How to govern military technology—which potential weapons should have priority in development, what should be the “mix” of weapons in the military arsenal—and how to relate military strategy to foreign policy have become awesome problems in the nuclear age. Since …
This memoir is at once significant in content and slightly frivolous in effect. It was written by a Columbia professor after three years of hard labor at the Fudge Factory— as the State Department is known to refugees from the …
This long-awaited volume by the Chairman of the Senate’s Committee on Foreign Relations is intensely disappointing. It provides an eloquent but rambling sample of the Senator’s rhetoric on a number of subjects. Unfortunately, it gives no answer to the two …