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James William Fulbright, Senator from Arkansas, is known to Soviet readers as a leading critic of U.S. foreign policy in the U.S. Senate. He boldly criticized the Truman, Eisenhower, and Johnson administrations, and he condemns the foreign policy course of the Nixon cabinet. In fact, the entire postwar history of U.S. foreign policy is connected with the name of Fulbright. The senator's activities are devoted to books and articles published in the U.S. - an honor that is bestowed mainly on presidents. What does J.W. Fulbright represent as a theorist and practitioner? What are the social bases of his critique? What is the senator's place in shaping and implementing U.S. foreign policy? These and other questions can be answered by the reader in this book. The work is written on the basis of the study of a large range of sources - documents, literature, press. The author used the Fulbright family press. The monograph will undoubtedly be of some use to researchers dealing with the problems of international relations and U.S. foreign policy; written in a lively and interesting way, it will be of interest to teachers, international lecturers, and a wide range of readers.
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