Foreign Policy: Number 15: Summer 1974

New York: National Affairs, Inc. /In Assoc. wCarnegie Endowment for International Pea, 1974. Presumed First Edition, presumed first printing thus. Wraps. 192 pages. Name of previous owner present. Cover has some wear and soiling. Foreign Policy is published in association with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The Endowment bears no responsibility for the editorial content. Foreign Policy was founded in the winter of 1970-71 by Samuel P. Huntington, professor of Harvard University, and his friend Warren Demian Manshel to give a voice to alternative views about American foreign policy at the time of the Vietnam War. Huntington hoped it would be "serious but not scholarly, lively but not glib." In the Spring of 1978, after six years of close partnership, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace acquired full ownership of Foreign Policy. In 2000, a format change was implemented from a slim quarterly academic journal to a bi-monthly magazine. Also, it launched international editions in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America. In September 2008, Foreign Policy was bought by The Washington Post Company (now Graham Holdings Company). In 2012, Foreign Policy grew to become the FP Group – an expansion of Foreign Policy magazine to include ForeignPolicydotcom and FP Events. Condition: Good.

Keywords: Albert Wohlstetter, Henry Kissinger, Tad Szulc, Les Aspin, Richard J. Barnet, Censorship, Philip Geyelin, Vietnam War, Cease-fire, Multinationals, African-Americans, Roger Wilkins, Impeachment, Arms Race, Arms Control, John Marks, Martin Weil, Charle

[Book #58773]

Price: $35.00