Gil Hahn

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Dulles believed that Khrushchev’s charm offensive sprang from fundamental weakness. The Soviet economy had failed to meet basic consumer needs; the subventions to satellite states in Eastern Europe and China had become a costly burden; and the Russians were struggling to keep up with the Americans in the arms race. Dulles concluded that the Soviets wanted “a pause” in the geopolitical contest, and he was not inclined to give them one.
The Age of Eisenhower: America and the World in the 1950s
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