Выбрать главу

military personnel

national interest of

and NATO, see NATO

Open Door policy of

and Pearl Harbor attack

and postwar Germany

public opinion shaped in academia

racial tensions in

and Soviet relations

and weapons of mass destruction

University of Chicago

Urban, George

USA and Canada Institute

U.S.S.R., see Soviet Union

Vandenberg, Arthur H.

Vandenberg, Hoyt

Varga, Yevgeny

Vassiltchikov, Marie

Vienna:

Anschluss in

Kennan’s assignment in

Sanatorium Gutenbrunn in

Vietnam War

antiwar protests

Vlasik, Nikolay

Vyshinsky, Andrey

Wallace, Henry A.

Walsh, Father Edmund A.

Warnke, Paul

Warsaw Pact

Washington Post, The

Wasson, R. Gordon

Watergate

Watson, Adam

Webb, James E.

Wedemeyer, Albert C.

Weeks, Edward A. “Ted,”

Wei, Fong

Weizmann, Chaim

Welles, Sumner

Wells, Grace (cousin)

Whitman, Walt

Whitney, Thomas P.

Wiley, John C.

Wilgress, Dana

Willett, Edward F.

Williams, William Appleman

Wilson, Woodrow

Wilson administration

Winant, John G.

Wisconsin

Wisner, Frank

Wolfe, Thomas

Wolfers, Arnold

Woodrow Wilson Foundation

Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars

Woodward, Sir Llewellyn

Woolf, Harry

World War I

and Kennan’s early years

and Paris Peace Conference

World War II

allied success in

anniversaries of

and appeasement

Britain’s declaration of war

D-Day

destruction of

end of

German surrender in

Germany’s declaration of war against U.S.

Japanese surrender in

military life in

and Munich

Nazi takeovers in

onset of

Pearl Harbor attacked in

preliminaries to

strategic bombing capabilities of

U.S. entry into

U.S. neutrality in

U.S. productivity in

U.S. veterans returning home from

Wright, C. Ben

Wright, Frank Lloyd

Yakovlev, Nikolay Nikolayevich

Yale Review, The

Yale University

Yalta

Yasnaya Polyana (Tolstoy’s home)

Yepishev, Aleksey Alekseyevich

Yugoslavia

and Belgrade channel

Communist Party in

and Cuban missile crisis

Kennan as ambassador to

Kennan’s visit to

and Kennedy administration

and most-favored-nation status

Skopje earthquake

Tito in, see Tito, Josef Broz

Yusupov, Prince

Zapolskaya, Juli

Zhdanov, Andrey

Ziegler, Philip

Zionism

PHOTOGRAPHS

George Kennan (born February 16, 1845) in 1903 (CORBIS)
Kossuth Kent Kennan (Joan Kennan Collection)
Florence James Kennan (Eugene Hotchkiss Collection)
George Frost Kennan (born February 16, 1904) in 1904 (Joan Kennan Collection)
George and Jeanette (Joan Kennan Collection)
935 Cambridge Avenue, Milwaukee (Joan Kennan Collection)
Lake Nagawicka (Joan Kennan Collection)
George with bike, ca. 1916 (Joan Kennan Collection)
George as cadet, St. John’s Military Academy, 1917 (Joan Kennan Collection)
The Kennan Family, ca. 1918 (from left, Frances, Kent senior, George, Kent junior, Louise, Constance, Jeanette) (Joan Kennan Collection)
George, at Princeton, while still fond of automobiles (Joan Kennan Collection)
Passport photo, May 1924 (Joan Kennan Collection)
George, on left, Princeton graduate and deckhand, 1925 (Joan Kennan Collection)
The young diplomat, probably in Estonia, late 1920s (Joan Kennan Collection)
Annelise Sorensen Kennan, early 1930s (Joan Kennan Collection)
Presenting credentials, Moscow, December 1933 (from left, Bullitt, Kennan in background, Kalinin) (Princeton University Library)
George, third from left, brooding in Norway; Annelise, second from right (Joan Kennan Collection)
The Washington Post, September 15, 1938 (from left, Joan, George, Grace, Annelise) (Joan Kennan Collection, used by permission of the Associated Press and The Washington Post)
George in wartime Berlin, ca. 1940–41 (Joan Kennan Collection)
George, closely supervised, visiting collective farm, probably in Siberia, June 1945 (Joan Kennan Collection)
The “long telegram” (Harry S. Truman Library)
The Policy Planning Staff, 1947. From left, Kennan, Carlton Savage, Joseph Johnson, Leroy Stinebower (substituting for Jacques Reinstein), Ware Adams (Princeton University Library, used by permission of The Washington Post)
President Truman, Robert M. Lovett, Kennan, and Charles E. Bohlen at the White House, 1947 (Bettmann/CORBIS)
George C. Marshall and Dean Acheson, 1947 (Bettmann/CORBIS)
Kennan, dictating to Dorothy Hessman, 1949 (Joan Kennan Collection)
J. Robert Oppenheimer, John von Neumann, and the Institute for Advanced Study computer, 1952 (Bettmann/CORBIS)
Ambassador Kennan in his Mokhovaya office, contemplating the Kremlin, 1952 (Princeton University Library)
Arriving in New York from Moscow, November 1952 (from left, Wendy, Annelise, George, Christopher) (Bettmann/CORBIS)