Beschreibung:
Historians and political scientists re-examine the conventional wisdom of grand strategies pursued by the great powers during the interwar years.
1. Introduction: grand strategy between the World Wars Steven E. Lobell, Jeffrey W. Taliaferro and Norrin M. Ripsman; 2. Deterrence, coercion, and enmeshment: French grand strategy and the German problem after World War I Peter Jackson; 3. The legacy of coercive peace building: the Locarno treaty, Anglo-French grand strategy, and the 1936 Rhineland crisis Scott A. Silverstone; 4. The League of Nations and grand strategy: a contradiction in terms? Andrew Webster; 5. Economic interdependence and the grand strategies of Germany and Japan, 1925-41 Dale C. Copeland; 6. Britain's grand strategy during the 1930s: from balance of power to components of power Steven E. Lobell; 7. British grand strategy and the rise of Germany, 1933-6 Norrin M. Ripsman and Jack S. Levy; 8. Strategy of innocence or provocation? The Roosevelt administration's road to World War II Jeffrey W. Taliaferro; 9. The rising sun was no jackal: Japanese grand strategy, the Tripartite Pact, and alliance formation theory Tsuyoshi Kawasaki; 10. Powers of division: from the anti-Comintern to the Nazi-Soviet and Japanese-Soviet pacts, 1936-41 Timothy W. Crawford; 11. Soviet grand strategy in the interwar years: ideology as realpolitik Mark L. Haas; 12. Conclusions: rethinking interwar grand strategies David M. Edelstein.