Thad Zajdowicz

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THESE COMMITMENTS paled before the two most important and long-range policy consequences of the events of 1949: the Truman administration's decision to go ahead with development of the hydrogen bomb, or "Super," in January 1950, and the consensus of top military and foreign policy planners behind one of the key documents of the Cold War, National Security Council Document 68, in April.
Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974
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