George R. Diepenbrock

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If there was a mandate, it was for anti-Communism rather than genuine internationalism. That the postwar peace was both uneasy and expensive was difficult for many Americans to accept. Once allies, the Soviet Union and China were about to become adversaries: archadversaries Japan, Germany, and Italy were becoming allies. For a time the atomic monopoly had offered us something of a bargain-basement defense policy.
The Fifties
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