Sayle, a history professor at the University of Toronto, provides an in-depth analysis. Through personal papers, cabinet memoranda, and other previously classifed documents retrieved from a dozen archives across North America and Europe, he contextualizes the personal perspectives of the alliance's political, military, and diplomatic leadership. Countering a widely held public perception, Sayle persuasively makes the point that the primary fear among these leaders was not the Red Army crossing Germany's Fulda Gap but rather the "problem of democracy" itself.
* Literary Review of Canada *
Sayle's book is a remarkably well-documented history of the NATO alliance. This is a worthwhile addition to the growing literature on NATO and a foundation for understanding its current challenges and prospects.
* Choice *
Drawing on extensive archival records, Sayle rehearses in detail the founding of NATO and its early operations
* Foreign Affairs *
Because of its ability to offer a clear, engaging, wide-ranging, and thought-provoking analysis, Enduring Alliance is quite simply the best overview of the alliance's history that scholars, students, and practitioners have now at their disposal. Sayle takes on an ambitious project but delivers a much-needed book that will no doubt become the reference point for any student interested in NATO and transatlantic relations.
* H-Net *
Timothy Sayle's Enduring Alliance is a timely and important book. Sayle successfully proves that most of the challenges that NATO faces today have existed throughout the history of the alliance.
* Real Clear Defense *
Drawing on a dizzying array of published and archival sources, Sayle presents a masterful analysis of what the alliance has been, what bound its members together, and why the alliance has endured for seven decades and is likely to endure for the foreseeable future.
* American Historical Review *
This clearly-written and extensively researched book is a welcome addition to the scholarship on NATO. Sayle provides a strong case on why NATO has endured. The book would be appropriate for use in advanced courses in history and international relations where students already have a firm grasp of the Cold War.
* Diplomatic History *
With his 2019 book, Enduring Alliance, Timothy Andrews Sayle makes three major contributions to NATO history. First, he provides a long-term perspective on the evolution of NATO, particularly with his detailed account of the Cold War. Second, he applies a strategic approach, rather than an institutional approach. Third, his narrative is based on a wide range of archival sources from both the Anglo-American world and NATO headquarters, consolidating an international narrative.
* China International Strategy Review *