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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages. American foreign policy between 1945 and 1970 is usually viewed in the context of the Cold War, and yet the domestic developments show or emphasize a dramatic swing from the complacent and conservative 1950's to the turbulent and radical 1960's. This paper will consider whether there are contradictory views here, and if so, how they might be reconciled. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JGA1945p.rtf
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and conservative 1950s to the turbulent and radical 1960s. This paper will consider whether there are contradictory views here, and if so, how they might be reconciled. AMERICA
AFTER THE COLD WAR The rise and fall of the Cold War represented not only the simplistic desires of two power hungry nations, but it also reflected a more innate
passion toward answering to the intrinsically driven motivation for conquest. Even in todays contemporary society, the remnants of post-Cold War rhetoric continues to influence relations between Russia as well
as Europe and the United States. The Cold War was a significant enabling factor for the long boom. The Communist challenge to the political stability of the capitalist world drew
the United States into an unprecedented role in managing the global economic and geopolitical system - a role centered on the reconstruction of its European and Japanese rivals. Beyond the
direct effect of the Marshall Plan, the huge U.S. expenditures on the construction and maintenance of military bases in Europe and the Far East provided an important outflow of liquidity
to a dollar-starved international economy. The huge expansion of this expenditure at the time of the two major U.S. military operations of the Cold War - Korea and Vietnam -
proved to be milestones in the postwar "take-off" of the Japanese and South Korean economies respectively. A DRAMATIC SWING In the swing to the 1950s and 1960s the concepts
found in Marxs Communist Manifesto are based upon fundamental aspects of economics, politics and history; without these integral elements, such astute determinations with regard to womens struggles for socialism, as
are found in the sociologists writings, would not have been achieved. By addressing relevant issues from both the past and present, Marx was able to formulate impressions of the
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