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American foreign policy since world war II

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi; Tata McGraw-Hill Pub.; 1989Edition: 11th edDescription: 410 pISBN:
  • 871874482
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327.73 SPA 11th ed.
Summary: Since the end of World War II more than forty years have passed without a global war. Regional conflicts have taken mil lions of lives, but the worst horror-nuclear war-has been avoided. This uneasy peace has been kept by two world powers vastly different from one another in geography, ideology, and political and economic systems. In American Foreign Policy Since World War II, eleventh edition, a comprehensive overview of U.S. foreign relations from 1945 to the present, John Spanier explores the differences between the United States and the Soviet Union and shows how their contrasting national styles contribute to the foreign policy successes and failures of each country. The book examines the various manifestations of the cold war from its beginnings in postwar Europe to its gradual spread in the Third World and to the doorstep of the United States. Designating the Reagan era as cold war II, Spanier places in perspective recent development in Central America and the Persian Gulf, enabling readers to see how these events fit into a pattern of superpower rivalry.
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Since the end of World War II more than forty years have passed without a global war. Regional conflicts have taken mil lions of lives, but the worst horror-nuclear war-has been avoided. This uneasy peace has been kept by two world powers vastly different from one another in geography, ideology, and political and economic systems. In American Foreign Policy Since World War II, eleventh edition, a comprehensive overview of U.S. foreign relations from 1945 to the present, John Spanier explores the differences between the United States and the Soviet Union and shows how their contrasting national styles contribute to the foreign policy successes and failures of each country.

The book examines the various manifestations of the cold war from its beginnings in postwar Europe to its gradual spread in the Third World and to the doorstep of the United States. Designating the Reagan era as cold war II, Spanier places in perspective recent development in Central America and the Persian Gulf, enabling readers to see how these events fit into a pattern of superpower rivalry.

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