logo
The Dinner That Helped Save Europe

The Dinner That Helped Save Europe

New York Times27-04-2025
In 1979, during John Paul II's first visit to the United States as pope, he met with President Jimmy Carter at the White House. Shortly after that, he invited Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's national security adviser, to dinner at the Vatican Embassy in Washington. Along with world affairs, Carter wanted to discuss declining morals with the recently elected pope, but Brzezinski had more practical subjects in mind.
For the pontiff and the adviser, their mutual obsession was the Soviet Union. Over a simple meal at the Apostolic Nunciature of the Holy See, they explored how they could together weaken Moscow's grip over its captive nations. Brzezinski was stunned by the pope's geopolitical knowledge. He joked that Carter was more like a religious leader while the pope seemed more like a world statesman. The vicar of Christ affirmed the quip with a belly laugh, Brzezinski noted in his personal diary, to which I acquired exclusive access.
From that dinner onward, the two Polish-born figures — one the first non-Italian pope in 455 years, the other America's first (and to date, probably the only) Polish-speaking grand strategist — became intimate allies.
Their serendipitous relationship proved critical in late 1980 in dissuading the Soviets from invading Poland, where the Solidarity movement had just emerged as a serious challenge to the Communist government. It was a partnership sustained by a running dialogue conducted during Brzezinski's visits to the Vatican, in long handwritten correspondence and over the phone. His White House speed dial had P for 'pope.'
John Paul's relationship with Brzezinski is a vivid example of how diplomacy works when there is mutual trust. Good chemistry is rare but extremely productive. Sustained dialogue with both friends and adversaries in today's volatile world is, if anything, even more critical. The ability at a tense moment to pick up the phone and know that you can trust the person on the other end is the fruit of constant gardening.
Yet it is increasingly hard to find the time. Technology means that presidential envoys are always within White House reach to respond to the cascade of competing demands. The world is also a more complex place than it was 40 years ago, and U.S. diplomats have rarely been held in lower regard at home. Twenty-four-hour media scrutiny also makes secrecy far harder. Henry Kissinger's covert visit to Beijing in 1971 to pave the way for U.S. rapprochement with Mao Zedong's China is hard to imagine today.
Kissinger also built strong relationships with his Soviet counterparts. (Brzezinski was reviled in Moscow, and Carter kept him away from talking to the Soviets.) Even as President Richard Nixon was luring China away from the U.S.S.R.'s Cold War bloc, Kissinger was buttering up the stony Soviet foreign minister, Andrei Gromyko, and having frequent dinners with Anatoly Dobrynin, the Soviet Union's longstanding ambassador to Washington. That the United States was able to further pry China apart from the U.S.S.R. while cementing détente with Moscow was a feat of diplomacy. It was also a product of time invested in relationships.
One of the few recent examples of a sustained conversation between rivals was that between Jake Sullivan, President Joe Biden's national security adviser, and Wang Yi, China's top diplomat. In the second half of the Biden administration, the two met in Vienna, Malta, Bangkok, Beijing and Washington for talks that added up to more than 50 hours of conversation, according to Mr. Sullivan. His quest for a stabilization of U.S.-China relations was cut short by Donald Trump's victory last November. China's request for Mr. Trump to appoint his own envoy has so far gone unanswered.
Without the trust that comes from a solid relationship between officials, the risk of military accident arising from miscommunication or ignorance is far greater. Above all, there should be no surprises. Talking at length clarifies the other side's intentions and reduces the chances of potentially lethal miscalculation. Even without Mr. Trump's unpredictable and shifting priorities, any U.S. president would find today's world harder to navigate than the relatively manageable bipolar divide during the Cold War.
American politics has never stopped at the water's edge. But foreign policy was not politicized during the 1970s and '80s to anything like the degree it is today.
The point of maximum danger to Poland in 1980 took place after Carter lost the election to Ronald Reagan. On Dec. 6, Stansfield Turner, the C.I.A. director, warned the president that a Soviet invasion was likely to happen within the next 48 hours. The Soviets had amassed 15 divisions on Poland's border. Brzezinski and John Paul had for weeks been working the phones in tandem to warn Solidarity and its charismatic leader, Lech Walesa, to tamp down their anti-Soviet rhetoric. The Soviets should be given no pretexts to cross the border, they told him.
At the same time, Washington, leaders of allied nations and the Vatican made clear to the Soviets that Poland would be indigestible. Unlike with the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968, the Red Army would meet heavy resistance from workers belonging to Mr. Walesa's mass trade union, from the Catholic Church and even from elements of the Polish military. All the while, Brzezinski was keeping the transition team of the incoming president informed. The incoming national security adviser, Richard Allen, agreed to reinforce Carter's warnings to Moscow.
Brzezinski's rapport with John Paul II had the benefit of not just their shared Polish roots but also timing: Karol Wojtyla was elected to the papacy in 1978. When the Vatican announced the outcome, Yuri Andropov, the head of the K.G.B., ordered a report on the election, which laid out a far-fetched plot by Brzezinski to rig the conclave. There was no basis to that claim. But the pope and Brzezinski more than redeemed Moscow's paranoia. Their coordinated tactics, based on trust and friendship, helped to prevent an invasion that could have changed history.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

More than half of U.S. thinks racism is widespread, according to Gallup
More than half of U.S. thinks racism is widespread, according to Gallup

UPI

timean hour ago

  • UPI

More than half of U.S. thinks racism is widespread, according to Gallup

A protestor stands in the street in front of Akron City Justice Center in Akron, Ohio, in July 2022 after Akron police fatally shot Jayland Walker, 25, after a short chase amid public unrest with law enforcement. Washington-based Gallup polling results suggest 64% of Americans believe racism is widespread in the United States. File Photo by Aaron Josefczyk/UPI | License Photo Aug. 20 (UPI) -- New data released Wednesday by Gallup suggests more than half the country believes that racism against Black people is not only alive and well but widespread in the United States. Gallup's newly-released results of 64% nearly tied with its last reading in its 2021 periodic measurements as its highest recorded by the Washington-based firm since 2008, the year Barack Obama was elected to the White House as the nation's first Black president. It's suggesting that 83% of Black adults and 61% of White adults say that racism is widespread. The question was first posed by Gallup experts in 2008, in which results said at the time that only 56% of U.S. adults thought racism was a widespread issues. It saw a reported dip to 51% by the following year. By 2015, its 60% reading came at a time of several high-profile killings of Black civilians at the hands of law enforcement officers and has since remained in that range. According to Gallup, police interactions stood out as the "top" area of unfair treatment toward Black people, with a perceptions of bias in healthcare, shopping, restaurants and workplaces at or near record high returns. Gallup said that non-Hispanic Black adults continue to be "most likely" to say such racism is prevalent in the country, with 83% expressing that view. Results found that smaller majorities of Hispanic respondents at 64% and 61% of non-Hispanic White adults agreed. The findings come from Gallup's survey from June 2-26 and included an oversample to allow for better estimates. "Conversely, Americans' (29%) belief that racism against White people is widespread is the lowest of five readings since 2008," according to Gallup. It added that 68% in its poll say U.S. adults think civil rights "have improved" in their lifetime. "The overall sample was weighted so all racial/ethnic groups are represented in their proper proportions of the U.S. population," according to Gallup officials. But the survey noted how in six of its interactions that dealing with police was seen largely as racially "inequitable." Gallup's results suggests a trend of at least 57% of Americans who believe Black people are treated less fairly than White people in various situations, particularly during traffic incidents that in recent years have been known to turn deadly in multiple states.

Warsaw: Drone that crashed in eastern Poland of Russian origin
Warsaw: Drone that crashed in eastern Poland of Russian origin

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Warsaw: Drone that crashed in eastern Poland of Russian origin

A drone that crashed in a cornfield in Poland is of Russian origin, Defence Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz said on Wednesday, calling the incident a provocation. "Russia is once again provoking the NATO states," Kosiniak-Kamysz remarked. He said this is happening at a time when there are efforts for peace in Ukraine, which is under attack from Russia. The Foreign Ministry in Warsaw announced it would issue a protest note to Moscow. All NATO allies have been informed about the incident, Kosiniak-Kamysz added. NATO initially declined to comment on the incident when asked. The drone fell in a field near the village of Osiny, about 100 kilometres south-east of Warsaw, early in the morning. Footage from the local news website LukowTV showed a flash of light followed by a loud bang. Windows in several nearby houses were shattered. No one was injured. Police officers called by residents found burnt debris made of plastic and metal at the crash site. The portal Onet published images from social networks showing a charred engine with a propeller. A representative of the Polish army's high command stated that the drone's motor was a commercially available model produced in China, as was its onboard electronics. The explosive charge onboard the drone was not large. "This was definitely not a warhead for combat operations," he said. It is therefore suspected that the drone was a so-called decoy. Craft of this type are often used to distract enemy air defences. The prosecutor responsible for the investigation said the drone left a crater about 6 metres in diameter and 50 centimetres deep. It is unclear whether the explosion occurred in the air or only upon impact. The crash site is about 120 kilometres from Poland's border with Ukraine and around 100 kilometres from the border with Belarus. EU and NATO member state Poland is one of the most important political and military supporters of Ukraine. It also sees itself as threatened by Russia and is massively rearming. In November 2022, a rocket hit the village of Przewodów in eastern Poland, killing two men. The incident is believed to have been caused by a stray Ukrainian anti-aircraft missile. The incident comes amid questions over NATO countries' involvement in offering security guarantees in the event of a peace deal between Moscow and Kiev. Russia has warned it would not accept the stationing of Western troops in Ukraine, a move it says could further escalate tensions. Solve the daily Crossword

Russian drone crashes into field in latest ‘provocation' from Kremlin, Poland says
Russian drone crashes into field in latest ‘provocation' from Kremlin, Poland says

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Russian drone crashes into field in latest ‘provocation' from Kremlin, Poland says

A Russian drone crashed in a field in eastern Poland, according to early findings, Polish officials said on Wednesday, in an incident the nation's defense minister described as a provocation. The drone hit and scorched a cornfield in the village of Osiny in the eastern Lublin province overnight, just over 62 miles from the Ukrainian border and around 55 miles from Belarus. Poland has been on high alert for objects entering its airspace since a stray Ukrainian missile struck a southern Polish village in 2022, killing two people. Advertisement 4 Polish officials are calling the incident a 'provocation' after a Russian drone fell in NATO territory. Pawel Supernak/EPA/Shutterstock Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Pawel Wronski told Reuters that the findings so far and some experts have suggested a Russian version of the Shahed drone developed by Iran was involved in the latest incident. General Dariusz Malinowski said the drone appeared to be a decoy which was designed to self-destruct. He said it had a Chinese engine. Advertisement Deputy Prime Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz, who also serves as defense minister, said the incident bore similarities to cases in which Russian drones flew into Lithuania and Romania, and could be linked to efforts to end the war in Ukraine. 'Once again, we are dealing with a provocation by the Russian Federation, with a Russian drone. We are dealing with it in a crucial moment, when discussions about peace (in Ukraine) are underway,' he told journalists. 4 Visitors check damaged Russian drones during the International Conference on Expanding Sanctions Against Russia in Kyiv, Ukraine, AP Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said on X his ministry would issue a protest against the airspace violation but did not name the perpetrator. Advertisement 'Another violation of our airspace from the East confirms that Poland's most important mission towards NATO is the defense of our own territory.' The Russian embassy in Warsaw did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. 4 Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said on X his ministry would issue a protest against the Russian government. White House U.S. President Donald Trump met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and a group of European allies in the White House on Monday, following his meeting on Friday in Alaska with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Advertisement The blast shattered windows in several homes, but nobody was injured, national news agency PAP reported. Police said they found burnt metal and plastic debris at the site and that corn had been burnt in an area of roughly 26-33 ft in diameter around the spot where the object fell. 4 President Donald Trump greets Russian president Vladimir Putin at Joint Base Elmendorf Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, Friday, August 15, 2025. White House 'I was sitting in my room at night, around midnight, maybe, and I heard something just bang,' local resident Pawel Sudowski told local news website 'It exploded so loudly that the whole house simply shook.' Start your day with all you need to know Morning Report delivers the latest news, videos, photos and more. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Air raid sirens rang out for about an hour over the border in Ukraine's Volyn and Lviv regions from around midnight local time, according to messages from its military posted on Telegram. There were no reports of air attacks in those regions, their governors said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store