Acknowledgments
Introduction by Howard Jones
1. The Importance of Studying Military History by Robert H. Ferrell
Part 1. The War in Vietnam
2. Prelude to Vietnam: The Erosion of the U.S. Army’s Raison d’Être, 1945–1962 by Harry G. Summers, Jr.
3. “In the Lands of the Blind”: Eisenhower’s Commitment to South Vietnam, 1954 by George C. Herring
4. Applying Air Power in Vietnam: The 1972 Linebacker Bombing Campaigns by Mark Clodfelter
Part 2. The Home Front
5. Cold War, Limited War, and Limited Equality: Blacks in the U.S. Armed Forces, 1945–1970 by Robert F. Burk
6. The Antiwar Movement in America, 1955–1965 by Charles DeBenedetti
7. Guns versus Butter: Vietnam’s effect on Congressional Support for the Great Society by James C. Schneider
Part 3. Central America
8. Revolt against the West: The Nicaraguan Revolution and Related Movements by Ralph Lee Woodward, Jr.
9. The United States, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua, 1980–1984 by Thomas M. Leonard
Part 4. Nuclear War and Deterrence
10. Prospects for Ballistic Missile Defense toward the Year 2000 by Donald M. Snow
11. American Nuclear Weapons Programs and Strategies during the 1980s. Comparative United States and Soviet Perspectives by Daniel S. Papp
Notes
Contributors
Index