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Presidents --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- United States --- Politics and government --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Presidents - United States - Biography --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, - 1908-1973 --- United States - Politics and government - 1963-1969 --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines (1908-1973) --- Présidents --- États-Unis --- Biographies --- Etats-Unis --- Politique et gouvernement --- 1963-1969
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Johnson, Lyndon B. --- United States --- Politics and government --- #SBIB:97G --- 342.511 <73> --- Geschiedenis van Noord-Amerika --- Staatshoofd. Koning. President--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines. --- -#SBIB:97G --- 342.511 <73>Geschiedenis van Noord-Amerika --- Staatshoofd. Koning. President--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USAJohnson, Lyndon Baines.United StatesPolitics and government --- 342.511 <73> Staatshoofd. Koning. President--Verenigde Staten van Amerika. VSA. USA --- -Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Chan-sên, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, - 1908-1973 --- United States - Politics and government - 1963-1969
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Deux moments forts ont traversé les Etats-Unis durant le XXe siècle : les périodes s’étendant de 1933 à 1952 et de 1961 à 1968. Franklin D.Roosevelt, Harry S.Truman, John F.Kennedy et Lyndon B.Johnson ont été les acteurs majeurs de ces deux grandes phases décisives pour le pays. Deux présidents morts, l’un au début de son quatrième mandat, l’autre à la fin de son premier, l’un d’épuisement, l’autre assassiné, qui ont profondément marqué la nation et l’opinion publique américaines au point d’en devenir de véritables mythes. Deux vice-présidents, sénateurs de leur Etat, aux personnalités, aux origines et aux parcours très différents de ceux de leurs prédécesseurs immédiats, appelés à remplacer ceux-ci en catastrophe, et qui se sont remarquablement acquittés de cette écrasante mission, faisant notamment preuve d’une capacité de décision peu commune.
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This is the most comprehensive, perceptive, and nuanced review to date of the foreign policy of the Lyndon Johnson era. It demonstrates US concern not just with the Soviet Union, Europe, and nuclear weapons issues, but the overwhelming preoccupation with Vietnam which shaped policy throughout the world. During this period, Johnson also faced a series of emergencies ranging from turmoil in the Congo, to war in the Middle East, to a perceived communist challenge in the Caribbean, to a lingering hostage crisis in Asia. Using the most recently declassified documents, it explains in thoroughly readable prose the intricacies of the foreign policy dilemmas that forced Johnson's Great Society domestic agenda into retreat.
Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- United States --- Foreign relations --- Arts and Humanities --- History --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Chan-sên, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, - 1908-1973 --- United States - Foreign relations - 1963-1969
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Presidents --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Chan-sên, --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- United States --- Politics and government --- Presidents - United States - Biography --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, - 1908-1973 --- United States - Politics and government - 1963-1969
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The presidency of Lyndon Johnson was a pivotal moment in twentieth-century American history. From the decisive social programs of the Great Society, to the triumph of the Civil and Voting Rights Acts, to the catastrophe of the Vietnam War and domestic unrest, it was an era of dramatic accomplishment and wrenching tragedy. In Guns or Butter, renowned historian Irving Bernstein brings those five climactic years of the sixties vividly to life, from the moment Lee Harvey Oswald aimed a rifle from the window of the Texas School Depository to the tense ballot-counting that put Richard Nixon in the W
United States --- Politics and government --- 1963-1969 --- Presidents --- Biography --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Chan-sên, --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī.,
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Presidents --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Chan-sên, --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- United States --- Politics and government
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A firsthand observer weighs the achievements-and failures-of two fabled American presidents As a young White House correspondent during the Kennedy and Johnson years in Washington, D.C., Godfrey Hodgson had a ringside seat covering the last two great presidents of the United States, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, two men who could not have been more different. Kennedy's wit and dashing style, his renown as a national war hero, and his Ivy League Boston Brahmin background stood in sharp contrast to Lyndon Johnson's rural, humble origins in Texas, his blunt, forceful (but effective) political style, his lackluster career in the navy, and his grassroots populist instincts. Hodgson, a sharp-eyed witness throughout the tenure of these two great men, now offers us a new perspective enriched by his reflections since that time a half-century ago. He offers us a fresh, dispassionate contrast of these two great men by stripping away the myths to assess their achievements, ultimately asking whether Johnson has been misjudged. He suggests that LBJ be given his due by history, arguing that he was as great a president as, perhaps even greater than, JFK. The seed that grew into this book was the author's early perception that JFK's performance in office was largely overrated while LBJ's was consistently underrated. Hodgson asks key questions: If Kennedy had lived, would he have matched Johnson's ambitious Great Society achievements? Would he have avoided Johnson's disastrous commitment in Vietnam? Would Nixon have been elected his successor, and if not, how would American politics and parties look today? Hodgson combines lively anecdotes with sober analyses to arrive at new conclusions about the U.S. presidency and two of the most charismatic figures ever to govern from the Oval Office.
Presidents --- Kennedy, John F. --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Chan-sên, --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- Kennedy, John Fitzgerald --- United States --- Politics and government
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1968 was an unprecedented year in terms of upheaval on numerous scales: political, military, economic, social, cultural. In the United States, perhaps no one was more undone by the events of 1968 than President Lyndon Baines Johnson. Kyle Longley leads his readers on a behind-the-scenes tour of what Johnson characterized as the 'year of a continuous nightmare'. Longley explores how LBJ perceived the most significant events of 1968, including the Vietnam War, the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr and Robert Kennedy, and the violent Democratic National Convention in Chicago. His responses to the crises were sometimes effective but often tragic, and LBJ's refusal to seek re-election underscores his recognition of the challenges facing the country in 1968. As much a biography of a single year as it is of LBJ, LBJ's 1968 vividly captures the tumult that dominated the headlines on a local and global level.
Presidents --- Election --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Chan-sên, --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- United States --- Politics and government
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In 1961, President John F. Kennedy initiated a bold new policy of engaging states that had chosen to remain nonaligned in the Cold War. In a narrative ranging from the White House to the western coast of Africa and the shores of New Guinea, Robert B. Rakove examines the brief but eventful life of this policy during the presidencies of Kennedy and his successor, Lyndon Baines Johnson. Engagement initially met with real success, but it faltered in the face of serious obstacles, including colonial and regional conflicts, disputes over foreign aid and the Vietnam War. Its failure paved the way for a lasting hostility between the United States and much of the nonaligned world, with consequences extending to the present. This book offers a sweeping account of a critical period in the relationship between the United States and the Third World.
Neutralisme --- Relations internationales --- Nonalignment --- World politics --- Pays en voie de développement --- Histoire. --- History. --- Kennedy, John Fitzgerald --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines, --- Kennedy, John F. --- Johnson, Lyndon B. --- Pays non-alignés --- États-Unis --- United States --- Developing countries --- Relations extérieures --- Foreign relations --- Coexistence (World politics) --- Peaceful coexistence --- Neutralism --- Non-aligned nations --- Non-alignment --- Nonaligned nations --- International relations --- Neutrality --- Chan-sên, --- Dzhonson, Lindon, --- L. B. J. --- ג'ונסון, לינדון --- ジョンソン, --- Johnson, L. --- Čhō̜nsan, Lindō̜n Bī., --- Pays en développement --- Johnson, Lyndon Baines --- Arts and Humanities --- History --- Relations extérieures --- Pays en voie de développement --- États-Unis --- Pays non-alignés