Endnotes:[1] Herbert J. Ellison. "Soviet-American Intervention." In David Carlton and Herbert M. Levine (ed.). The Cold War Debated. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988, p. 165.
[2] The Cold War (24 vols). A Jeremy Isaacs production for Turner Orginal Productions Inc. Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video; [Atlanta, GA]: CNN Productions, 1998.
[3] John Lewis Gaddis. We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
[4] James Kurth. "The Post-modern State." The National Interest. Number 28, Summer 1992, pp. 26-35.
[5] Edward N. Luttwak. "From Geopolitics to Geo-economics." The National Interest. Number 20, Summer 1990, p. 19.
[6] William D. Jackson. "Soviet Behaviour in the Cold War." International History Review. vol xx(2), June 1998, p. 401.
[7] Geoffrey Warner. "To End A War: The Decision to Drop the Bomb." In David Carlton and Herbert M. Levine (ed.). The Cold War Debated. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988, p. 35.
[8] Richard Ned Lebow. "The Rise & Fall of the Cold War in Comparative Perspective." Review of International Studies. vol 25, December 1999, p. 26.
[9] William Appleman Williams. The Tragedy of American Diplomacy (revised edition). New York: Delta Books, 1962, p. 207.
[10] Jean J. Kirkpatrick. "Beyond The Cold War." Foreign Affairs. vol 69(1), 1990, p. 12.
[11] Zbigniew Brzezinski. "The Cold War and Its Aftermath." Foreign Affairs. vol 71(4), Fall 1992, p. 31.
[12] Brzezinski, p. 36.
[13] G. John Ikenberry. "The Myth Of Post-Cold War Chaos." Foreign Affairs. Vol 75(3), May/June 1996, p. 811. See also Ambrose and Brinkley, ibid, p. 14.
[14] Ambrose and Brinkley, ibid, p. 53.
[15] David F. Rudgers. "The Origins of Covert Action." Journal of Contemporary History. vol 35(2), April 2000, p. 250. Ambrose and Brinkley, pp. 79-80.
[16] Lebow, ibid, p. 23.
[17] Sergei Kortunov. "Is the Cold War Really Over?" International Affairs. vol 44(5), 1998, p. 143.
[18] Kortunov, ibid, p. 143.
[19] Kortunov, ibid, p. 142.
[20] John Spanier. American Foreign Policy Since World War II (10th ed.). New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1995, p. 20.
[21] Arnold Toynbee. "A Turning-Point in the Cold War." International Affairs [Royal Institute of International Affairs]. vol 26(4), August 1950, p. 457.
[22] Edward Crankshaw. "The USSR Revisited." International Affairs [Royal Institute of International Affairs]. Vol 23(4), October 1947, p. 493.
[23] Crankshaw, ibid, pp. 498-499.
[24] Crankshaw, ibid, p. 494.
[25] Theodor Draper. "Neoconservative History." In David Carlton and Herbert M. Levine (ed.). The Cold War Debated. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988, p. 13.
[26] Draper, ibid, p. 20.
[27] David S. Foglesong. "Roots of 'Liberation': American Images of the Future of Russia in the Early Cold War, 1948-53." International History Review. vol XXX(1), March 1999, p. 73.
[28] Dennis Healey. "The Cominform and World Communism." International Affairs [Royal Institute of International Affairs]. vol 24, 1948, p. 339.
[29] Healey, ibid, p. 341.
[30] Alexei Bogaturov and Konstantin Pleshakov. "The Dynamics of International Stability." International Affairs [Moscow]. August 1991, p. 31. The authors contend that nation-state "static stability is a reality" (p. 33).
[31] Draper, ibid, pp. 13-14.
[32] Vladimir Sokolov. "Foreign Affairs Commissar Vyacheslav Molotov." International Affairs [Moscow], June 1991, p. 93.
[33] Spanier, ibid, p. 21.
[34] John Lewis Gaddis. Strategies of Containment. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982, p. 35.
[35] Gaddis, ibid, p. 45.
[36] Spanier, ibid, p. 17.
[37] Foglesong, ibid, pp. 69-70.
[38] Spanier, ibid, pp. 11-14.
[39] Paul Seabury. "Yalta and the Neoconservatives." In David Carlton and Herbert M. Levine (ed.). The Cold War Debated. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988, p. 22.
[40] Seabury, ibid, pp. 22-23.
[41] Brian Thomas. "Ideology and the Cold War." In David Carlton and Herbert M. Levine (ed.). The Cold War Debated. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988, p. 177.
[42] Bogaturov and Pleshakov, ibid, p. 34.
[43] Williams, ibid, p. 206. Robert J. Maddox. "The Rise and Fall of Cold War Revisionism." In David Carlton and Herbert M. Levine (ed.). The Cold War Debated. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988, p. 96.
[44] Williams, ibid, p. 208.
[45] Maddox, ibid, p. 97.
[46] Foglesong, ibid, p. 59.
[47] Foglesong, ibid, p. 58.
[48] Foglesong, ibid, p. 67.
[49] Madison Grant. The Passing of the Great Race. New York: Arno’s Press, 1970. Madison was Chairman of the New York Zoological Society, Trustee of the American Museum of Natural History, and a Councillor of the American Geographical Society. His book (originally published in 1916) argues for a European race history that has influenced contemporary White supremacist and Neo-Nazi groups.
[50] Foglesong, ibid, p. 77.
[51] Foglesong, ibid, p. 65.
[52] Stephen E. Ambrose and Douglas G. Brinkley. Rise To Globalism (8th ed.). New York: Penguin Books, 1997, p. 31.
[53] Andre Liebich. "Mensheviks Wage the Cold War." Journal of Contemporary History. vol 30(2), April 1995, p. 247.
[54] Henry Kissinger. "Reflections On Containment." Foreign Affairs. vol 73(3), May/June 1994, p. 129.
[55] Mark Kramer. "Ideology and The Cold War." ibid, p. 544.
[56] William D. Jackson, ibid, p. 400.
[57] Mark Kramer. "Ideology and The Cold War." ibid, p. 542.
[58] Silviu Brucan. "Communism versus Capitalism: A False Issue." Review [Fernand Braudel Center]. vol 21(2), 1998, pp. 202 - 203.
[59] Jonathan Schell. "The Unfinished Twentieth Century: What We Have Forgotten About Nuclear Weapons." Harpers, January 2000, p. 47.
[60] Ambrose and Brinkley, ibid, p. 67.
[61] Ambrose and Brinkley, ibid, p. 106.