The Necessity for Choice: Prospects of American Foreign PolicyThis book is an attempt to define the major foreign policy and defense issues before America in the 1960s. Underlying the work is a sense of urgency, based on the author's conviction that in this revolutionary age the norm is the fact of upheaval and solutions, however comprehensive they seem, can never be regarded as permanent. The book starts from the premise that many of the patterns of policy which have served the nation since the end of World War II no longer apply. It seeks to assess the contemporary debate, and to indicate some possibilities for resolving the policy issues. The problems which have not been solved, nor properly judged, according to the author, range from national defense, NATO, Germany, arms control, negotiations, and colonialism, to the role of the intellectual in the field of foreign policy. |
Contents
CHAPTER 11THE DILEMMAS OF DETERRENCE | 10 |
CHAPTER IIILIMITED WARA REAPPRAISAL | 57 |
CHAPTER IVTHE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE | 99 |
Copyright | |
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ability achieve advantage aggression aggressor agreement alliance allies American areas argument arms control become Berlin blackmail blow capability Cold War considered control system conventional forces course danger decision defense democracy deterrence difficult diplomacy disarmament East German economic effective effort Europe European evasion existing fact Federal Republic free world Germany goal incentive increase inevitable inspection system intellectual invulnerability issue Khrushchev kilotons launch least less limited major nuclear power massive retaliation means measures ment military establishment missile gap mobility nations NATO neutral nuclear strategy nuclear test nuclear test ban nuclear war nuclear weapons Oder-Neisse line opponent peace period political position possible pre-emptive war present proposals reduce resist result retaliatory force risk seek side significance situation society Soviet leaders Soviet pressure Soviet Union stability stockpiles strategy summit conference surprise attack tactical tensions test ban threat of all-out threatened tion unification unilateral United vulnerable West Western