A Constructed Peace: The Making of the European Settlement, 1945-1963

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Princeton University Press, 16 iun. 2020 - 440 pagini

People still think of the Cold War as a simple two-sided conflict, a kind of gigantic arm wrestle on a global scale," writes Marc Trachtenberg, "but this view fails to grasp the essence of what was really going on." America and Russia were both willing to live with the status quo in Europe. What then could have generated the kind of conflict that might have led to a nuclear holocaust? This is the great puzzle of the Cold War, and in this book, the product of nearly twenty years of work, Trachtenberg tries to solve it.

The answer, he says, has to do with the German question, especially with the German nuclear question. These issues lay at the heart of the Cold War, and a relatively stable peace took shape only when they were resolved. The book develops this argument by telling a story--a complex story involving many issues of detail, but focusing always on the central question of how a stable international system came into being during the Cold War period. A Constructed Peace will be of interest not just to students of the Cold War, but to people concerned with the problem of war and peace, and in particular with the question of how a stable international order can be constructed, even in our own day.

 

Cuprins

CHAPTER
34
CHAPTER THREE
66
THE NATO SYSTEM
95
CHAPTER FIVE
146
CHAPTER
201
CHAPTER SEVEN
251
CHAPTEREIGHT
283
CHAPTER NINE
352
SOURCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY
403
INDEX
419
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Despre autor (2020)

Marc Trachtenberg is Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of History and Strategy (Princeton) and Reparation in World Politics: France and European Economic Diplomacy, 1916-1923.

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