During the late 1950s and early 1960s Henry Kissinger became one of America's most famous nuclear strategists, developing a reputation as a brilliant "defense intellectual," which he would soon use to launch his public career. Yet critics of his work then and historians of nuclear strategy since have found his scholarship to be derivative, inconsistent, and unengaged with contemporary debates. Why was Kissinger nevertheless viewed by American politicians and the general public as a leading strategist? This article examines his main writings closely in order to show how his arguments appealed precisely to a public unwilling to confront the difficult realities of the thermonuclear revolutio
grantor: University of TorontoScholars have portrayed John G. Diefenbaker as an indecisive...
The majority of scholarly accounts suggest that Anglo-Americans throughout the era of détente, 1969–...
This article examines the political process in which the “assured destruction” policy of the 1960s w...
During the late 1950s and early 1960s Henry Kissinger became one of America's most famous nuclear st...
As National Security Advisor and (later) Secretary of State under Presidents Richard Nixon and Geral...
This thesis examines the adversarial roles of nuclear physicists Hans Bethe and Edward Teller as pol...
The October War of 1973 brought the United States and Soviet Union within arm's reach of a nuclear c...
The article discusses the reasons for the decline of the atom bomb and nuclear warfare as a public i...
Henry Kissinger conducted American foreign policy with a distinctive assurance and panache that gave...
Theoretically, the hydrogen bomb controversy is an instance of terminological tension and resolution...
The engagement of American intellectuals with the nuclear threat has been limited and episodic. In t...
This article examines the evolution of scholarly debates about the lives and careers of two recent U...
Dwight D. Eisenhower assumed the presidency convinced that atomic weapons should be employed as esse...
The revival of nuclear strategy in US policy and scholarship has been strengthened by arguments that...
American nuclear strategy has been marked therefore, by a persistent dilemma: on the one hand, spasm...
grantor: University of TorontoScholars have portrayed John G. Diefenbaker as an indecisive...
The majority of scholarly accounts suggest that Anglo-Americans throughout the era of détente, 1969–...
This article examines the political process in which the “assured destruction” policy of the 1960s w...
During the late 1950s and early 1960s Henry Kissinger became one of America's most famous nuclear st...
As National Security Advisor and (later) Secretary of State under Presidents Richard Nixon and Geral...
This thesis examines the adversarial roles of nuclear physicists Hans Bethe and Edward Teller as pol...
The October War of 1973 brought the United States and Soviet Union within arm's reach of a nuclear c...
The article discusses the reasons for the decline of the atom bomb and nuclear warfare as a public i...
Henry Kissinger conducted American foreign policy with a distinctive assurance and panache that gave...
Theoretically, the hydrogen bomb controversy is an instance of terminological tension and resolution...
The engagement of American intellectuals with the nuclear threat has been limited and episodic. In t...
This article examines the evolution of scholarly debates about the lives and careers of two recent U...
Dwight D. Eisenhower assumed the presidency convinced that atomic weapons should be employed as esse...
The revival of nuclear strategy in US policy and scholarship has been strengthened by arguments that...
American nuclear strategy has been marked therefore, by a persistent dilemma: on the one hand, spasm...
grantor: University of TorontoScholars have portrayed John G. Diefenbaker as an indecisive...
The majority of scholarly accounts suggest that Anglo-Americans throughout the era of détente, 1969–...
This article examines the political process in which the “assured destruction” policy of the 1960s w...