000 01872nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c41503
_d41503
005 20220324161751.0
008 200204s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9780718132620
082 _a327.172 WEI
100 _aWeinberger, Caspar
245 0 _aFighting for peace: seven critical years at the pentagon
260 _aLondon
260 _bMichael Joseph
260 _c1990
300 _a310 p.
520 _aThe eight years of the Reagan Administration were a critical period for the United States, witnessing major international crises and controversy in the White House itself. Few men are better placed to comment on those turbulent times than Caspar Weinberger, who for most of the Presidency was Secretary of State for Defense. His lively, personal account of his years in office makes fascinating, enlightening reading. The turbulent 1980s began with Soviet threats towards Poland, and crises in El Salvador and Nicaragua. They continued with the Iran-Contra affair, Lebanon and the Israeli invasion, the Libyan bombing and the liberation of Grenada. Weinberger was fundamentally involved in the whole change in America's nuclear strategy and the revolutionary Strategic Defense Initiative, as well as the development of NATO policy. The period ends with the Iran-Iraq war and the Persian Gulf episodes, and the new Soviet initiative in arms reduction. Caspar Weinberger's support for Britain was, of course, immensely influential during the Falklands war. Caspar Weinberger's comments on the management of both the Armed and Intelligence services are fascinating, as are his discussions of the problems in a democratic society of a free and frank public airing of many of the decisions made. Through it all, we gain a unique insight into what it is like to be in such a position of power.
650 _aInternational relations
942 _cB
_2ddc