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The Division of Europe after World War II - 1946 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R559
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The Division of Europe after World War II - 1946 (Paperback)
Series: Ideas and Action Series
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List price R615
Loot Price R559
Discovery Miles 5 590
You Save R56 (9%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Should the negotiation of the post-World War II peace treaties in
Europe have been pursued separately or should they have been
approached within the framework of a general European settlement?
The debate on this fundamental foreign policy issue, which has left
only faint tracks in the documentary record, is fully explored here
for the first time. W. W. Rostow, in his second book in the Ideas
and Action Series, describes a meeting that took place on the eve
of the departure of Secretary of State James Byrnes for Paris to
participate in treaty negotiations. The meeting was probably the
only occasion during 1946 when the peace treaty issue as a whole
was explicitly addressed at a high level with lucid alternatives on
the table. The plan laid before Secretary of State Byrnes by his
senior subordinates, Under Secretary Dean Acheson and Assistant
Secretary for Economic Affairs Will Clayton, aimed to halt the
movement toward the split of Europe and the emergence of hostile
blocs. It outlined an all-European settlement, including economic
and security institutions linked to the United Nations. Only one
part of the proposal gained Byrnes's support and came to life: the
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe in Geneva. But the
Acheson-Clayton proposal foreshadowed the Marshall Plan. The book's
larger theme is the process by which the Cold War came about.
Rostow's interpretation differs from either conventional or
revisionist views, emphasizing as it does the process of
incremental deterioration that occurred in 1946 and the role of
uncertainty and weakness in American policy. This second volume in
the Ideas and Action Series will interest general readers as well
as those with a particular interest in World War II. It should be
of special value to political scientists, economists, military
historians, and policy makers, and may serve as a case study in a
variety of courses.
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