Worldmaking (115 page)

Read Worldmaking Online

Authors: David Milne

BOOK: Worldmaking
8.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Logevall, Fredrik. “First Among Critics: Walter Lippmann and the Vietnam War.”
The Journal of American–East Asian Relations
4, no. 4 (Winter 1995).

Lucas, W. S., and Kaeten Mistry. “Illusions of Coherence: George F. Kennan, U.S. Strategy and Political Warfare in the Early Cold War.”
Diplomatic History
33, no. 1 (January 2009).

Mahan, Alfred Thayer. “The Peace Conference and the Moral Aspects of War.”
North American Review
, October 1899.

Manela, Erez. “Imagining Woodrow Wilson in Asia: Dreams of East-West Harmony and the Revolt Against Empire in 1919.”
The American Historical Review
111, no. 5 (December 2006).

Milne, David. “The 1968 Paris Peace Negotiations: A Two Level Game?”
Review of International Studies
37, no. 2 (April 2011).

______
. “Pragmatism or What? The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy.”
International Affairs
88, no. 5 (September 2012).

Mueller, Tim B. “The Rockefeller Foundation, the Social Sciences, and the Humanities in the Cold War.”
Journal of Cold War Studies
15, no. 3 (Summer 2013).

Mumford, Lewis. “The Corruption of Liberalism.” The
New Republic
, May 18, 1940.

Ninkovitch, Frank. “Beyond Containment.”
Reviews in American History
18, no. 2 (1990).

Nitze, Paul H. “Atoms, Strategy and Policy.”
Foreign Affairs
34, no. 2 (January 1956).

______
. “The Role of the Learned Man in Government.”
Review of Politics
, 20, no. 3 (July 1958).

Nixon, Richard M. “Asia After Viet Nam.”
Foreign Affairs
46, no. 3 (October 1967).

Preston, Andrew. “Bridging the Gap Between the Sacred and the Secular in the History of American Foreign Relations.”
Diplomatic History
30, no. 5 (November 2006).

Rice, Condoleezza. “Promoting the National Interest.”
Foreign Affairs
79, no. 1 (January–February 2000).

Rofe, J. Simon. “‘Under the Influence of Mahan': Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt and Their Understanding of American National Interest.”
Diplomacy and Statecraft
19 (2008).

Rostow, Eugene. “Searching for Kennan's Grand Design.”
The Yale Law Journal
87, no. 7 (June 1978).

Russell, Greg. “Alfred Thayer Mahan and American Geopolitics: The Conservatism and Realism of an Imperialist.”
Geopolitics
11, no. 1 (2006).

Sumida, Jon. “Alfred Thayer Mahan, Geopolitician.”
The Journal of Strategic Studies
22, nos. 2 and 3 (June 1999).

Tarlton, Charles D. “The Styles of American International Thought: Mahan, Bryan and Lippmann.”
World Politics
17, no. 4 (July 1965).

Thompson, John A. “The Overestimation of American Power: Sobering Lessons from the Past.”
World Policy Journal
23, no.2 (Summer 2006).

Urban, George. “From Containment to … Self-Containment: A Conversation with George Kennan.”
Encounter
, September 1976.

VanDeMark, Brian. “Beard on Lippmann: The Scholar vs. the Critic.”
The New England Quarterly
59, no. 3 (September 1986).

Wilkins, Burleigh Taylor. “Frederick York Powell and Charles A. Beard: A Study in Anglo-American Historiography.”
American Quarterly
11, no. 1 (1959).

Williams, Andrew. “Why Don't the French Do Think Tanks? France Faces Up to the Anglo-Saxon Superpowers, 1918–1921.”
Review of International Studies
34, no. 1, (January 2008).

Wilson, Woodrow. “The Law and the Facts.”
American Political Science Review
9 (1911).

Wolfowitz, Paul D. “Remembering the Future.”
The National Interest
59 (Spring 2000).

Woodward, C. Vann. “The Age of Reinterpretation.”
The American Historical Review
66, no. 1 (October 1960).

X. “The Sources of Soviet Conduct.”
Foreign Affairs
, July 1947.

Zelizer, Julian E. “History and Political Science: Together Again?”
The Journal of Policy History
16, no. 2 (2004).

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

In British academia, where research “outputs” are counted, weighed, and graded over five-year cycles, spending a decade writing a single book is not a wise course. That I've been able to pursue this project in continuous paid employment owes much to the forbearance of academic colleagues at the University of Nottingham and the University of East Anglia.

At Nottingham, I would like to thank Richard Aldrich and Simon Tormey for their support. In the School of American Studies, I was fortunate to discuss the ideas animating the book with Richard King, a superb intellectual historian. I also benefited from Fredrik Logevall's year at Nottingham as a Visiting Leverhulme Professor, during which we cotaught a seminar on George Kennan and had many fine conversations about writing. (Fred's
Embers of War
is my favorite history book of the past decade.) My friend and colleague Matthew Jones was a superb mentor to me, and I continue to benefit from his deep historical knowledge. I also thank Nottingham for supporting my research with an “early career researcher” award.

At the University of East Anglia, I owe a special debt of gratitude to John Street, not least for hiring me. Like Richard Aldrich at Nottingham, John is as thoughtful and attentive a head of department as one could hope to have. Hussein Kassim has supported my research unfailingly and, with Sara Connolly, hosted some memorable evenings. My sincere thanks also go to Simon Curtis, Heather Savigny, Valentino Cardo, Chris Hanretty, Alex Brown, Adriana Sinclair, Nick Selby, John Turnpenny, John Greenaway, Alan Finlayson, and Lee Marsden. Kaeten Mistry, Richard Crockatt, and David Gill all read multiple chapters, and I'm particularly grateful to all three for their smart and incisive comments.

The book began life at the University of Cambridge, and I would like to express gratitude to colleagues there. I am fortunate to have two good friends—Joel Isaac and Andrew Preston—who also happen to be outstanding scholars of American history. My conversations with both, in Cambridge and elsewhere, greatly enriched the book. John Thompson and I discussed the book on numerous occasions, and his comments on various draft chapters were typically insightful. My thanks also go to Tony Badger, both for agreeing to supervise my Ph.D. in John's absence and for assisting my career in many ways since.

I was fortunate to receive substantial financial support in completing this book. My thanks go to the British Academy, the Arts and Humanities Research Council, the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, the Fox International Fellowship program at Yale University, and the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. The University of Nottingham and UEA each granted me a semester's sabbatical leave to research the book, for which I am very grateful.

This funding allowed me to conduct research at various archives, where I received first-rate assistance. At Princeton's Seeley Mudd Library, I'd like to thank Dan Linke, Jennifer Cole, and John DeLooper. At the Library of Congress, my thanks go to Jennifer Brathovde. At the American Philosophical Society, I'd like to extend my appreciation to Marty Levitt and Roy Goodman. At the University of Pennsylvania, Nancy Shawcross pointed me in the direction of some archival gems. At Columbia University Archives, Sady Sullivan provided vital assistance.

Other friends and colleagues read draft chapters and offered helpful feedback. With all the usual disclaimers, my sincere thanks go to Richard Immerman, whose comments on the early chapters were immensely helpful. I am also very grateful to Bevan Sewell, John Griffin, and Nick Hermann for reading and commenting. During a stint in Philadelphia in 2009, Bruce Kuklick was generous in offering his perspective on the project. My sister, Eve Hepburn, read the entire manuscript and offered a thoughtful commentary throughout. I'm also grateful to other family and friends including Margo Milne, John Griffin, Nathaniel Millett, Robert Reed, Austin Fido, Dan Crowe, Andrew and Christine Rudalevige, Christopher McKnight Nichols, Samuel Windham, Deirdre Williams, John Kimbell, Hannah Hunter and Jason Chilvers, Martin and Verity Conway, Simon Gerrard, Giles Foden, Tom and Caroline Ablewhite, Sarah Pearsall, Andrew Trask, Christine Carroll, Tim Lynch, and Steve and Debbie Scalet for their companionship and good cheer.

I have taught a module based on this book since 2005, and I'd like to extend my thanks to all my students for the stimulating conversations we've had. In particular, I'd like to record my appreciation for Thomas Tunstall Allcock and Charlie Laderman, now embarking on what I'm sure will be distinguished academic careers. This book would have been very difficult to research and write without having the opportunity to teach it. So I thank Nottingham and UEA for putting the course on their books, and the students who chose it as a final-year option.

I am very grateful to Andrew Wylie for his encouragement, patience, and fine eye for author-editor matchmaking. At the Wylie Agency, my thanks also go to James Pullen and Nina Ellis. Just as he was with
America's Rasputin
, my editor at Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Eric Chinski, has been an outstanding reader and critic. His very smart comments on the manuscript at multiple stages improved the book immensely. I'm very fortunate to be one of his authors. At FSG, I'm also very grateful to Peng Shepherd, Gabriella Doob, Eugenie Cha, Gena Hamshaw, Cynthia Merman, Jim Guida, Noreen McAuliffe, Lyn Rosen, and Scott Auerbach for their assistance on multiple levels.

I owe the greatest debt to my wife, Emma, who offered her love and support, commented insightfully on draft chapters, and shared equally in the running of the home. These past eight years have been particularly special. Our son, Benedict, was born in 2007, and our daughter, Anna, was born in 2009. They have enriched my life in ways I couldn't have imagined. This book is dedicated with much love to Emma, Ben, and Anna.

 

INDEX

The index that appears in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

Abbas, Mahmoud

Abraham Lincoln
, USS

Abrams, Elliot

Acheson, Dean

Adams, Henry

Adams, John

Adams, John Quincy

Addams, Jane

Afghanistan

Afghanistan War

African Americans

Agnew, Spiro

Ahmadinejad, Mahmoud

Air Force, U.S.

Albright, Madeleine

Allende, Salvador

al-Qaeda

Alsop, Stewart

America First Committee

American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)

Andropov, Yuri

Angola

Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty

Anti-intellectualism in American Life
(Hofstadter)

anti-Semitism

Arab nationalism

Arab Spring

Arafat, Yasser

Arbenz, Jacobo

Argentina

Armies of the Night
(Mailer)

Armitage, Richard

Armstrong, Hamilton Fish

Army, U.S.

Army of the Republic of South Vietnam (ARVN)

Aron, Raymond

Arthur, Chester A.

Ashe, Samuel

Asia

“Asia After Viet Nam” (Nixon)

Assad, Bashar al-

Atlantic Ocean

Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)

Austria

Austro-Hungarian Empire

Awlaki, Anwar al-

Axis Powers

Baathism

Bacevich, Andrew

Baghdad

Baker, James A., III

Baker, Newton D.

Balkan states

Ball, George

Bangladesh

Bao Dai

Bay of Pigs invasion (1961)

Beard, Charles; academic career of; British Empire as viewed by; colonialism as viewed by; Columbia University resignation of; as constitutional scholar; “continental Americanism” of; economic views of; FDR as viewed by; federal government as viewed by; foreign policy as viewed by; Germanic scholarship as viewed by; influence of; Kennan compared with; Lippmann compared with; Mahan compared with; military policy as viewed by; as political scientist; press coverage of; Prussian militarism as viewed by; Spanish-American War as viewed by; states' rights as viewed by; T. Roosevelt as viewed by; warfare as viewed by; Wilson criticized by; World War I as viewed by; writings of

Beard, Clarence

Beard, Mary Ritter

Begin, Menachem

Belgium

Bellow, Saul

Berger, Sandy

Berle, Adolf

Berlin, East

Berlin, West

Berlin Airlift

Berlin Wall

Beveridge, Albert J.

Bible

Biden, Joe

Big Three

bin Laden, Osama

Bismarck, Otto von

Blair, Tony

Blix, Hans

blockades, naval

Bloom, Allan

Boerner, Phil

Bohlen, Charles “Chip”

Boot, Max

Borah, William

Bosnia

Brazil

Bremer, L. Paul

Brest-Litovsk, Treaty of (1918)

Brezhnev, Leonid

Brooks, David

Brown, Harold

Bruce, David K.

Bryan, William Jennings

Brzezinski, Zbigniew

Buchanan, James

Buckley, William F., Jr.

Bullitt, William C.

Bundy, McGeorge

Bundy, William

Bunker, Ellsworth

Burke, Edmund

Bush, George H. W.

Bush, George W.

Byrnes, James F.

Callahan, David

Cambodia

Cameron, David

Camp David Accords (1978)

Canada

“Capabilities for Limited Contingencies in the Persian Gulf” (Wolfowitz)

Other books

Callander Square by Anne Perry
Alias by Tracy Alexander
The Alpine Christmas by Mary Daheim
Secondhand Horses by Lauraine Snelling
Hay Alternativas by Vicenç Navarro & Juan Torres López & Alberto Garzón Espinosa
Pushing Her Limits by Mandoline Creme