ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1944, assesses the prospects of peace following the Allied victory in the Second World War. It examines the tasks that victory would impose on the victors; the development during the war of US policies, military and political; the errors that caused the war; and the viewpoints and needs of the Allied powers. Concluding that the future peace could be only achieved through the power and influence of the United States, it argues that the process of uniting the Allies in peace would need greater statesmanship than united them in war against a common enemy.

part One|31 pages

Looking Forward

chapter I|8 pages

The Uses of Victory

Hopes and Doubts

chapter II|12 pages

Time, Space, and Power

Revolution in Geography

chapter III|11 pages

What is Peace?

A Skeptical Age

part Two|79 pages

America in the Mediterranean

chapter IV|22 pages

Prelude to Invasion

Our Frontier in Africa

chapter V|23 pages

Our French Allies

We Collide with the French Problem

chapter VI|14 pages

Our British Allies

Parting of the Ways

chapter VII|9 pages

French Versus French

Allies and French Unity

chapter VIII|11 pages

Italy’s Surrender

The Classic Diplomatic Dilemma

part Three|67 pages

Democratic Failure

chapter IX|17 pages

Spain Divides Americans

Franco, Pétain, Darlan

chapter X|20 pages

Wasted Victory

Hopes of the Axis

chapter XI|18 pages

Invitation to Aggression

Origin of a Partnership

chapter XII|12 pages

Our Extreme Nationalists

The Awakening of 1940

part Four|89 pages

After Victory

chapter XIII|21 pages

Germany After Defeat

The Reich and Europe

chapter XIV|12 pages

The Enigma of Russia

Russia and the West

chapter XV|13 pages

Britain’s Policy and Ours

Defending Our Neutrality

chapter XVI|22 pages

What will America Do?

The World Looks to Us

chapter XVII|21 pages

Our Southern Neighbors

Where We Have a Foreign Policy