This volume presents a well-documented survey of Dulles as President Eisenhower's secretary of state.
Choice Reviews
With lucid prose and command of the primary documents and secondary sources, Richard Immerman gives us a masterful acount of John Foster Dulles, his diplomacy, and his relations with Eisenhower. Not the least of his contributions is showing that Dulles was neither a tool of the president nor his leader, but rather his sometimes antagonistic partner.
- Robert Jervis, Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Relations, Columbia University,
<i>John Foster Dulles</i> is a superb biography of a complex and most important person, a fascinating analysis of the pivotal Eisenhower-Dulles relationship, and a masterful account of U.S. power and diplomacy in the 1950s.
- Walter LaFeber,
Chapter 1 The Great Enlightenment
Chapter 2 The Cold War Consensus
Chapter 3 A Policy of Boldness
Chapter 4 The New Look
Chapter 5 United Action
Chapter 6 Maximum Bargaining Power
Chapter 7 Walking a Tightrope
Chapter 8 The Final Crises
The Biographies in American Foreign Policy series employs the enduring medium of biography to examine the major episodes and themes in the history of U.S. foreign relations. By viewing policy formation and implementation from the perspective of influential participants, the series seeks to humanize and make more accessible those decisions and events that sometimes appear abstract or distant. Particular attention is devoted to those aspects of the subject's background, personality, and intellect that most influenced his or her approach to U.S. foreign policy, and each individual's role is placed in a context that takes into account domestic affairs, national interests and policies, and international and strategic considerations.
Series Editor: Joseph A. Fry