How to Wage the Cold War

Published date01 June 1951
Date01 June 1951
DOI10.1177/002070205100600208
Subject MatterArticle
POLICY
FOR
THE
WEST
151
HOW TO
WAGE
THE
COLD
WAR
In
the
great
debate
which is
going
on
in
Britain
and America
about
the
relations
between
the
western world
and Russia
and about
the
rela-
tions
of
the
nations
of
the
western
world with
one
another,
the
private
citizen
cannot
immediately
do
much
more
than
keep
himself as
well
informed
as
possible.
This
reviewer
has found
the
following recent
discussions
especially
illuminating.
(1)
New
York
Nation,
85th
Anniversary
Number,
Dec.
16,
1950.
A
special
issue
containing
articles
on "Peace
with
Russia-Can
it
be
Negotiated
?"
H.
Stuart
Hughes-Containment
Reconsidered.
Hans
J.
Morgenthau-History's
Lesson.
Isaac
Deutscher-The
War
of
Ideas.
R.
H.
S.
Crossman-Agreeing
to
Disagree.
(2)
Saturday
Review
of
Literature-Special
Number
of
Jan.
13,
1951
on
"America
and
the
Mind
of
Europe."
Lewis
Galantiere-Introduction.
Raymond
Aron-Does
Europe
Welcome
American
Leadership?
Denis
de
Rougemont-The
Conquest
of
Anarchy.
Arthur Koestler-Appalling
Alternatives.
(3)
Proceedings
of
the
Academy
of
Political
Science
(Columbia
University)
Jan.,
1951.
E.
M.
Earle-The
Political Balance
Sheet
of
the
Free
World.
(4)
The
Political
Quarterly,
Jan.,
1951-Special
Number
on
the
Cold
War.
R.
H.
S.
Crossman-Reflections
on
the
Cold
War.
Hans
J.
Morgenthau-Policy
of
the
U.S.A.
E.
M.
Hugh-Jones--Geography
of
the
Cold
War.
(5)
The
American
Political
Science
Reziew,
Dec.,
1950.
Hans
J.
Morgenthau-The
Mainsprings
of
American
Foreign
Policy;
the
National
Interest
vs.
Moral
Abstractions.
All
these
issues
can
be
borrowed
from
the
library,
or
obtained
through
the
Literature
Service
of
the
C.I.I.A.

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