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  1. Sep 25, 2020 · In February 1952, skirting the military code against active-duty officers seeking political office, Eisenhower secretly sent word that he was available through a close friend, the retired general Lucius Clay, who had succeeded him as the high commissioner of occupied Germany and broken the Soviet blockade of Berlin.

  2. Dec 17, 2002 · Throughout his years in office, Eisenhower was convinced that a nuclear showdown with the Soviet Union would be “a suicidal catastrophe” (p. 247), while he was confident (thus differing from the belief that lay behind NSC-68) that the Soviet Union would not take “substantial risks” (p. 247) in attempting to achieve world domination, as ...

    • Saki Dockrill
    • 2000
  3. Eisenhower also claimed that in 1943 he had shared similar views with President Roosevelt, stressing the danger that the postwar chaos would be exploited by the Soviet Union.

  4. Eisenhower was in any case skeptical of the rhetoric of the Republican foreign affairs spokesman (John Foster Dulles) in promising "massive retaliation" and the liberation of the "captive people" of Eastern Europe.8 Another contempo rary criticism of the Eisenhower administration was its "formidable antioathv

  5. Eisenhower's denials had been revealed to be duplicitous. Khrushchev used the downing of the U2 to present the Soviet Union as the wronged party in a game of superpower...

  6. Feb 28, 2017 · Fear of provoking war with the Soviet Union drove the decision, the study finds, based on research in a variety of government and public sources.

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  8. May 17, 2021 · Having inherited the Berlin problem upon taking office in January 1953, the Eisenhower administration quickly reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to West Berlin and actively exploited it as part of a broader program aimed at undermin-ing Soviet power in Eastern Europe.

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