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Tansill published America Goes to War, a history book about World War I, in 1938. [2] The book was well received by his peers. For example, Thomas A. Bailey , a professor of history at Stanford University wrote in a review published in The Mississippi Valley Historical Review , "This lucidly written and thoroughly documented book is the most ...
Russian Roulette: The Inside Story of Putin's War on America and the Election of Donald Trump is a 2018 book by journalists Michael Isikoff and David Corn. It details their findings on Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. [1]
Drift opens with an analysis of the politics surrounding the Vietnam War, focusing on the Abrams Doctrine, which stressed public support for military operations.Maddow writes that Lyndon B. Johnson's reluctance to utilize the National Guard and the Army Reserve began the trend of separating the military and its use from the purview of the American population. [4]
Quartered in Hell: The Story of the American North Russia Expeditionary Force 1918–1919. G O S. ISBN 0942258002. Maddox, Robert James (1977). The Unknown War with Russia: Wilson's Siberian intervention. Presidio Press. ISBN 0891410139. Unterberger, Betty Miller (1969). America's Siberian Expedition 1918–1920: A Study of National Policy ...
There are jobs for everybody and plenty to eat. Russia is not so bad a place in which to live and there are no lay-of s or short time and you get all that is coming to you' . . . Then immigration to the Soviet Union will begin to rival the flood that poured into America. At the present rate of progress that day is not far distant. [5]
Russia Leaves the War (1956) [1] is a book by George F. Kennan, which won the 1957 Pulitzer Prize for History, the 1957 National Book Award for Nonfiction, [2] the 1957 George Bancroft Prize, and the 1957 Francis Parkman Prize.
President Obama chides Mitt Romney for calling Russia, and not Al Qaeda, the No. 1 threat to the United States.
The Soviet Union is referred to as Russia throughout the document, a metonym that was common in the West throughout the Cold War.) The chiefs of staff were concerned that both the enormous size of the Soviet forces deployed in Europe at the end of the war and the perception that Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin was unreliable caused a Soviet threat ...