The Wages of Globalism: Lyndon Johnson and the Limits of American Power
by H. W. Brands 2021-01-06 16:22:41
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One episode dominates the memory of Lyndon Johnson''s presidency: the Vietnam War. The war has so darkened Johnson''s reputation that it is difficult for many to recall his policies in a positive light-- especially his foreign policy. Now historian... Read more
One episode dominates the memory of Lyndon Johnson''s presidency: the Vietnam War. The war has so darkened Johnson''s reputation that it is difficult for many to recall his policies in a positive light-- especially his foreign policy. Now historian H.W. Brands offers a fresh look at Johnson''shandling of international relations, putting Vietnam in the context of the many crises he confronted and the outdated policies of global containment he was expected to uphold. The result is a fascinating portrait of a master politician at work, maneuvering through a series of successes that made hisultimate failure in Vietnam all the more tragic.In The Wages of Globalism, Brands conducts a witty and insightful tour through LBJ''s foreign policy--a tour that begins in Washington, runs through Santa Domingo, Nicosia, and Jakarta, and ends in Saigon. He opens with a thoughtful portrayal of the tense, often fruitful relationship between thedomineering Johnson and his advisers--Dean Rusk, Robert McNamara, George Ball, Clark Clifford, Walt Rostow--as he picked up Kennedy''s legacy and sought to make it his own. Leaving Vietnam for the end, Brands presents the various crises with all the force the White House felt at the time: theDominican intervention, India impending famine and war with Pakistan, the coup against Sukarno in Indonesia, France''s departure from NATO''s unified command, the threat of fighting between Greece and Turkey over Cyprus, the Six Day War, and the worry that Germany might acquire nuclear weapons. Ineach, Brands captures the uncertainty in Washington and the conflicting advice that Johnson received. The picture that emerges is remarkably positive, revealing the president''s ability to pick his way through fierce complexities. He forcefully stopped a war over Cyprus; handled de Gaulle withequanimity and skill; and--over the objections of all his advisers--intentionally delayed shipping grain to famine-threatened India, creating a real momentum for agricultural reform in that country that ultimately led to self-sufficiency. Only in Vietnam did Johnson''s sure balance of determinationand judgment break down: worried about his domestic program and the need to stand firm against aggression, he let his determination run away with him."In 1947," H.W. Brands writes, "Truman made a bad bargain with history." By the time Johnson inherited the White House, it had become painfully clear that America was no longer supreme in the world, able to prop up the status quo worldwide. In this fascinating, behind-the- scenes account, Brandsshows how skillfully Johnson steered the nation into the new era--until, in Southeast Asia, politics and his own personality led him into the ultimate trap of the Truman Doctrine. Less
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  • 9.13 X 5.98 X 0.79 in
  • 304
  • Oxford University Press
  • March 1, 1997
  • English
  • 9780195113778
H. W. BRANDS holds the Jack S. Blanton Sr. Chair in History at the University of Texas at Austin. A New York Times bestselling author, he was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in biography f...
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