Quelling the Teacup Wars
In: Foreign affairs, Band 73, Heft 6, S. 2-6
ISSN: 0015-7120
4 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Foreign affairs, Band 73, Heft 6, S. 2-6
ISSN: 0015-7120
In: Foreign affairs: an American quarterly review, Band 73, Heft 6, S. 2
ISSN: 2327-7793
Few analysts of U.S. involvement in Vietnam would agree with the provocative conclusion of this book. The thesis of most postmortems is that the United States lost the war because of the failure of its foreign policy decisionmaking system. According to Gelb and Betts, however, the foreign policy failed, but the decisionmaking system worked. They attribute this paradox to the efficiency of the system in sustaining an increasingly heavy commitment based on the shared conviction of six administrations that the United States must prevent the loss of Vietnam to communism. However questionable the conviction, and thus the commitment, may have been, the authors stress that the latter "was made and kept for twenty-five years. That is what the system—the shared values, the political and bureaucratic pressures—was designed to do, and it did it." The comprehensive analysis that supports this contention reflects the widest use thus fare of available sources, including recently declassified portions of negotiations documents and files in presidential libraries. The frequently quoted statement of the principals themselves contradict the commonly held view that U.S. leaders were unaware of the consequences of their decisions and deluded by false expectations of easy victory. With few exceptions, the record reveals that these leaders were both realistic and pessimistic about the chances for success in Vietnam. Whey they persisted nonetheless is explained in this thorough account of their decisionmaking from 1946 to 1968, and how their mistakes might be avoided by policymakers in the future is considered in the final chapter.
Zartman, I. W.: In search of the new world order. - S.23-38. Hassner, P.: New world order, old world order or new world disorder? - S.39-54. O'Neill, R.: The future of nuclear weapons. - S.55-75. ... Ahn B.: Regionalism in the Asia-Pacific: Asian or Pacific community? - S.95-131. Scalapino, R. A.: The United States and Pacific: Asia entering the 21st century. - S.132-154. Nye, J. S., jr.: The United States and Asia in the new global order. - S.155-168. Funabashi, Y.: The anatomy of the Nye Initiative. - S.169-189. Inoguchi, T.: Distant neighbours? Japan and Asia. - S.193-204. Vogel, E. F.: The rise of China and Asian security. - S.205-222. MacFaquhar, R.: Domestic politics and foreign relations. - S.223-241. Chufrin, G.: Russian foreign policy in the Asia-Pacific. - S.242-255. Arbatov, G.: Post-Cold War era, Russian policy and Korea. - S.259-284. Chipman, J.: Changes in international strategy: implications for East Asia. - S.285-304. Gelb, L. H.: South Korea and the global world order. - S.305-320. Wanandi, J.: Korea and the new regional order in the Asia-Pacific. - S.321-334. Evans, P. M.: Reinventing East Asia: a Korean role. - S.335-350. Han S.: The future of the world, the region and Korea. - S.351-363
World Affairs Online