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...basic role of diplomacy today, therefore, is as it has always been, is the control of conflict. Imbedded in Eban's argument is the assumptions that nations more often than not will have competing interests and it is the goal of statesmen to keep these rivalries at manageable levels. Progress he warns, will most often be unspectacular and painfully slow and actions may very well offend the public conception's of morality, especially in democracies. What The New Diplomacy evolves into, then is an eloquent defense of the traditional realist approach to international relations...

Author: By William S. Benjamin, | Title: Treading Lightly | 12/8/1983 | See Source »

...enormous event-an event so much more enormous that, relative to it, the war itself shrank to minor significance. In what they said and did, men were still, as in the aftershock of a great wound, bemused and only semi-articulate, whether they were soldiers or scientists, or great statesmen, or the simplest of men. But in the dark depths of their minds and hearts, huge forms moved and silently arrayed themselves: Titans, arranging out of the chaos an age in which victory was already only the shout of a child in the street...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE U.S. AT WAR 1945: The Peace: The Bomb Ends WWII | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

...only way the statesmen could save the U.N. forces would be through a plea for an armistice, or acceptance of a deal with the Communists. By any such deal, Communism would emerge triumphant. The alternative was war-that is, a recognition of the terrible fact that the U.S. and Communist China were already in a state of war. That would mean, inescapably, a campaign against the mainland of China...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs 1950: U.S. Army In Retreat in Korea | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

Perhaps never before have statesmen of great powers negotiated so expeditiously. As fast as the Big Four agreed upon a basic point, their secretaries took this to an adjoining room, where it was dealt with by staff officers and legal experts, ironing out all details. "I am not going to quibble about a village!" was one of Hitler's cracks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News 1938: Four Chiefs, One Peace: Czechoslovakia | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

...rights movement, spineless in the face of McCarthyism, slow of wit and out of touch with the currents of upheaval swirling beneath the calm surface of the 1950s. To more and more students of the era, however, Dwight David Eisenhower was a canny leader who brilliantly outmaneuvered subordinates and statesmen. Author and Biographer Stephen E. Ambrose can claim a seat in each camp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Sublime Commander | 10/3/1983 | See Source »

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