Between Deterrence and Dtente: British Ambassador Sir Roger Makins' Perspective on US Foreign Policy in 1953
By (Author) Jeffrey LaMonica
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
30th December 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
327.7300904
Hardback
100
Width 161mm, Height 236mm, Spine 13mm
336g
The year 1953 represented a pivotal moment in the Cold War and set the course of global affairs for the next sixty-five years. The cessation of hostilities in the Korean War resulted in the creation of two opposing countries separated by a contentious demilitarized zone. This book presents how Great Britains Ambassador to the US, Sir Roger Makins, provided the British Foreign Office with weekly summaries of American political and diplomatic affairs throughout 1953. Examining the events of this critical year through the eyes of this British diplomat provides a fresh perspective on the Cold War.
Between Deterrence and Dtente: : British Ambassador Sir Roger Makins' Perspective on US Foreign Policy in 1953 provides a fascinating and important explanation of a seasoned British diplomats view of key issues in American foreign affairs at an important juncture of the cold war. As the book makes clear, the legacies from 1953 of the Korean War, the U.S.-China relationship, decolonization, the Middle East, and deterrence and dtente with the then Soviet Union remain pressing issues in the twenty-first century. The need for the quality of analysis of a Sir Roger Makins remains equally pressing. -- Lowell Gustafson, Villanova University
Jeffrey LaMonica is associate professor of history and coordinator of the global studies program at Delaware County Community College.