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The Wages of Globalism: Lyndon Johnson and the Limits of American Power
 
 
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The Wages of Globalism: Lyndon Johnson and the Limits of American Power [Paperback]

H. W. Brands (Author)

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Book Description

0195113772 978-0195113778 April 24, 1997
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Johnson's handling of international relations, putting Vietnam in the context of the many crises he confronted and the outdated policies of global containment he was expected to uphold.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 his ultimate 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 the domineering 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: the Dominican 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. In each, 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 with equanimity 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 determination and 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, Brands shows 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.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Brands--a Texas A & M historian whose previous works include The Devil We Knew , Bound to Empire (1992), and Inside the Cold War (1991)--reassesses Johnson's diplomatic record, placing his Vietnam policy in the context of (1) his approach to other international crises, and (2) the commitment to the global containment of Communism that he inherited from his predecessors. Brands first examines LBJ's relationships with his foreign policy advisers, many of them inherited from John Kennedy. He then analyzes less-remembered foreign policy issues of the mid-1960s--the Dominican Republic, India/Pakistan, Indonesia, the roles of France and Germany in NATO, Cyprus, and the Six-Day War in the Middle East--before tackling Vietnam. Brands argues that LBJ's successes as well as his most notable failure in foreign policy resulted, first, from his view of "American diplomacy as a branch of American politics" (which led him always to seek "the line of least political resistance"), and, second, from his "preference for the status quo." The Wages of Globalism asserts that "it was Lyndon Johnson's peculiar bad luck to preside over American foreign policy at the moment when . . . the Truman doctrine . . . shattered on the hard reality of a new international order." Includes notes and a select bibliography. Mary Carroll --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Kirkus Reviews

A convincing reassessment of Lyndon Johnson's foreign policy. Although Brands (History/Texas A&M; The Devil We Knew, 1993, etc.) admits that it is difficult to consider LBJ's record in foreign affairs without immediately thinking of the debacle in Vietnam that wrecked his presidency, that is nonetheless what he attempts to do. Coming to the Oval Office at the height of the American Century, Johnson inherited a tradition of American globalism that began with the Spanish-American War, gained momentum in WW I, and peaked after WW II, from which the United States emerged as the greatest economic and military force in the world, able to project its power around the planet. The author argues that Johnson continued in this vein and that many of his accomplishments deserve to be understood and applauded. Obsessed with Communism and the nagging question of ``Who lost Cuba,'' Johnson intervened in Vietnam and successfully invaded the Dominican Republic, ostensibly to protect American lives but in reality to prevent a supposed Communist takeover. When the Six-Day War broke out in the Middle East, Johnson could not, as Eisenhower did in the Suez crisis of 1956, force Israel to give up territory gained. He did, however, use America's coercive influence to limit the scope and duration of the war. He suffered the snub of de Gaulle ordering US troops out of France and withdrawing from NATO, but soldiers remained in Europe and he kept the alliance together. He helped halt wars between Greece and Turkey and between India and Pakistan. In many ways, Brands offers Johnson as a transitional figure between the days of American hegemony and the current era when a multipolar world often seems to confound and stymie US foreign policy. Judicious and well researched, the volume presents a good opening in the reappraisal of Johnson and his administration. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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More About the Author

H.W. Brands taught at Texas A&M University for sixteen years before joining the faculty at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is the Dickson Allen Anderson Centennial Professor of History. His books include Traitor to His Class, Andrew Jackson, The Age of Gold, The First American, and TR. Traitor to His Class and The First American were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
trilateral talks
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, The Wages of Globalism, White House, South Vietnam, United Nations, Middle East, Soviet Union, State Department, George Ball, North Vietnam, Dean Rusk, Dominican Republic, Southeast Asia, Santo Domingo, Latin America, Cold War, Six Days, Suffer the General, Turkish Cypriots, President Johnson, South Asia, Walt Rostow, New Delhi, Bloody Good Luck, Robert Komer
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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