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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2008
1 Brian White contrasts the ‘official’ American and British concepts of containment. Initially, both London and Washington conceived containment as a strategy designed to modify Soviet behaviour through positive and negative measures. Although British policy prior to 1950 did much to help the Americans construct the Cold War structures, the British could neither accept the NSC-68 definition of the Soviet threat, ie the all-out (political-ideological, economic, and military-strategic) warfare between two power blocs, nor the prescribed policy responses, ie the doctrine of the indivisibilty of the East–West conflict in Europe and in the Far East. White, Britain, Detente, 35 ff., 48.
2 One has to bear in mind that it was the same instruments, the tanks, which were used in the ‘East’ to maintain repressive governments in power while also being deployed to frighten the powers-that-be in the ‘West’ and persuade them to renounce the option of rescuing liberation movements within the realm of international socialism.
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28 John McCloy to Deputy-Defense Secretary Gilpatric, 8 Jan. 1965, L.B. Johnson Presidential Library, NSF, Committee files, Box 5, Chronological File 2.
29 John McCloy to President Johnson, 9 Feb. 1967, NSF, NSC Histories (Trilateral), Box 50, Book 2.
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47 Schmidt, ‘Test of Strength’.
48 On this see the forthcoming publication of M. Dickhaus's dissertation (Florenz/Bielefeld) on the Währungspolitik der Deutschen Bundesbank in its European and international contexts.
49 Milward, 247.
50 Bossuat, 107 f.
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58 Bluth, 147. ff.
59 In a previous phase, the Wilson Government had liked ‘to line up with the Soviet Union more overtly and press the U.S. more strongly to drop the MLF’ – White, Britain, Detente, 119–20– in order to restrain the presumed nuclear ambitions of the FRG and to reduce Soviet fears of a revanchist Germany, Ibid., 114. However, the UK could not push too hard on the MLF as this would have alienated both Washington and Bonn, whose support was thought essential for the Labour Government's EC application.
60 Ibid., 131.
61 Ibid., 122 ff.
62 Britain objected to American willingness to concede the banning of the first use of nuclear weapons rather than insist on the banning of the first use of any weapon; Ibid., 122 ff.
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65 Ibid., 56 f.
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