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Lloyd C. Gardner

    Spheres of Influence
    The Long Road to Baghdad
    • The Long Road to Baghdad

      A History of U.S. Foreign Policy from the 1970s to the Present

      • 320 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden

      Now available in paperback, this sweeping and authoritative narrative is essential reading in the study of the conflict in Iraq that has plagued the first decade of the 20th century. A unique and thorough study, it places the Iraq War in the context of US foreign policy since Vietnam, casting the conflict as a chapter in a much broader story of US and allied forces' diplomatic and military moves in the region. In a disturbing account, Gardner shows how the Iraq War is a necessary outcome of doomed US policies.

      The Long Road to Baghdad2010
      3,2
    • Spheres of Influence

      The Partition of Europe, from Munich to Yalta

      • 320 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden

      The war within the war was the struggle among Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin for the shape of the world that would follow World War II. That delicate diplomacy is spelled out in Lloyd Gardner's brilliant reinterpretation of the negotiations that divided Europe and laid the foundations of the cold war. Gardner begins his story not in 1941 but with the British attempt to appease Hitler at Munich in 1938. Here, the author argues, were the roots of the territorial agreements that culminated at Yalta—the "spheres of influence" which the Americans sought to avoid as a curse on the possibilities of a freer and more liberal world economy. Using the most recently opened sources, including those from Soviet archives, Gardner captures the atmosphere of these momentous events in glimpses of the major personalities and a persuasive analysis of the course of events. He shows how Roosevelt tried to avoid the partition of Europe that Churchill and Stalin wanted, but ultimately settled for it in the hope of keeping the Allies together to make a more lasting peace. Playing for time, FDR ran out of it. The result was the cold war—which Gardner concludes may have been preferable to World War III.

      Spheres of Influence1993