Ohio State University Press
The United States and the European Right, 1945-1955
The United States and the European Right, 1945-1955
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In this groundbreaking study, Deborah Kisatsky shows that opportunity, not order, galvanized U.S. foreign policy, and that American dealings with the European Right were more complex than has been presumed. U.S. leaders cooperated with West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to achieve shared Atlanticist goals. And the United States co-opted nationalistic fighters into a secret stay-behind net of the Bund Deutscher Jugend-Technischer Dienst. But Allied leaders jointly worked to contain such vocal neutralist-nationalists as the ex-Nazi Otto Strasser. Cooperation, co-optation, and containment of French and Italian, as of German, rightists advanced American hegemony in Europe. These strategies extended techniques of social control perfected within the United States and synthesized domestic and international systems of power in the twentieth century.
Based on extensive multinational research, this book raises bold questions about the deep sources of U.S. foreign policy, past and present.
Deborah Kisatsky is assistant professor of history at Assumption College, in Worcester,
Massachusetts.
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