Eisenhower's Government: Nuclear Blackmail Policy in Korean War

Nankai University (Philosophy and Social Sciences) 4:43-49 (1997)
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Abstract

Eisenhower came to power after the end of the Korean War as a top priority of foreign policy considerations. And China, North Korea pursued a flexible strategy is different from the Eisenhower administration tried to expand the scope of the war, in the Korean War with the threat of the atomic bomb, the way by expanding the war to end war. However, due to a number of international and domestic factors, the Eisenhower administration did not dare to do whatever they want, bent, only return to the negotiating table to end the war by peaceful means. Over the years, Western historians of the United States in the Korean War were unrealistic description of nuclear blackmail, exaggerated the role of nuclear deterrence. Facts have proved that the United States advocated expanding the war to all the rhetoric and the threat of the atomic bomb, but a deceptive trick

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