Carnegie
Corporation
of New York
Spring 2005

 

 





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Strategic Visions

Prompted by a dangerous gap between the mounting superpower rivalry and the negligible understanding of Soviet behavior among the American public and their leaders, Carnegie Corporation spearheaded support after World War II for inter-disciplinary research on the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. This led to the founding of the Russian Research Center at Harvard University in 1948 that attracted talented scholars to the field. The research and study supported by these and other grants provided by the foundation world effectively created a reservoir of knowledge for senior policymakers to draw on at the dawning of the Cold War.

Avoiding Nuclear War
After concentrating primarily on domestic causes throughout the mid-1960s and 1970s, Carnegie Corporation once again took the lead to move the Soviet Union to the forefront of foundation grantmaking. In 1983, under the stewardship of new president David A. Hamburg, the Corporation launched a major campaign to marshal independent research and policy analysis aimed at encouraging both superpowers to step back from renewed confrontation and to delineate sober-minded prospects for improving bilateral relations. This Avoiding Nuclear War (ANW) program was premised on investigating creative ways for extricating both countries from an intensifying security dilemma, where mutual fear, mistrust, misperceptions and commitments to containment elevated each side’s anxiety and propensity to resort to even more threatening policies with potentially grave consequences for humanity. The ANW program aspired to generate a “deeply innovative combination of new ideas, understanding and education” about nuclear crisis management, crisis prevention and confidence building. Because assumptions about Soviet foreign and military ambitions seemed to be key factors driving U.S. policy and “due to startling revelations about the profound misunderstanding of American policymaking within senior Soviet leadership and intelligence circles,” Hamburg at the outset envisioned Soviet-related projects as integral to the ANW program. Accordingly, from 1983-1990, the Corporation devoted roughly half of the program’s $50 million portfolio to strengthening and cultivating “the strongest possible” scholarly and policy analytical expertise for examining Soviet decision making and security policy, improving communication among Soviet and American policymaking and policyadvising communities and elevating public awareness and understanding of the fateful bilateral relationship.

Guided by this strategy, the lion’s share of Soviet-related grants during the period fell into four basic categories. The first consisted of multi-year, multi-million-dollar institutional grants to Columbia University, Stanford University, the University of California, RAND and MIT to revitalize first-rate graduate training and scholarly research on Soviet foreign and security policies. This was complemented by support to Duke University and the Social Science Research Council for training on Soviet domestic politics that, together with the institutional grants, aimed at attracting a new generation of scholars to advise the American public and policymakers. Second, the ANW program invested in leading policy-analytic research organizations, such as the Council on Foreign Relations and the Center for Strategic and International Studies, as well as top-flight academic research centers (such as at Harvard and Georgetown universities as well as the Brookings Institution) to generate immediate and long-term assessments of Gorbachev’s “glasnost” and “new thinking” and their implications for crisis management and prevention. As new opportunities arose to engage Soviet scientists and analysts with direct access to the Kremlin, Hamburg and the program staff championed formation of joint study groups, consisting of policy experts and scientists from both sides of the U.S.-Soviet divide. This featured collaborative projects between Harvard University and the Soviet Foreign Ministry that explored alternative negotiating strategies, as well as joint technical studies on verification and compliance of arms control agreements and the health consequences of nuclear war between respective institutes of both countries’ Academy of Sciences.

The ANW program also accented support for linkages and exposure to the Soviet Union for disparate audiences. Successive grants to the Aspen Institute brought together U.S. Congressmen and Soviet specialists. Through a combination of bi-annual retreats and regular breakfast meetings, the project served the dual purposes of engaging legislators with little knowledge of the Soviet Union directly with policy scholars (and on occasion, their Soviet counterparts) in a bipartisan format, while enlightening experts and Soviet officials on the concerns of U.S. congressional leaders. Finally, the Corporation supported various public awareness projects, such as collaboration between the Public Agenda Foundation and Brown University on alternative directions for U.S.-Russia relations, as well as several educational documentaries, including two television series, that traced the evolution of Soviet society under Gorbachev (Gorbachev’s Russia) and ebbs and flows in the bilateral relationship (Global Rivals).

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