Some people have all the luck. The late President Dwight D. Eisenhower was one of them. His running mate and vice president, Richard M. Nixon, ended up tarred with the Vietnam War and accused of suborning democracy with Watergate. Plenty of similar things happened on Eisenhower's watch. He almost got the country into the same Vietnam War at the time of Dien Bien Phu. He undertook to overthrow legitimate governments through covert operations of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) across the globe. Eisenhower engaged in so many crises that his secretary of state, John Foster Dulles, coined the term “brinkmanship” to denote the art of getting into a crisis but then out of it. Eisenhower pre-delegated authority to military commanders to use nuclear weapons. On his watch the United States innovated the thermonuclear bomb and began a nuclear buildup that ended with thousands of delivery vehicles and tens of thousands...
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Summer 2015
July 01 2015
Eisenhower and the Cold War Arms Race: “Open Skies” and the Military-Industrial Complex
Helen
Bury
, Eisenhower and the Cold War Arms Race: “Open Skies” and the Military-Industrial Complex
. London
: I. B. Tauris
, 2014
. xiv + 285 pp.
John Prados
John Prados
National Security Archive
Search for other works by this author on:
John Prados
National Security Archive
Online ISSN: 1531-3298
Print ISSN: 1520-3972
© 2015 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2015
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Journal of Cold War Studies (2015) 17 (3): 232–233.
Citation
John Prados; Eisenhower and the Cold War Arms Race: “Open Skies” and the Military-Industrial Complex. Journal of Cold War Studies 2015; 17 (3): 232–233. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/JCWS_r_00569
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