Living with Peril: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Nuclear WeaponsRowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1997 - 461 lappuses Living with Peril explains in detail how the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations adapted to the reality of a Soviet nuclear force capable of destroying the United States and against which there was no effective defense. Wenger illuminates the development, implementation, and evolution of U.S. government policies designed to avoid war and to respond to the vulnerability of nuclear destruction. Drawing from a wealth of sources, Wenger provides an insightful and original perspective on the origins of cold war nuclear diplomacy. This is crucial reading for students and scholars of international relations, peace and conflict studies, and diplomatic history. |
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1.–3. rezultāts no 87.
199. lappuse
... West had to prepare for the moment when Khrushchev would relin- quish control over access to West Berlin to the East Germans , thereby forcing the West to deal with a state it refused to recognize . The Eisenhower administration assumed ...
... West had to prepare for the moment when Khrushchev would relin- quish control over access to West Berlin to the East Germans , thereby forcing the West to deal with a state it refused to recognize . The Eisenhower administration assumed ...
229. lappuse
... West Berlin , including the freedom of access . However , Henry Kissinger warned that if " the West understands its interests cor- rectly it must stand for the unity of Germany despite the experience of two world wars and despite the ...
... West Berlin , including the freedom of access . However , Henry Kissinger warned that if " the West understands its interests cor- rectly it must stand for the unity of Germany despite the experience of two world wars and despite the ...
231. lappuse
... West Berlin is not 110 miles inside East Germany , but right on the demarcation line between West and East Germany . " Gromyko replied that the " reason why the Soviet Government be- lieved it to be necessary to have a peace treaty ...
... West Berlin is not 110 miles inside East Germany , but right on the demarcation line between West and East Germany . " Gromyko replied that the " reason why the Soviet Government be- lieved it to be necessary to have a peace treaty ...
Saturs
The Impact of the Strategic Nuclear Balance on Policy | 49 |
The Impact of the Thermonuclear Revolution on Policy | 85 |
A Delicate Balance | 105 |
Autortiesības | |
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Living with Peril: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Nuclear Weapons Andreas Wenger Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 1997 |
Living with Peril: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Nuclear Weapons Andreas Wenger Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2000 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
Acheson aggression allies American April atomic weapons attack August Basic National Security Berlin crisis bomb buildup Cold War Communist conventional forces Cuba Cuban Missile Crisis Danger and Survival December decision defense budget Department deterrent disarmament discussed Eisenhower administration Eisenhower's emphasized Europe European ExComm fiscal Folder foreign policy FRUS Germany ibid ICBM impact JFKL John Foster Dulles July June Kaysen Kennedy administration Kennedy's Khrushchev Korea Marc Trachtenberg March McGeorge Bundy McNamara Memorandum of Conversation Memorandum of NSC military missile gap national security policy NATO negotiations NH Box 13 Nitze November NSC meeting nuclear forces nuclear superiority nuclear war October peace planning political President Eisenhower President Kennedy proposed quotations from Memorandum risk Robert Secretary Dulles Secretary of Defense Secretary Rusk September 1961 Soviet nuclear Soviet Union speech tactical nuclear weapons task force thermonuclear tion Trachtenberg U.S. nuclear U.S. policy United West Berlin western