Roots of War |
Contents
INTRODUCTION In Search of the National Interest | 3 |
Bureaucratic Homicide and Imperial Expansion | 13 |
The Bureaucratic Revolution | 23 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abroad Administration advisers Ameri American foreign policy argued army believe billion bombing business creed businessmen campaign capital capitalist cent Chiefs of Staff Cold War communist crisis crucial Dean Acheson decisions Department developed diplomatic domestic economic Eisenhower election empire enemy escalation Europe fight force foreign affairs foreign policy issues imperialism important industry influence isolationist John Foster Dulles Joint Chiefs Kennedy labor Latin America leaders Lyndon Johnson major McGeorge Bundy McNamara ment military moral multinational corporations national interest national security bureaucracy national security managers Nixon North Vietnam nuclear number one nation official operations organized overseas peace Pentagon papers planning political poor countries postwar President problems production responsibility Robert role Secretary of Defense social society Soviet Union strategic theory threat tion tional Truman Truman Doctrine U.S. corporations U.S. government United Vietnam War Vietnamese weapons White House World War II York