While America Sleeps: Self-Delusion, Military Weakness, and the Threat to Peace TodayMacmillan, 2000 - 483 pages In While England Slept Winston Churchill revealed in 1938 how the inadequacy of Britain's military forces to cope with worldwide responsibilities in a peaceful but tense era crippled its ability to deter or even adequately prepare for World War II. |
From inside the book
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... allies and friends , and all those with an interest in preserving the general peace . Without American support , the friends of democracy and human rights will cry in vain for protection against the forces of repression , which persist ...
... allies face no serious threat now or in the foreseeable fu- ture , that our current policies and power are adequate to ward off serious dan- gers , that the greater threat is too much involvement , too much alertness , too much ...
... allies in the 1930s of the determination to resist aggression and de- fend their own security . The same weakness made possible the unhampered rise to international power of military dictatorships in Italy , Germany , and Japan ...
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Contents
The Brave New World | 13 |
Britains Defense Dilemma | 44 |
The First Challenge to Peace | 67 |
The Paper Lion Roars | 78 |
Retreat from Responsibility | 98 |
The Search for Security | 118 |
The Unraveling of Versailles | 140 |
The Locarno Treaty | 160 |
The New World Order | 237 |
The Peace Dividend | 267 |
Increased Commitments Reduced Forces | 300 |
Kicking the Can Down the Road | 321 |
Proliferation and Blackmail | 341 |
Another Versailles | 367 |
A Legacy of Half Measures | 400 |
Conclusion | 424 |
The Spirit of Locarno | 176 |
The Bill Comes Due | 194 |
The Price of SelfDeception | 217 |
The United States After the Cold War | 235 |
Notes | 437 |
465 | |
469 | |