Dartmouth Conferences (peace)

Dartmouth Conferences on peace process begun at Dartmouth College in October 1960.[1] It is one of the longest ongoing bilateral unofficial dialogues between American and Soviet (now, Russian) representatives.[2]

Contents

History and impact

The conferences began during the height of the Cold War, aiming to create a forum where leading American and Soviet intellectuals could meet and discuss peace initiatives.[3] The meetings were restricted to American and Soviet non-governmental representatives only.[1][3] Nonetheless, it was used as an unofficial channel of communication between the respective governments.[4][5] The participants were in fact often briefed and debriefed by their respective state officials before and after the conference.

Funding came from the Ford Foundation and Johnson and Kettering Foundation on the American side and from the Soviet Peace Committee and the Institute for US and Canadian Studies on the Soviet side.[5][6]

The first conference was held in the Dartmouth College; although the venue changed in the later years, the name of the first venue became associated with the conference series.[5] The organizers of the conference tried to keep a yearly schedule, but the Soviet side often refused the invitation; for example, there were no conferences in the years 1965-1968, as the relations between USSR and USA cooled down and the Soviet officials protested the growing US involvement in Vietnam, ordering the invited Soviet representatives to turn down invitations to the conference.[7]

During the Cold War, it has been noted that the Dartmouth Conferences became a front conference for the Soviet Union, whose agents often managed to weaken Dartmouth critique of USSR and instead concentrate on blaming the United States and the West.[1][8]

Nonetheless the Darmouth Conferences continued after the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, although the large conferences of the past have been replaced by the meetings of specialized task forces (which were created in 1981).[9] Soviet Union was replaced by Russia, and focus would shift to issues such as peace in post-Soviet states, like Tajikistan.[10]

Notable participants

Notable participants included Norman Cousins (founder of the conference), Zbigniew Brzezinski, Georgi Arbatov, Helmut Sonnenfeldt, Evgeni Primakov, David Rockefeller, Andrei Kozyrev, Charles Yost, John Kenneth Galbraith, and Buckminster Fuller.[11]

Locations and times

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Richard Felix Staar, Foreign policies of the Soviet Union, Hoover Press, 1991, ISBN 0817991026, p.87
  2. ^ Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri, Nuclear Politics: Towards a Safer World, Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd, 2004, ISBN 1932705023, Google Print, p.26
  3. ^ a b James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, Google Print, p.vii
  4. ^ James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, p.4
  5. ^ a b c Ruud van Dijk, Encyclopedia of the Cold War, Taylor & Francis, 2008, ISBN 0415975158, Google Print, p.645
  6. ^ Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri, Nuclear Politics: Towards a Safer World, Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd, 2004, ISBN 1932705023, Google Print, p.27
  7. ^ James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, p.68
  8. ^ James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, Google Print, p.18
  9. ^ James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, Google Print, p.275
  10. ^ James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, Google Print, p.vii-viii
  11. ^ James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, p.4-5
  12. ^ a b James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, p.21
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, Google Print, p.67
  14. ^ a b c James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, p.139
  15. ^ a b James Voorhees, Dialogue sustained: the multilevel peace process and the Dartmouth Conference, US Institute of Peace Press, 2002, ISBN 1929223307, p.219

Further reading