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The "Kennedy Line" or the Goldwater course? Roosevelt's policy with its recognition of the USSR and opposition to Hitler's Germany or "non-interventionism" and "isolationism", which meant actual encouragement of fascism? The origins of these disputes over the US foreign policy program go back to 1919-1922, when in America there was an acute struggle connected with the post-war redivision of the world. What is the meaning of this struggle? What factions and interests are behind the struggling parties? To what extent and why do US monopolies participate in it? Does the "average American" influence its outcome? What is the position of the working class? Answering these questions, the author draws portraits of American political figures - Lodge, Hearst, Borah, etc., covers the debates in the U.S. Senate, extensively drawing on new archival documents.
The book touches on many problems that cause polemics between Soviet and bourgeois historians. It helps to understand U.S. policy both in the past and in the present, provides interesting material for propagandists, students, university and school teachers.
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