Reagan and Thatcher: The Difficult Relationship

Front Cover
W. W. Norton & Company, Mar 19, 2012 - Biography & Autobiography - 342 pages

An iconic friendship, an uneasy alliance—a revisionist account of the couple who ended the Cold War.

For decades historians have perpetuated the myth of a "Churchillian" relationship between Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, citing their longtime alliance as an example of the "special" bond between the United States and Britain. But, as Richard Aldous argues in this penetrating dual biography, Reagan and Thatcher clashed repeatedly—over the Falklands war, Grenada, and the SDI and nuclear weapons—while carefully cultivating a harmonious image for the public and the press. With the stakes enormously high, these political titans struggled to work together to confront the greatest threat of their time: the USSR.

Brilliantly reconstructing some of their most dramatic encounters, Aldous draws on recently declassified documents and extensive oral history to dismantle the popular conception of Reagan-Thatcher diplomacy. His startling conclusion—that the weakest link in the Atlantic Alliance of the 1980s was the association between the two principal actors—will mark an important contribution to our understanding of the twentieth century.
 

Contents

Prologue
1
CHURCHILL JEFFERSON AND JESUS
3
THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE
19
COME IN ITS FREEZING
35
LITTLE ICECOLD BUNCH OF LAND
71
EVEN MORE OF A WIMP THAN JIMMY CARTER
97
ANOTHER ISLAND ANOTHER WAR
131
THIS IS HOW LARGE POWERS BEHAVE
161
THE DAY THE EARTH SHOOK
211
A THUNDEROUS ROUND OF APPLAUSE
241
THE LAST WALTZ
263
EPILOGUE LEAD ME INTO THE SUNSET
283
Acknowledgments
297
Notes
299
Index
327
Copyright

NOT A GREAT LISTENER
191

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About the author (2012)

Richard Aldous is a professor of history at Bard College, where he holds the Eugene Meyer Chair. He is the author and editor of eleven books and is a contributor to television and radio on both sides of the Atlantic. Aldous’s writing appears regularly in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times Book Review, and The American Interest, where he is a contributing editor. He lives in Red Hook, New York.