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America, God and the Bomb The Legacy of Ronald Reagan
Knelman, F.H. Publisher: New Star Books, Vancouver, Canada Year Published: 1987 Pages: 478pp ISBN: 0-919573-76-2 Library of Congress Number: U264.K54 Dewey: 355',0217 Resource Type: Book
Abstract: Reagan and his impact on the future. Knelman's analysis has been reinforced in the intervening years, especially by the Iran-contra affair. Knelman's hypotheses are: that the Reagan administration constitutes a radical discontinuity in American political history; that the Reagan administration has been guided by a "secret agenda" which views the Soviet Union as a permanent adversary with whom no detente is possible. Further, the administration sees the Soviet Union as a target for internal collapse through economic suffocation or, if necessary, by destruction in a nuclear war--a war limited or protracted but in any event survivable and winnable. And finally, that many powerful positions in the Reagan administration are held by representatives of the New Right and the Religious Right, forming a "conspiracy of the like-minded." This book examines how the Reagan administration has consistently avoided arms agreements and relentlessly pursued superiority, provides documentary evidence of the "secret agenda" in policy and strategy, and illustrates how the the Religious Right has influenced White House policy. There is also a chapter on Canadian complicity in the United States' nuclear strategy (despite Canada's claim that it is not participating in the escalating arms race). The book includes a glossary and an index. F.H. Knelman, who lives in Vancouver, is a teacher, author and peace activist.
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