributed Kennan’s advocacy of improved Soviet-US relations to advancing senility.
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