Tom Glaser

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The stabilization of the Cold War in Europe, the reduced likelihood of it ever becoming ‘hot’, and the fact that these matters lay largely out of their hands, induced among West Europeans the rather comfortable conviction that conventional armed conflict was obsolete. War, it seemed to many observers in the years 1953–63, was unthinkable, at least on the European continent (it never ceased to be the preferred approach to conflict resolution elsewhere).
Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945
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