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How the war in Vietnam came to represent the outer limits of
feasible American intervention, how the working of the democratic
process finally forced President Johnson to abandon a policy of
escalation, and why the particular events of March 1968 signaled
the end of an era constitute the subject matter of this
prize-winning, firsthand account. As under secretary of the Air
Force from October 1967 to February 1969, Townsend Hoopes had an
insider s perspective on events. His book is both compelling memoir
and searching historical inquiry. For this new paperback edition,
Mr. Hoopes has written a supplemental chapter interpreting the
final events of 1973-75 and assessing with masterful clarity the
whole period of American involvement in Vietnam, from 1945 to
1975."
In recent years the United Nations has become more active in - and
more generally respected for - its peacekeeping efforts than at any
other period in its fifty-year history. During the same period, the
United States has been engaged in a debate about the place of the
U.N. in the conduct of its foreign policy. This book, the first
account of the American role in creating the United Nations, tells
an engrossing story and also provides a useful historical
perspective on the controversy. Prizewinning historians Townsend
Hoopes and Douglas Brinkley explain how the idea of the United
Nations was conceived, debated, and revised, first within the U.S.
government and then by negotiation with its major allies in World
War II. The experience of the war generated increasing support for
the new organization throughout American society, and the U.N.
Charter was finally endorsed by the community of nations in 1945.
The story largely belongs to President Franklin Roosevelt, who was
determined to form an organization that would break the vicious
cycle of ever more destructive wars (in contrast to the failed
League of Nations), and who therefore assigned collective
responsibility for keeping the peace to the five leading U.N.
powers - the major wartime Allies. Hoopes and Brinkley focus on
Roosevelt but also present vivid portraits of others who played
significant roles in bringing the U.N. into being: these include
Cordell Hull, Sumner Welles, Dean Acheson, Harry Hopkins, Wendell
Willkie, Thomas Dewey, Arthur Vandenberg, William Fulbright, Edward
Stettinius, and Walter Lippmann. In an epilogue, the authors
discuss the checkered history of the United Nations and consider
its future prospects.
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