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American foreign policy since World War II / Steven W. Hook, John Spanier.

Van Pelt Library E744 .H646 2004
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hook, Steven W., 1959-
Contributor:
Spanier, John W.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
United States--Foreign relations--1945-1989.
United States.
International relations.
United States--Foreign relations--1989-.
Physical Description:
xvi, 431 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Edition:
Sixteenth edition.
Place of Publication:
Washington, D.C. : CQ Press, [2004]
Contents:
Chapter 1 The American Approach to Foreign Policy 1
Learning from Experience 5
The Volatile State System 6
The Shifting Balance of Power 7
The American Concept of Security 9
The American National Style 11
The American Sense of Destiny 11
The Depreciation of Power in International Politics 13
The Penchant for Crusading 17
Self-Doubts and Revisionist Histories 19
Chapter 2 From World War to Cold War 24
American Wartime Illusions 25
The Russo-Soviet Approach to Foreign Policy 29
The Russian Background 29
The Soviet Ingredient 30
Soviet Expansion after World War II 32
U.S.-Soviet Differences 34
The Soviet Push to the South 36
Toward the Strategy of Containment 38
George Kennan and the New Grand Strategy 40
Alternatives to Containment 43
The Changing of the Guard: Sea Power versus Land Power 45
Declaring Cold War: The Truman Doctrine 46
Chapter 3 Containment: From Theory to Practice 50
New Economic and Military Structures 52
The Bretton Woods System 52
The National Security Act 54
Reviving the Western European Allies 55
The Marshall Plan 57
Roots of the European Union 58
Military Rearmament and the NATO Alliance 60
Recurring Conflicts over Berlin 62
Confronting Revolution in East Asia 64
The Chinese Revolution 64
Hot War in Korea 66
Conflict in the Taiwan Straits 72
Domestic Pressures for a Global Crusade 73
Nuclear Strategy and the "Balance of Terror" 75
Chapter 4 Developing Countries in the Crossfire 81
Obstacles to Political and Economic Development 84
The Population Explosion in Developing Countries 85
Financial Obstacles to Development 86
Tensions between Nationalism and State Building 87
The Revolution of Rising Expectations 90
Clashing Models of Economic Development 92
Regional Conflicts in Africa and the Middle East 96
National Disintegration and Civil War in the Congo 96
Regional Rivalries: The Arab-Israeli Wars 98
U.S. Policy toward Latin America 101
Superpower Confrontation in Cuba 104
The Bay of Pigs 107
The Cuban Missile Crisis 108
Chapter 5 Vietnam and the Cost of Containment 112
Ejection of the French from Vietnam 113
The "Domino Theory" and U.S. Intervention 116
The Perils of Incrementalism 120
The Misconduct of Guerrilla Warfare 122
The Military Battlefield: Vietnam 125
The Political Battlefield: The United States 128
Disengagement from Vietnam 131
Congress versus the "Imperial Presidency" 134
Chapter 6 The Era of Superpower Detente 138
Managing the Superpower Rivalry 141
The Kissinger Philosophy 142
Exploiting the Sino-Soviet Split 145
Linking Cooperation to Soviet Restraint 148
Arms Control as the Centerpiece of Detente 150
The Erosion of U.S. Alliances 153
New Military Flashpoints 154
Chile's Military Takeover 155
Regional Conflicts in Africa 157
Disillusionment with Detente 159
Chapter 7 Jimmy Carter and World-Order Politics 162
Recognizing Global Interdependence 164
A Focus on North-South Relations 167
The New International Economic Order 168
The Foreign Aid "Regime" 169
OPEC's Economic Challenge 171
Carter's Middle East Breakthrough 172
The Collapse of Carter's Foreign Policy 177
The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan 178
Revolution and Communist Rule in Nicaragua 179
America "Held Hostage" in Iran 181
Lessons of World-Order Politics 184
Chapter 8 The Revival of Superpower Confrontation 186
Reagan's Rhetorical Offensive 188
Expanding U.S. Military Forces 190
Opposition to Arms Control 191
The Strategic Defense Initiative 193
"Rollback" in Developing Countries 194
Evaluating the Reagan Doctrine 199
Abuses of the Reagan Doctrine: The Iran-contra Scandal 202
Alliance Politics in the Late Cold War 204
Poland and the Rise of Solidarity 205
The Missile Debate in Europe 207
NATO Threatened from Within 208
From Confrontation to Conciliation 210
Chapter 9 The End of the Cold War 214
Bush's Management of the Soviet Collapse 215
Dismantling Stalin's Empire 217
Detaching Brezhnev's Outposts 223
Reducing Arms and Stabilizing the Nuclear Balance 225
Endgame: The Collapse of the Core 227
Reasons for the Soviet Collapse 232
The Contending Arguments in Perspective 233
Excesses of the Containment Policy 238
A Final Appraisal 239
Chapter 10 America's "Unipolar Moment" 241
Great Expectations after the Cold War 244
Revived Debates about America's World Role 246
Clinton's Embrace of "Geoeconomics" 251
The Course of America's Economic Troubles 252
Responses by the Clinton Administration 255
East Asia's Economic "Miracle" 257
Promoting Democracy and Sustainable Development 260
A Grand Strategy of Democratic "Enlargement" 260
Support for Sustainable Development 262
Domestic Challenges to Clinton's Foreign Policy 264
Chapter 11 Old Tensions in a New Order 268
Sources of Global Fragmentation 269
War and Peace in the Middle East 271
Iraq's Challenge in the Persian Gulf 271
Obstacles to an Arab-Israeli Peace 279
The Plight of "Failed States" 282
Somalia and Central Africa 284
Haiti 287
Nuclear Brinkmanship in South Asia 289
Lessons from the Regional Crises 292
Chapter 12 The Shifting European Landscape 295
Western Europe: From Community to Union 297
Jump-Starting Democracy in Eastern Europe 300
NATO's Endurance after the Cold War 303
"Ethnic Cleansing" in the Balkans 306
The Dayton Accords 310
The Kosovo Showdown 312
U.S.-Russian Relations under Stress 316
Internal Challenges to Reform 317
Unrest in the "Near Abroad" 320
Chapter 13 America under Fire 324
Strains in the Unipolar Order 326
The Globalization Backlash 327
U.S. Opposition to International Agreements 329
Terror in the Morning Sky 332
Waging War against Terrorism 334
The al Qaeda Connection 336
Elements of Asymmetric Warfare 340
Intelligence 341
Diplomacy 342
Homeland Security 342
The Afghanistan Campaign 343
Outbreak of Domestic Terrorism 346
A Grand Strategy of Primacy and Preemption 347
Chapter 14 A World of Trouble 352
An Economic Boom Gone Bust 354
East Asia's Reversal of Fortune 355
Challenges to the "Washington Consensus" 358
Renewed Hostilities against Iraq 360
Building Support for Action 363
Diplomatic Ruptures and Allied Resistance 364
North Korea's Nuclear Breakout 370
Global Orders and American Power 372
Appendix A U.S. Administrations since World War II 378.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 394-408) and index.
ISBN:
1568028180
OCLC:
52214714

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