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The Challenge of Grand Strategy: The Great Powers and the Broken Balance between the World Wars

The Challenge of Grand Strategy: The Great Powers and the Broken Balance between the World Wars

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Cambridge University Press, 8/6/2012
EAN 9781107022522, ISBN10: 1107022525

Hardcover, 360 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.4 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

The years between the World Wars represent an era of broken balances: the retreat of the United States from global geopolitics, the weakening of Great Britain and France, Russian isolation following the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, the resurgence of German power in Europe, and the rise of Japan in East Asia. All these factors complicated great-power politics. This book brings together historians and political scientists to revisit the conventional wisdom on the grand strategies pursued between the World Wars, drawing on theoretical innovations and new primary sources. The contributors suggest that all the great powers pursued policies that, while in retrospect suboptimal, represented conscious, rational attempts to secure their national interests under conditions of extreme uncertainty and intense domestic and international political, economic, and strategic constraints.

1. Introduction
grand strategy between the World Wars Steven E. Lobell, Jeffrey W. Taliaferro and Norrin M. Ripsman
2. Deterrence, coercion, and enmeshment
French grand strategy and the German problem after World War I Peter Jackson
3. The legacy of coercive peace building
the Locarno treaty, Anglo-French grand strategy, and the 1936 Rhineland crisis Scott A. Silverstone
4. The League of Nations and grand strategy
a contradiction in terms? Andrew Webster
5. Economic interdependence and the grand strategies of Germany and Japan, 1925–41 Dale C. Copeland
6. Britain's grand strategy during the 1930s
from balance of power to components of power Steven E. Lobell
7. British grand strategy and the rise of Germany, 1933–6 Norrin M. Ripsman and Jack S. Levy
8. Strategy of innocence or provocation? The Roosevelt administration's road to World War II Jeffrey W. Taliaferro
9. The rising sun was no jackal
Japanese grand strategy, the Tripartite Pact, and alliance formation theory Tsuyoshi Kawasaki
10. Powers of division
from the anti-Comintern to the Nazi-Soviet and Japanese-Soviet pacts, 1936–41 Timothy W. Crawford
11. Soviet grand strategy in the interwar years
ideology as realpolitik Mark L. Haas
12. Conclusions
rethinking interwar grand strategies David M. Edelstein.

'Empirically rich and theoretically sophisticated, the essays in The Challenge of Grand Strategy give us a much better picture of the 1930s than we have had before. The reasoning of the players, the complex domestic politics, and their difficult international interactions are marvellously brought to life.' Robert Jervis, Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Politics, Columbia University

'These stimulating essays challenge conventional wisdoms, set forth provocative new arguments, and invite reconsideration of International Relations theories as well as the history of the interwar years.' Melvyn P. Leffler, Edward Stettinius Professor of American History, University of Virginia