The Sit Room
In the Theater of War and Peace
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
The Sit Room brings you inside the secretive Situation Room of the White House, the most important deliberative room in the world, during the early 1990s when the author was one of the policymakers who framed the Clinton Administration's policy towards the bloody Balkans War. Drawing upon newly declassified documents and his own notes, David Scheffer, who later became America's first Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, weaves the true story of how policy options were debated in the Sit Room among the highest national security officials. The road to a final peace deal in late 1995 came at the high price of the murderous siege of Sarajevo and ethnic cleansing of mostly Bosnian Muslims from their homes and towns, including the genocide of Srebrenica's men and teenage boys.
The Sit Room reveals the behind-the-scenes story about how American policy evolved--often futilely--to try to stop an intractable war and its shocking atrocities. Main actors in the Sit Room include: the assertive Ambassador to the United Nations, Madeleine Albright; the State Department's ace negotiator, Richard Holbrooke; the cerebral National Security Adviser, Tony Lake; the immigrant Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, John Shalikashvili; the bulldog Deputy National Security Adviser, Sandy Berger; and White House moralist, David Gergen. For almost three years, the Sit Room was littered with shattered proposals to end the war-until armed force backed up diplomacy to compel a fragile peace deal. The Sit Room reveals authentic policy-making at the highest levels, with a unique journey into the arena of war and peace where spirited debate guided America's foreign policy.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Scheffer (All the Missing Souls: A Personal History of the War Crimes Tribunals), professor of law at Northwestern University and former American ambassador-at-large for war crimes, offers an insider's detailed account of the "three-year conversation" that took place in the White House situation room as policy makers tried to grapple with the early-1990s Balkans War. For Scheffer, deliberations in the "sit room" were characterized both by courageous, innovative thinking in particular that of Scheffer's boss at the time, Madeleine Albright, U.S. permanent representative to the United Nations and by "procrastination, fear of the unknown, and a futile search for alternatives to bold action." Participants in these discussions found themselves negotiating ever-changing daily developments and a dizzying array of stakeholders, ultimately "muddling through" to secure what Scheffer calls a "fragile peace." This account will doubtless be useful to scholars of U.S. foreign policy and the policy-making process, but may prove less than engaging for the general reader, as it often reads like a sequence of notes meeting after meeting, document after document rather than a unified narrative with an identifiable arc. As such, policy scholars will be rewarded by the level of detail and the sharp character sketches of key figures, but other readers may find themselves losing the forest for the trees.