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9780415135542

The Fifty Years War: The United States and the Soviet Union in World Politics, 1941-1991

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780415135542

  • ISBN10:

    0415135540

  • Format: Nonspecific Binding
  • Copyright: 1996-03-06
  • Publisher: Routledge

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Summary

This is an authoritative and comprehensive history of the Fifty Years' war and the relationship that dominated world politics in the second half of the twentieth century. For fifty years relations between the United States and the Soviet Union were deciding factors in international affairs. Available for the first time in paperback, Richard Crockatt's acclaimed book is an examination of this relationship in its global context. It breaks new ground in seeking a synthesis of historical narrative and analysis of the global structures within which superpower relations developed. Attention is given to economic as well as political and military factors.

Table of Contents

List of figures
ix
Preface to the paperback edition xi
Preface and acknowledgements xiii
List of abbreviations
xvii
Part I Perspectives
Introduction: The Fifty Years War
3(12)
A question of scale
4(3)
The cold war and international politics
7(8)
The American and Soviet Foreign Policy Traditions
15(24)
The United States
15(10)
Russia and the Soviet Union
25(14)
Part II the emergence of a bipolar world, 1941-1953
Introduction
37(2)
The Second World War and the Struggle for Peace, 1941-1946
39(25)
Globalism and the changing balance of power
39(3)
The Grand Alliance and the war in Europe
42(4)
The disintegration of the wartime alliance
46(12)
1946: Domestic politics and international conflict
58(6)
Two Ways of Life: The Cold War in Europe, 1947-1953
64(25)
Perspectives on the origins of the cold war
64(8)
Containment and the Truman Doctrine
72(4)
The Marshall Plan, Germany, and the division of Europe, 1947-1949
76(4)
NATO, NSC 68 and the militraization of containment
80(4)
Stalinism and the cold war at home and abroad, 1947-1953
84(3)
Conclusion
87(2)
Cold War: The Far Eastern Dimension, 1945-1953
89(25)
Asia and Europe compared
89(2)
Defining superpower interests in Asia
91(2)
McCarthyism and the Far Eastern turn in American policy
93(2)
China and the ferment in Asia, 1945-1950
95(4)
The American occupation of Japan
99(1)
The Korean War
100(7)
Conclusion
107(7)
Part III Globalism and the limits of bipolarity, 1953-1964
Introduction
111(3)
Peaceful Coexistence and Irreconcilable Conflict, 1953-1964
114(24)
The economics of superpower status
114(3)
De-Stalinization and international communism, 1953-1964
117(6)
The Eisenhower administration and the new Soviet leadership
123(2)
Towards the Geneva summit
125(2)
The Geneva summit
127(2)
Crisis and its meaning, 1956-1961
129(2)
Kennedy and Khrushchev
131(7)
The Nuclear Arms Race, 1945-1963
138(29)
Introduction
138(3)
American nuclear strategy
141(8)
Soviet nuclear strategy
149(3)
Disarmament or arms control?
152(6)
The Cuban missile crisis
158(9)
The United States, the Soviet Union and the Third World, 1953-1963
167(40)
Patterns of dependence and independence
167(6)
The suberpowers and the Third World: basic assumptions
173(3)
The Middle East: Iran, Suez, and Lebanon
176(7)
Southwest Asia
183(6)
Latin America: Guatemala and Cuba
189(8)
Africa: The Congo
197(2)
Conclusion
199(8)
Part IV Detente and its limits, 1965-1981
Introduction
203(4)
Detente in the Making, 1965-1973
207(28)
The international environment
207(9)
The domestic dimensions of detente
216(3)
Detente: The theory
219(5)
Detente: The practice
224(10)
Conclusion
234(1)
The Vietnam War and the Superpower Triangle
235(18)
Introduction
235(1)
Vietnam and the American national interest
236(9)
North Vietnam and Sino-Soviet conflict
245(1)
The American opening to China
246(4)
Vietnam: The costs of victory
250(3)
Detente Under Pressure, 1973-1981
253(52)
Introduction
253(1)
The United States: a nation in irons?
254(3)
The Soviet Union: a nation unchained?
257(3)
Arms control and the strategic nuclear debate, 1974-1981
260(8)
European dilemmas: West and East
268(11)
Irrepressible conflict: The Third World
279(19)
Conclusion
298(7)
Part V Cold war versus international politics: The denouement, 1981-1991
Introduction
301(4)
Reaganism and the Spectre of Communism
305(33)
Transitions of power
305(5)
The economics of superpower status revisited
310(5)
Arms and the man
315(9)
The troubled Western Alliance
324(7)
The superpowers, the Middle East, and Central America
331(6)
Conclusion
337(1)
Gorbachev and the New World Disorder, 1985-1991
338(31)
Introduction
338(2)
The Soviet Union and the collapse of communism
340(10)
Eastern Europe in revolution
350(6)
The United States, the Soviet Union, and the end of the Cold War
356(10)
The end of the cold war and the wider world
366(3)
Conclusion
369(10)
The issue of stability
369(2)
The shape of things to come
371(8)
Notes 379(2)
Bibliographical note 381(3)
Bibliography 384(15)
Index 399

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