Bővebb ismertető
PREFACEThis volume, the first of several about the Cold War, is a picture of the world in early 1946 insofar as it was a battleground in an undeclared war between two new great powers, the Soviet Union and the United States, and their allies. The conflict was one of metaphor so far as the great powers were concerned but was violent at the level of the political life of small states.The book is a narrative for only a few chapters at the end. The rest of the volume sets the scene at the beginning of a quarrel which is in many respects still with us and whose end cannot be foreseen. A characteristic of the book emphasised by me is the role of individuals. Marx made a major contribution to thought when, in the 1840s and 1850s, he worked out a scheme of history based on the importance of technology rather than personality. But after his day the development of technology under the control of governments has placed vast power in the hands of those who lead their nations. Hence the men - there were no women of political consequence at that time - who led the world in 1945 and 1946 require attention.Book I in this volume discusses the view of the world in 1946 of the Soviet Union under Stalin: a nation which aspired to world influence if not hegemony. For this section, I seek to interrelate the joint importance of Russian imperialism and Marxist-Leninist ideology and how each gave support to one another. Given what I explain above, I have naturally laid special attention on the personality of Stalin. In Book II, I discuss the character of the United States and her leaders: in particular the new President Truman and his recently dead predecessor, Franklin D. Roosevelt. I devote a long chapter to the British under Clement Attlee and the Foreign Office under Ernest Bevin. I have some