ARMED TRUCE: The Beginnings of the Cold War 1945-1946
by Hugh Thomas
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1: Despotism and ideology -- Stalin's "election" -- National Sovietism -- The Vozhd -- Homo staliens -- Russia in 1946 -- Stalin's international policy -- 2: The west -- The coming of entangling alliances -- The new Americans: Truman, Leahy, Byrnes -- The new Americans II: officials, friends, cronies -- The legacy of Roosevelt -- Anglo-Saxon relations -- 3: Disputed lands -- Far away countries: eastern Europe; Poland and Czechoslovakia -- Nations of the Danube: Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria show more -- Heirs of the Turkish empire: Yugoslavia and Albania -- Baltic harbours: Finland, the Baltic states, East Prussia -- The heart of Europe: Germany and Austria -- Gardens of the west: France, Italy and Spain -- The "northern tier": Greece, Turkey and Persia -- The east: China, Japan, Korea and Indo-China -- 4: A professor's dream -- The "Manhattan project" -- The Soviet weapon; and first steps in "atomic diplomacy" -- 5: World's apart -- The road to Fulton: Kennan's telegram -- Fulton and Churchill -- Denouement in Persia -- "Patience and firmness"; or, "strength without ostentation" -- Conclusion to the armed truce. show lessTags
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51+ Works 4,986 Members
Hugh Swynnerton Thomas was born in Windsor, England on October 21, 1931. After studying history at Cambridge University, he worked at the British Foreign Office and was secretary to the British delegation at major disarmament talks. He lectured at the Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst, Britain's premier officer training establishment. From 1979 show more to 1990, he served as the chairman of the Center for Policy Studies, a right-wing policy institute. He was an unofficial adviser to Margaret Thatcher during the Falklands war against Argentina, enlisted because of his deep knowledge of South America. He wrote numerous fiction and nonfiction works. His novels included The World's Game, The Oxygen Age, and Klara. His nonfiction books included Cuba: The Pursuit of Freedom, A History of the World, Rivers of Gold, The Golden Empire, and World Without End. The Spanish Civil War won the Somerset Maugham Prize in 1962. He was made a life peer in 1981 as Baron Thomas of Swynnerton. He died after having a stroke on May 7, 2017 at the age of 85. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Cold War
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