A History of United States Foreign Policy

Voorkant
Prentice-Hall, 1965 - 573 pagina's

Inhoudsopgave

The Aims of Foreign Policy
1
The Diplomacy of the Revolution
18
Problems of Independence
28
War in Europe Raises New and Settles Old Problems 35
37
The Louisiana Purchase and Its Sequel
48
In Defense of Peaceful TradeThe War of 1812
57
Friendly Settlements with Great Britain and Spain
69
Q The Monroe Doctrine and Latin American Independence
79
28
286
The League of Nations and the Senate
295
The United States Renounces War but Spurns Peace Machinery
308
812
315
Siberia
322
The Four
328
Economic Foreign Policy Between Two World Wars
334
The Manchurian Crisis and Its Aftermath 19311937
346

A Diplomatic Miscellany
93
Oregon
105
Texas
114
President Polks Quarrel with Mexico
122
Ponders War 128 The Clash of Arms
129
Agents of Commerce Open Doors in the Far East
142
The United States Takes an Interest in Japan 146 The United States Defines
149
CanadaAnnexation or Reciprocity? 152 The Pacific 152 Approaches
158
18
172
19
180
Fisheries Fur Seals and Far Eastern Interests
191
The United States Looks Outward
201
The War with Spain and Its Fruits
212
Latin America and the Caribbean 18991917
222
The United States and the Far East 18981914
240
The Paths of Peace
253
The Road to
264
The British Navy Revives Old Issues 267 The German Submarine Raises
271
172
277
European Dictators and American Neutralism
357
A Good Neighbor Policy for the New World
367
The Rising Tide of Aggression
380
The United States as a NonBelligerent
389
Pearl Harbor
398
The Grand Alliance
411
Ending the War
423
The United States and the United Nations
435
Europe and the Cold War
454
Peaceful Coexistence
470
The Struggle for Eastern Asia
482
The Search for Pacific Security
494
Israel Emerges 514 Aims of the United States 516 Point Four in
518
The Eisenhower Doctrine 522 The Crisis of 1958 523 The United States
524
48
546
4
557
7
565
10
573
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