
Contents
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I. Eisenhower: Between the Unattainable and the Unacceptable I. Eisenhower: Between the Unattainable and the Unacceptable
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II. Eisenhower: The Most Crowded and Demanding Weeks II. Eisenhower: The Most Crowded and Demanding Weeks
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III. Bush: Squandering Victory III. Bush: Squandering Victory
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IV. Bush: “I Think We Handled it About Right.” IV. Bush: “I Think We Handled it About Right.”
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V. Obama: “It Didn’t Work.” V. Obama: “It Didn’t Work.”
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VI. Obama: The Moral Morass of Syria VI. Obama: The Moral Morass of Syria
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines how Eisenhower, H. W. Bush, and Obama reacted when their foreign policy strategies were tested by crises and unexpected events. This chapter revisits Eisenhower’s aid to besieged French forces at Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam in 1954. It also discusses his handling of two crises in October 1956 over Suez and the Soviet invasion in Hungary, just days before his reelection. It examines how Bush led the United States during the critical period of 1991—with the aftermath of the first Persian Gulf War and the collapse of the Soviet Union after a failed coup in August 1991. Finally, the chapter also analyzes how Obama approached the Arab Spring, which started in 2011, specifically focusing on his response to conflicts in Libya and Syria.
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