ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1961, is an analysis of the great struggle of the twentieth century, the Cold War. It carefully examines the conflict’s origins in the Russian Revolution of 1917, and follows the thread of antagonism between west and east all the way up to 1960. These were the key years of the Cold War, when it seemed that the prospect of nuclear confrontation was a real one, and this book offers a close reading of the main events of those years. This volume concentrates on the Cold War in the East, and Volume One focuses on the European theatre.

part III|215 pages

The Cold War in East Asia, 1945–55

chapter Chapter XX|46 pages

The Fall of China to Communism, 1927–1950

chapter Chapter XXI|72 pages

The Crucifixion of Korea, 1945–1954

chapter Chapter XXIII|30 pages

The First Formosa Crisis January, July 1955

chapter Chapter XXIV|19 pages

The First Summit Conference July 1955

part IV|359 pages

The Second Cold War, 1955–1959

chapter Chapter XXV|32 pages

The Failure to Make Peace, July 1955–October 1956

chapter Chapter XXVI|24 pages

The Revolutions in Poland and Hungary, October 1956

chapter Chapter XXVII|38 pages

Explosions at Suez, October 1956

chapter Chapter XXVIII|32 pages

Lessening Tension, April–August 1957

chapter Chapter XXIX|31 pages

After the Sputniks, October 1957–April 1958

chapter Chapter XXX|31 pages

Trouble in All Directions, April–October 1958

chapter Chapter XXXI|22 pages

Berlin II, November 1958–July 1959

chapter Chapter XXXII|20 pages

The Turn Toward Peace, July–December 1959

chapter Chapter XXXIII|46 pages

The Frustrated Summit at Paris, January–June 1960

chapter Chapter XXXIV|40 pages

Why the West Lost the Cold War

chapter Chapter XXXV|41 pages

The Future