Lexington Books
Pages: 358
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-7936-0217-6 • Hardback • January 2020 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
978-1-7936-0219-0 • Paperback • March 2022 • $42.99 • (£33.00)
978-1-7936-0218-3 • eBook • January 2020 • $40.50 • (£31.00)
Michael Wayne Santos is professor of history at the University of Lynchburg.
I The Unsatisfying Nature of Satisficing
II Endings and Beginnings: Factors Shaping the Narrative
III Competing Challenges in an Uncertain World
IV Enemies From Within and From Without
V One Step Forward, One Step Back
VI Caught in the Middle
VII Things Are Seldom What They Seem
VIII Persisting Problems on the New Frontier
IX Assumptions vs. Realities
X To the Edge of Armageddon and Back Again
XI Down the Rabbit Hole
XII Hot Spots Beyond Vietnam
XIII Rationalizing Away Qualms
XIV A Matter of Sovereignty
XV Looking Back Across Twenty-Three Years
This historical narrative expertly brings together a plethora of sources to explicate the complexities of decision-making during the most turbulent 23 years of the Cold War (1945–68). Though Santos (Univ. of Lynchburg) asserts no theoretical construct, “seeking more to describe,” he posits "satisficing" as the centralizing theme of the period, whereby decisions were made “in light of short-term realities.” As he details, the fallibility of decision-makers, seeming unwillingness to negotiate with enemies, imperfect intelligence, bureaucratic politics, unequal levels of rationality among the international actors, domestic sociocultural turmoil, and a rapidly changing dynamic of disparate nation-states exposed the limits of what was acceptable from regimes antithetical to an American agenda. Ultimately, these two decades of short-term satisficing "were motivated by a consistent theme—keep communism ... out of the regions at all costs,” a constraining rather than liberating framework for decision-making. Throughout this well-written text, Santos reveals similar overarching constraints to long-term thinking, referencing Dean Acheson's observation that “the significance of events [is] shrouded in ambiguity” as they are occurring. The lessons to be learned from this period continuously reveal themselves in America’s pursuit to export democracy today. Summing Up: Recommended. All readership levels.
— Choice Reviews
“United States Foreign Policy 1945-1968 is a lucid, comprehensive account of this critical period in the history of the world. Michael Wayne Santos takes an even-handed approach to the volatile issues that unfolded during the Cold War, with an extensive bibliography that reflects the wide-ranging primary and secondary sources on which the author relies.” — William R. Keylor, Boston University
“The Cold War was as much a set of stories as it was a ‘scientific outcome' of structures and great power politics. Historian Michael Wayne Santos has written a beautifully textured analysis of the most important stories that shaped international relations in the second half of the twentieth century. This is a book brimming with fresh insight about how people, decisions, beliefs, and convictions about the nature of experience came together in a mix that continues to frame the stories we tell about world politics today.” — Steven Weber, University of California at Berkeley