Browse Login Join Donate Help Newest Papers Newest Members Recent Papers Saved Papers

The United States And National Security, And Dominant Party In Balance Of Power

Below is one of our free research papers on The United States And National Security, And Dominant Party In Balance Of Power. If the term paper below is not exactly what you're looking for, you can search our essay database for other topics.
The United States and National Security, and Dominant Party in Balance of Power

The emergence of the United States as a dominant party in balance of
power equations is a relatively new phenomenon in world history. New military
technology coupled with increased global integration has allowed the United
States to reinvent the fundamental assumptions of international diplomacy while
propelling itself to the top of the hegemonic stepladder. This positioning was
achieved piecemeal during the course of the first two world wars, but it wasn't
until the deployment of the atomic bomb that the U.S.. assumed its position as a
true superpower. The years that followed this unparalleled ascension are the
most fascinating times in the history of U.S. international relations. Hopefully,
an investigation into this atomic diplomacy, along with a balanced analysis of
the problems of conceptualizing and implementing containment, will provide
insight for our current efforts to devise a workable post-war national security
policy.
    There is no way to tell the story of post-war national security without
also telling the story of George Kennen. Kennen, the foremost expert of Soviet
Affairs in early post-war America, is almost wholly responsible for the policy
of containment. What we must remember under Kennen's containment is that nuclear
diplomacy is not separate from other national security measures as it is often
today. Nuclear weapons were part of an integrated system of containment and...

Login

Join

It's completely free!
Get instant access to all our essays.

Join Now!

Submitted by: 123student
Date Submitted: 10-10-2005
Category: Politics
Words: 1938
Pages: 7.75