A breakfast for Bonaparte : U.S. national security interests from the Heights of Abraham to the nuclear age /

Despite or perhaps because of what he has seen at negotiation tables and diplomatic exchanges, Rostow writes with no bias other than to promote the goal of relative peace as attainable and reasonable. That goal may become the more attainable, he feels, if more and more nations would come to see it a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rostow, Eugene V. (Eugene Victor), 1913-2002
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Washington, D.C. : National Defense University Press : For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. G.P.O., ©1993
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Table of Contents:
  • 1. On war and peace
  • 2. The state system : the balance of power and the concept of peace
  • 3. The quest for peace : from the Congress of Vienna to the United Nations Charter
  • 4. From sea to shining sea : America's conception of its foreign policy
  • 5. Europe's troubles, America's opportunity, 1776-1801
  • 6. Europe's troubles, America's opportunity, 1801-1830
  • 7. The United States within the concert of Europe, 1830-1865
  • 8. Premonitions of change, 1865-1914
  • 9. The death of the Vienna system, July 1914
  • 10. The Vienna system reborn, April 1917
  • 11. The interwar years : the precarious birth of the modern world, 1919-1920
  • 12. The interwar years : pretense and self-deception, 1920-1929
  • 13. The interwar years, 1929-1939 : Hitler's Icarian flight
  • 14. The Soviet Union reaches for hegemony : the Stalin years
  • 15. The nuclear dimension : a case study
  • 16. Conclusion : the Gorbachev era and beyond