Cold War Statesmen Confront the Bomb
Nuclear Diplomacy Since 1945
Jonathan Rosenberg editor Ernest May editor Philip Gordon editor John Gaddis editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st Apr '99
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Cold War Statesmen Confront the Bomb: Nuclear Diplomacy Since 1945 is a path-breaking work that uses biographical techniques to test one of the most important and widely debated questions in international politics: Did the advent of the nuclear bomb prevent the Third World War? Many scholars and much conventional wisdom assumes that nuclear deterrence has prevented major power war since the end of the Second World War; this remains a principal tenet of US strategic policy today. Others challenge this assumption, and argue that major war would have been `obsolete' even without the bomb. This book tests these propositions by examining the careers of ten leading Cold War statesmen--Harry S Truman; John Foster Dulles; Dwight D. Eisenhower; John F. Kennedy; Josef Stalin; Nikita Krushchev; Mao Zedong; Winston Churchill; Charles De Gaulle; and Konrad Adenauer--and asking whether they viewed war, and its acceptability, differently after the advent of the bomb. The book's authors argue almost unanimously that nuclear weapons did have a significant effect on the thinking of these leading statesmen of the nuclear age, but a dissenting epilogue from John Mueller challenges this thesis.
excellent and scholarly collection * Lawrence Freedman, TLS *
ISBN: 9780198294689
Dimensions: 242mm x 162mm x 27mm
Weight: 729g
408 pages