In the presidential campaign rhetoric of 1960, Senator John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard M. Nixon discovered a shared middle-ground in regard to colonialism, a major issue of the year due to widespread decolonization movements. While both men expressed strongly anti-colonial ideals, neither went so far as to outwardly attack Western European states for their imperial policies. As a way of discussing colonialism without upsetting European allies while at the same time maintaining their idealistic stance, Kennedy and Nixon almost always balanced colonial references with the anti-communist language of the Cold War, thereby diminishing colonialism’s importance independent of that bipolarized struggle. Stemming from this rhetorical ...
President Richard Nixon\u27s decision to unofficially recognize Communist China during the early 197...
Abstract The thesis deals with the US foreign policy under Richard Nixon. More specifically, it exam...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of HistoryDonald MrozekBoth Presidents Johnson and Nixon used the ide...
The main objective of this paper is to confirm, or reject the thesis stating that Richard Nixon had ...
In Chicago on July 28th, 1960, Richard M. Nixon, vice-president of the United States was nominated a...
Commitment, credibility, and counterinsurgency were central themes of John F. Kennedy\u27s foreign p...
In the 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy\u27s Catholicism prompted several controversial d...
Richard M. Nixon, one of the greatest people in the history of the United States of America, spent t...
This thesis examines the growing importance of race to US relations with Africa in the context of de...
This essay argues that John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon demonstrated ambivalent feelings toward de...
This work examines the relationship between President Richard Nixon and the American conservative mo...
As Henry Jackson exhorted defense lobbyists during the height of the Cold War, “The Russians are det...
The United States became deeply involved in Vietnam during the 1960s largely due to America’s desire...
Kennedy\u27s rhetoric on Vietnam serves as an exemplar of how presidents balance idealistic argument...
This dissertation examines the decision and policy-making processes that led to the implementation o...
President Richard Nixon\u27s decision to unofficially recognize Communist China during the early 197...
Abstract The thesis deals with the US foreign policy under Richard Nixon. More specifically, it exam...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of HistoryDonald MrozekBoth Presidents Johnson and Nixon used the ide...
The main objective of this paper is to confirm, or reject the thesis stating that Richard Nixon had ...
In Chicago on July 28th, 1960, Richard M. Nixon, vice-president of the United States was nominated a...
Commitment, credibility, and counterinsurgency were central themes of John F. Kennedy\u27s foreign p...
In the 1960 presidential campaign, John F. Kennedy\u27s Catholicism prompted several controversial d...
Richard M. Nixon, one of the greatest people in the history of the United States of America, spent t...
This thesis examines the growing importance of race to US relations with Africa in the context of de...
This essay argues that John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon demonstrated ambivalent feelings toward de...
This work examines the relationship between President Richard Nixon and the American conservative mo...
As Henry Jackson exhorted defense lobbyists during the height of the Cold War, “The Russians are det...
The United States became deeply involved in Vietnam during the 1960s largely due to America’s desire...
Kennedy\u27s rhetoric on Vietnam serves as an exemplar of how presidents balance idealistic argument...
This dissertation examines the decision and policy-making processes that led to the implementation o...
President Richard Nixon\u27s decision to unofficially recognize Communist China during the early 197...
Abstract The thesis deals with the US foreign policy under Richard Nixon. More specifically, it exam...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of HistoryDonald MrozekBoth Presidents Johnson and Nixon used the ide...