Summit Diplomacy: Some Lessons from History for 21st Century Leaders Professor Paul Reynolds
It is not easy to see how matters could be worsened by a parley at the Winston Churchill coined the term summit in 1950, during some of the darkest days of the Cold War. In the second half of the twentieth century summit meetings became a central element of international diplomacy among them dramatic encounters such as Kennedy and Khrushchev at Vienna in 1961 and Reagan and Gorbachev in Reykjavik in 1986. Today summits are in the headlines all the time for meetings of the EU, G8 and G20 and the word is often used in other walks of life, especially in business. But there is relatively little reflection about what summit meetings are supposed to achieve or about their costs as well as benefits. We need to take a long view of summitry, exploring why, for most of history, leaders deliberately avoided facetoface meetings. We should look more closely at some of the classic Cold War meetings, asking why some worked and others did not. And we also need to understan
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