America unbound : World War II and the making of a superpower

Bibliographic Information

America unbound : World War II and the making of a superpower

edited by Warren F. Kimball

(The Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute series on diplomatic and economic history, 3)

St. Martin's Press, 1992

Available at  / 12 libraries

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Note

Revised papers from a conference held at Rutgers University

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Whether World War II made or merely marked the transition of the United States from a major world power to a superpower, the fact remains that America's role in the world around it had undergone a dramatic change. Other nations had long recognized the potential of the United States. They had seen its power exercised regularly in economics, if only sparodically in politics. But World War II, and the landscape it left behind, prompted American leaders and the Congress to conclude that they had to use the nation's strength to protect and advance its interests.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgements - Introduction
  • W.F.Kimball - Power and Superpower: The Impact of Two World Wars on America's International Role
  • D.Reynolds - U.S. Globalism: The End of the Concept of Europe
  • D.C.Watt - American Empire, American Raj
  • W.LaFeber - The Legacy of World War II for American Conventional Military Strategy: Should We Escape It?
  • R.F.Weigley - American and Wartime Changes in Intelligence
  • B.F.Smith - Soviet Intelligence and the Office of Strategic Services
  • H.D.Peake - U.S. Economic Strategy: Wartime Goals, Peacetime Plans
  • W.F.Kimball - Genocide Treaty Ratification: Ending an American Embarrassment
  • W.Korey - Notes on Contributors - Index

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