Toward Managed Peace: The National Security Interests of the United States, 1759 to the Present

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Yale University Press, 1. 1. 1995. - 416 страница
In this authoritative book, one of the world's leading political analysts who has been Dean of the Yale Law School, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, and Director, U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, reviews the diplomatic experience of the United States and the prospects for world politics and argues that the most vital security interest of the nation is the achievement and maintenance of world peace. To achieve this goal, says Rostow, the state system must be based on a favorable balance of power, and it must be managed by the major powers, or a decisive number of them, in accordance with the United Nations Charter.

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Introduction 37
3
Concept of Peace
29
The Quest for Peace from the Congress of Vienna
40
Introduction
53
The Vienna System Reborn April 1917
191
The Precarious Birth of
208
Pretense and SelfDeception
234
Hitlers Icarian Flight 19291939
252
Introduction
277
The Stalin
283
A Case Study
309
The Gorbachev Era and Beyond
337
United States Foreign Policy after the Soviet Collapse
362
Index
385
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