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Many doctrines were put forward by American ideologues after 1957. Fearful and angry. Analytical and belligerent and shouty. But perhaps all of them are characterized by concern for the position of the United States in the world in the conditions that emerged after the launch of the first satellite. Williams, for example, in The Tragedy of American Diplomacy, recognizes the "profound crisis" of U.S. policy. The author accuses postwar governments of creating an oppressive climate of fear and expectation of military catastrophe through their actions. Basing its policy on the idea of a "crusade against communism," U.S. foreign policy "closed the door to any outcome other than a `cold war.
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