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This book fills a major gap in the study of inter-war British
foreign policy: it is the first complete study of Austen
Chamberlain's term of office as Stanley Baldwin's Foreign Secretary
from 1924-29. It is argued that Chamberlain's priority was a
two-stage policy in western Europe, which aimed at pacifying both
France and Germany, as well as encouraging the League of Nations.
Other key chapters deal with British policy in the Middle East and
China and policy Towards America. Overall, Chamberlain is shown to
have committed Britain to a European diplomatic role, which was
opposed by Cabinet ministers who did not see a European interest to
all aspects of British foreign policy. Today, in the Conservative
Party, the debate is still unresolved.
This book fills a major gap in the study of inter-war British
foreign policy: it is the first complete study of Austen
Chamberlain's term of office as Stanley Baldwin's Foreign Secretary
from 1924-29. It is argued that Chamberlain's priority was a
two-stage policy in western Europe, which aimed at pacifying both
France and Germany, as well as encouraging the League of Nations.
Other key chapters deal with British policy in the Middle East and
China and policy Towards America. Overall, Chamberlain is shown to
have committed Britain to a European diplomatic role, which was
opposed by Cabinet ministers who did not see a European interest to
all aspects of British foreign policy. Today, in the Conservative
Party, the debate is still unresolved.
The development of nuclear weapons has been a critical problem for
the NATO alliance. In the Pacific, a region of increasing strategic
interest for the United States and Soviet Union, nuclear weapons
have been an environmental concern since the bombing of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. Opposition to nuclear tests has now been taken a step
further with the creation of a South pacific Nuclear Free Zone and
the decision by a New Zealand Government to ban port visits by
vessels believed to be carrying nuclear weapons. New Zealand's
proposal to back its policy with legislation had been seen by the
Reagan and Thatcher administrations as a threat to the principle of
'neither confirm nor deny' the presence of nuclear weapons on
vessels. This 1989 study examines the questions of principle at
issue, the evolution of the ANZUS crisis, its implications for the
Western alliance structure as a whole, and the degree to which the
'nuclear-free' virus' in the South Pacific might be catching.
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