02151nam a2200349Ia 4500001001200000003000800012006001900020007001500039008004100054010001700095020001500112020001500127040002100142035002100163050002700184082001800211100003200229245012300261260004300384300001400427504005100441505083500492533015201327610005701479650002901536650002101565650002601586655002901612710001701641856012601658999001701784ebr10135403CaPaEBRm u cr cn|||||||||050317s2005 nyu sb 001 0 eng d z 2005045965 z1403976937 z1403970246 aCaPaEBRcCaPaEBR a(OCoLC)12353998514aUA646.3b.J5685 2005eb04a355.02/172221 aJohnston, Andrew M.,d1963-10aHegemony and culture in the origins of NATO nuclear first-use, 1945-1955h[electronic resource] /cAndrew M. Johnston. aNew York :bPalgrave Macmillan,c2005. ax, 329 p. aIncludes bibliographical references and index.0 aIntroduction : the persistence of nuclear first-use -- Ch. 1. Culture, war, empire -- Ch. 2. The persistence of the old regime : British, French, and American strategic thinking before 1949 -- Ch. 3. "Disembodied military planning" : the political-economy of strategy, 1949-50 -- Ch. 4. Mind the gap : the paper divisions and cardboard wings of the Lisbon force goals -- Ch. 5. Strategies of perpheralism : France, Britain, and the American new look -- Ch. 6. Two cultures of massive retaliation : neo-isolationism and the idealism of John Foster Dulles -- Ch. 7. Hegemony versus multilateralism : nuclear sharing and NATO's search for cohesion -- Ch. 8. "Our plans might not be purely defensive" : leading NATO into the nuclear era -- Conclusion : what does culture tell us about NATO nuclear strategy that we were afraid to ask? aElectronic reproduction.bPalo Alto, Calif. :cebrary,d2009.nAvailable via World Wide Web.nAccess may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.20aNorth Atlantic Treaty OrganizationxMilitary policy. 0aNuclear weaponszEurope. 0aNuclear warfare. 0aDeterrence (Strategy) 7aElectronic books.2local2 aebrary, Inc.40uhttp://site.ebrary.com/lib/rucke/Doc?id=10135403zAn electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view c85056d85056