Transcription of The Cold War: A New History - PC\|MAC
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Table of ContentsTitle PageCopyright PageDedicationPreface CHAPTER ONE - THE RETURN OF FEARCHAPTER TWO - DEATHBOATS AND LIFEBOATSCHAPTER THREE - COMMAND VERSUS SPONTANEITYCHAPTER FOUR - THE EMERGENCE OF AUTONOMYCHAPTER FIVE - THE RECOVERY OF EQUITYCHAPTER SIX - ACTORSCHAPTER SEVEN - THE TRIUMPH OF HOPE EPILOGUENOTESBIBLIOGRAPHYPHOTOGRAPH CREDITSMAP SOURCESINDEXALSO BY JOHN LEWIS GADDISThe United States and the Origins of the cold War, 1941 1947 Russia, the Soviet Union, and the United States: An Interpretive History Strategies of Containment: A Critical Appraisal ofAmerican National Security Policy During the cold War The Long Peace: Inquiries into the History of the cold War The United States and the End of the cold War: Implications,Reconsiderations, Provocations We Now Know: Rethinking cold War History The Landscape of History : How Historians M
with the Cold War. The world, I am quite sure, is a better place for that conflict having been fought in the way that it was and won by the side that won it. No one today worries about a new global war, or a total triumph of dictators, or the prospect that civilization itself might end. That was not the case when the Cold War began.
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