Cold War Patriot and Statesman: Richard M. Nixon
By (Author) Leon Friedman
Edited by William F. Levantrosser
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th June 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
Biography: historical, political and military
Central / national / federal government
973.924
Hardback
392
The only apparent consensus about the Nixon Presidency is that his accomplishments in the foreign policy area far outshadowed those in the domestic arena. The advances for which he was responsible--in particular, the opening to China--brought the most significant improvement in foreign relations among the great powers in decades. The Nixon diplomacy worked, while many of his domestic programs failed. This was true, the editors of this Hofstra-sponsored volume maintain, because there was more of a sense of realism and caution in his dealings with foreign governments and a willingness to compromise and accommodate their interests--a tolerance he often lacked in the domestic area. This volume outlines the main components of the Nixon foreign policy, beginning with the significant effort to bring China into the world community. The manner in which the Vietnam war was ended is examined, as are the evolution of American policy in the Middle East and the efforts at detente. With essays and observations from scholars and participants in the making of that policy, this volume is significant reading for all students of American foreign policy and the presidency.
LEON FRIEDMAN is the Joseph Kushner Professor of Civil Liberties Law at the Hofstra University Law School. WILLIAM F. LEVANTROSSER is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Colloquim on the American Presidency at Hofstra University. The editors have collaborated on two previous volumes: Richard M. Nixon: Politician, President, Administrator (1991) and Watergate and Afterward: The Legacy of Richard M. Nixon (1992), both available from Greenwood Press.