Concentrating on U.S. concerns for credibility abroad, Stueck uses
recently declassified documents and many interviews to analyze the
origins of the Sino-American confrontation in Korea in late 1950.
He demonstrates how personalities (Secretary of State Marshall and
General MacArthur) and bureaucracies (the State Department and the
Joint Chiefs of Staff) influenced policy development and how
congressional penny-pinching reduced prospects for a prudent
American course in Korea.
Originally published in 1981.
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