Description
Examines NSC 68, the massive rearmament program that the United States embarked upon beginning in the summer of 1950.
About the Author
Curt Cardwell is an Assistant Professor of US Foreign Relations history at Drake University. He received a Ph.D. in History at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, in 2006, and was recipient of the Harry S. Truman Library Dissertation Year Grant in 2003.
Reviews
'Curt Cardwell has offered us an economic analysis of one of the more important documents in modern US history, NSC 68, which is sure to change our understanding of the imperatives that drove American leaders in the early Cold War years, especially the 'dollar gap' and the need to stimulate spending. It will provide an invaluable source for a revisionist/materialist interpretation of the Cold War.' Robert Buzzanco, author of Masters of War and Vietnam and the Transformation of American Life
'Curt Cardwell demonstrates that political economy is not a lost art. In this meticulously researched and comprehensive account of the place of NSC 68 in the early Cold War, Cardwell lays out the economic imperatives facing the Truman administration and the role rearmament played in postwar recovery. The book is a persuasively argued revision of the standard story told with verve and energy.' Marilyn B. Young, New York University
'Curt Cardwell has written an important, perceptive, and analytically powerful book that adds a new dimension to existing understanding of the transformation of the United States after World War II into a national security state. His impressive research substantiates a provocative main thesis that US leaders prosecuted the Cold War more to preserve a liberal economic world order than to contain the Soviet Union. Cardwell exposes the previously overlooked centrality of the dollar gap as a motivating factor guiding postwar US policy, providing an important corrective, especially to existing accounts that exaggerate the success of the Marshall Plan.' James I. Matray, California State University, Chico
'Today's overwhelming US military budget had its roots in 1949-50, whereas the famous (if long-secret) NSC 68 strategy paper of 1950 shaped American plans to the end of the Cold War - and after. Curt Caldwell has written the definitive study of these crucial pivots in American history by giving this book two special qualities: a mastery of the records revealing what triggered these US policies, and a beautifully done dissection of the all-important economic causes that shaped - and misshaped - this historic turn and, consequently, the more than 60 years that have followed.' Walter LaFeber, Cornell University, and author of America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945-2006 and The American Age: U.S. Foreign Relations at Home and Abroad Since 1750
'Curt Cardwell has written an interesting and provocative take on the origins of NSC 68, the defining ideological blueprint for the US approach to the Cold War, drafted and implemented in 1950.' Bryan Mabee, International Affairs
Book Information
ISBN 9780521197304
Author Curt Cardwell
Format Hardback
Page Count 310
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 560g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 163mm * 26mm