This document discusses lessons from several world leaders including Konrad Adenauer, Charles de Gaulle, Richard Nixon, and Anwar Sadat. It discusses how each leader approached challenges of their time through strategy, will, equilibrium, and peace negotiations. Key lessons included Adenauer's focus on humility for Germany, de Gaulle's view of politics as the art of the willed, Nixon's pursuit of equilibrium between powers, and Sadat's risky but impactful pursuit of peace with Israel. The document emphasizes the combination of character and circumstance that shapes history through great leadership.
This document discusses lessons from several world leaders including Konrad Adenauer, Charles de Gaulle, Richard Nixon, and Anwar Sadat. It discusses how each leader approached challenges of their time through strategy, will, equilibrium, and peace negotiations. Key lessons included Adenauer's focus on humility for Germany, de Gaulle's view of politics as the art of the willed, Nixon's pursuit of equilibrium between powers, and Sadat's risky but impactful pursuit of peace with Israel. The document emphasizes the combination of character and circumstance that shapes history through great leadership.
This document discusses lessons from several world leaders including Konrad Adenauer, Charles de Gaulle, Richard Nixon, and Anwar Sadat. It discusses how each leader approached challenges of their time through strategy, will, equilibrium, and peace negotiations. Key lessons included Adenauer's focus on humility for Germany, de Gaulle's view of politics as the art of the willed, Nixon's pursuit of equilibrium between powers, and Sadat's risky but impactful pursuit of peace with Israel. The document emphasizes the combination of character and circumstance that shapes history through great leadership.
This document discusses lessons from several world leaders including Konrad Adenauer, Charles de Gaulle, Richard Nixon, and Anwar Sadat. It discusses how each leader approached challenges of their time through strategy, will, equilibrium, and peace negotiations. Key lessons included Adenauer's focus on humility for Germany, de Gaulle's view of politics as the art of the willed, Nixon's pursuit of equilibrium between powers, and Sadat's risky but impactful pursuit of peace with Israel. The document emphasizes the combination of character and circumstance that shapes history through great leadership.
Any society, whatever its political system, is perpetually in transit between a past that forms its memory and a vision for the future that inspires its evolution.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Without leadership institutions drift, and nations court growing irrelevance and ultimately disaster.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Leaders think and act at the intersection of two axes : the past and the future the values and the aspirations of those they lead.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
For strategies to inspire society, leaders must serve as educators communicating objectives, assuaging doubts and rallying support.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Courage and character are need at the intersection of the past with the future and values and aspirations.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Leadership is most crucial in periods of transition when values and institutions are losing their relevance.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Leaders are hemmed in by constraints, they operate in scarcity. This can be capabilities, demography, time.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Management of risk is as critical to the leader as analytical skill.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
The leader as a strategist faces an inherent paradox: in circumstances that call for action, the scope for decision making is often greatest when relevant information is at its scantiest.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
If you misuse time, the limits will impose themselves on you as a leader.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
History teaches by analogy, through the ability to recognize comparable situations.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
The leader has to do the ‘correct thing’ without ‘knowing it’.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Meaningful political choices rarely involve a single variable.
It is the combination of character and
circumstance that creates history and the six leaders I have profiled here in the book are good examples.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Most leaders are not visionary but managerial.
Management of the status quo may be the
riskiest course of all for any leader.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
The statesman is the first type of leader. These leaders will embrace change and progress while retaining that society retains its basics. They have a sense of limits to push.
These Leaders assume responsibility for the
‘best’ and ‘worst’ outcomes.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
The statesman leader recognizes that change cannot go beyond what it can sustain.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
The second type of leader – the visionary or the prophet. They invoke their vision as proof of their righteousness.
Prophets redefine what’s appears possible, they are
‘unreasonable men’ according to GB Shaw.
Prophets distrust gradualism and their goal is to
transcend rather than manage the status quo.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Leaders can move from one model to the other, borrow from one where needed.
Churchill, Sadat and De Gaulle are examples.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Ordinary leaders seek to manage the immediate present, great leaders manage the future.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Do individuals matter in history?
History teaches us that men and women shape
their environment by their interpretation of it.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Konrad Adenauer • Konrad was the first German leader after WW 2. • The task of restoring dignity and legitimacy fell on Konrad. • He was mayor of cologne for 16 years before Hitler fired him. • He had a lot of difficulty and instability in his life. • He was jailed by the Nazi's, he would move from one hideout to the other every 24 hours and tried to lead a quiet life. • He was obsessed by the possibility of tragedy. • Konrad outlined the idea of a positive and viable European federation. Leadership Book Summary Shiv Lessons from Konrad Adenauer • Germany’s neighbors in Europe saw Germany as a country under ‘probation” after WW 2 • Konrad always stressed that humility was the road to equality for Germany. • The soviet union sensed the rebuilding of German as a direct threat to it. • Konrad had to focus on high ranking German officials in the trial for crimes on jews. He called it the way to ‘inner purification’ • Adenauer maintained personal contact with Nahum Goldmann, the founder of the world Jewish Congress.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Konrad Adenauer • Adenauer’s authority derived in part from his personality, which combined dignity with strength. • He never confused energy with strength • Great leadership is about sustaining vision over time.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Charles De Gaulle(CDG) • His was about the ‘strategy of will’. • Before 1940, DE Gaulle was seen as an outstanding soldier and strategic analyst. • DE Gaulle was a reader and author of poetry. He saw the price of statesmanship as a challenge as to whom to confide and trust. • In 1924, CDG published a book on why Germany collapsed in WW 1. • CDG never had gratitude as a strong point • For CDG, politics was not the art of the possible, but the art of the willed.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Charles De Gaulle(CDG) • In 1945, the French were living in a state of spiritual and material penury. Reforms that would take decades were unveiled in weeks. • The government established a family allowance to support raising French children and raising French birth rate. • CSD demonstrated that revolutionary changes did not require a revolution. • CDG warned Kennedy about the Vietnam war, he didn’t want USA getting into war. • CDG had an aloof style of decision making.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Charles De Gaulle(CDG) • CDG had great intuition, over three decades, he judged the situation insightfully. • He had extraordinary prescience and a courage to act. • In 1930s, he judged that future wars would be motorized. • CDG attracted admirers who were useful to him. A relationship with him meant neither reciprocity nor permanence. • His differently abled daughter Anne died of pneumonia in 1948 when she was twenty. CDG carried a picture of her in his breast pocket all his life.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Richard Nixon • Nixon practiced the strategy of equilibrium • Nixon was one of the most controversial presidents in American history. • When Nixon took office in 1969, the cold war was at full maturity. • I joined Nixon as his National security advisor and with presidents or people with power n there is no partnership, especially when the power is distributed so unequally between the two sides. • Even with his established relationships, an element of reserve palpable.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Richard Nixon • Nixon had both – significant insecurity and determined self promotion. • He was sometimes resentful when media highlighted my role in national policy and he wasn’t mentioned enough. • Nixon always focused on potential turning points in the daily briefings. • Nixon viewed peace as a state of fragile equilibrium between the great powers. • Nixon never believed that personal rapport with world leaders could offset conflicting national interests.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Richard Nixon • Nixon as a statesman reveled in analytical rigor and boldness in execution. • Nixon was instrumental in shifting the dollar gold link, and moving to a more flexible one. • Nixon didn’t want America to get involved in Asia so that they were dragged into any conflicts involving that country. • Nixon always felt that in some cases, one pays the price for pursuing something half heartedly and whole heartedly. • Societies become great not by victories over each other, but by common purpose and reconciliation.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Anwar Sadat • Even at its best the friendship between Egypt and USSR had been formal to the point of coldness. • Sadat approached the Us as opposed to his predecessor who tilted to USSR • In 1971, Sadat said he would ‘not accept this state of no war and no peace.” when he said this he was improving his negotiation position. • Conversations with Sadat were frequently interrupted by pauses for reflection. • Even successful negotiations have uneasy traces of compromise.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Anwar Sadat • Sadat landed in November 1977 in Jerusalem to the astonishment of the global pundits. Sadat was aiming to get to Israel via Washington, not the other way round. • Arab leaders felt betrayed that they were not consulted. • In 1978, Sadat visited camp David with begin for talks hosted by President carter and secretary Cyrus Vance. • Sadat got a lot of aid and GDP grew form levels of 1.5 % to 7 %. However, Egypt didn’t develop indigenous capital. • Sadat was killed in 1981 in a ceremonial parade.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Anwar Sadat • On Sadat’s epitaph read “ hero of war and peace. He lived for the sake of peace and was martyred for the sake of his principles.’ • I visited Egypt in 1983 and went to his grave to pay respects, I was the only mourner present.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Lee Kuan Yew • In November 1968, LKY visited Harvard on a sabbatical when he had been prime minister of Singapore for 9 years. He came to Harvard to get fresh ideas, to meet stimulating minds and to go back enriched. • One of the qualities of a statesman is not to get sept by the mood of the moment. • LKY had clarity of analysis right through his career. • Leaders are tempted by pessimism he once said to a group of leaders. • For Singapore to be important, he felt that mediocrity and corruption were not acceptable.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Lee Kuan Yew • LKY greatest gift to Singapore was to make them believe that they were their own gift and they need to work hard to realize the greatness. • In 1978, Deng Xiaoping came to visit Singapore to develop the China model and he was stunned by the progress. He had last been in Singapore in 1920. • LKY was a clever but rebellious student. • LKY set aside 33 % of the Singapore budget for education in the early 1960s.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Lee Kuan Yew • LKY felt his country needed to overachieve since they were constantly walking a tightrope between survival and catastrophe. • LKY always wanted Singapore to be a winning cause, so others would invest in it. • America had to live with a bigger China said LKY in 2011. • LKY warned America not to treat China as an enemy but to develop a different strategy. • For LKY , globalization meant that every country had to live in a competitive world. • Lee always said that not everything he did was right, but he always said he did it for an honorable purpose.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Margaret Thatcher • She believed in the strategy of conviction. • MT defined the leadership era of 1979 to 1990. • She made Britain more confident. • At the heart of her success was personal fortitude. • Americans view presidentship as a succession of leaders, however in Britain it is viewed as a succession of parties and policies. Hence there is always somewhere ready to take over. • She always wanted her party to have the winning quality. • In 1948, fresh with a chemical engineering degree, MT applied for a job with ICI. She was rejected. Her assessment read “ she is headstrong, obstinate and dangerously self opinionated” Leadership Book Summary Shiv Lessons from Margaret Thatcher • She cut a free milk program when she was education minister and the press labeled her ‘ milk snatcher’ • In 1975, I said that MT will not last and Churchills son-in-law would be a big leader. I was wrong. • Unlike the American presidency, the British prime minister does not have the ability to override her cabinet and still maintain his/her government. • She was anti communist to the core. • MT was always inclined to challenge public opinion and take the people with her.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
Lessons from Margaret Thatcher • MT struggled to find anything meaningful after her retirement from politics. • Her exceptional steeliness coupled with her love for the country is what made her special.
Leadership Book Summary Shiv
We cannot choose our external circumstances but we can choose how we respond to them.