A narrative history and assessment of the early years of Robert McNamara’s tenure as Secretary of Defense, including McNamara’s relationship with Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, the transformation of the Department of Defense as a part of Kennedy’s New Frontier, and the Pentagon’s handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis, Bay of Pigs episode, and onset of the Vietnam War along with other major national security events and developments during a turbulent and momentous period of the Cold War. (Fuller description is on the dust jacket flaps.)
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TheMcNamaraAscendancy1961-1965 The McNamara Ascendancy, the first of two volumes in the History of the Office of the Secretary of Defense dealing with the tenure of Robert S. McNamara, examines the dynamic, sometimes turbulent early years of his secretaryship under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Few secretaries of defense before or since entered the Pentagon with such a commanding start or left behind a more controversial legacy. Authors Lawrence Kaplan, Ronald Landa, and Edward Drea chronicle both McNamara’s remarkable achievements during the pathbreaking years of the New Frontier and the disappointments and miscalculations that by 1965 had already begun to hinder his performance and diminish his reputation. McNamara brought to the Pentagon an energy and intelligence that made him certainly the most successful manager of the department up to that time. His aggressive pursuit of economy and efficiency introduced new approaches to organizing OSD, managing the services, and linking the budget to programs—employing techniques that would have lasting impact even as his reforms incurred growing resistance from leading members of the military and Congress. In the policy realm, too, he embraced innovative ideas for strategic deterrence, collective security, military assistance, and, of paramount importance, the use and control of nuclear weapons. The search for solutions that would insure U.S. preparedness while containing the strategic arms competition was a difficult balancing act, complicated by powerful economic and political as well as strategic considerations. Here, also, he provoked controversy and resentment from key allies abroad and traditional interests and reluctant partisans within his own department. The McNamara Ascendancy traces the determined efforts of McNamara and his band of “Whiz Kids” to cut costs and centralize the Pentagon’s functions and operations against the backdrop of successive international crises and in the broad context of national security decisionmaking involving the White House, State Department, NSC, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the intelligence agencies. Even as the secretary and the administration were able to put Berlin and Cuba behind them, the problem of how to defend South Vietnam from communist aggression threatened to overshadow McNamara’s accomplishments and unravel his unfinished institutional agenda. The deepening commitment in Vietnam dominates the last year of the book, but not before, as the authors convincingly demonstrate, McNamara’s seminal first four years had fundamentally transformed roles and methods and redefined relationships in the ongoing evolution of the Cold War national security establishment. Lawrence S. Kaplan is University Professor Emeritus of History and Director Emeritus of the Lyman L. Lemnitzer Center for NATO and European Union Studies at Kent State University. He is currently Adjunct Professor of History at Georgetown University. A leading scholar of NATO and the author of numerous books and articles on diplomatic history, he has been a Fulbright Lecturer at the Universities of Bonn, Louvain, and Nice, as well as a visiting lecturer at University College, London. Ronald D. Landa holds advanced degrees in history from Northwestern University and Georgetown University, from which he received the Ph.D. in 1971. From 1973 to 1987 he was a historian in the Office of the Historian, U.S. Department of State, where he edited volumes in the documentary series Foreign Relations of the United States. From 1987 until his retirement in 2000, he worked in the Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense, where he has since served as a consultant and contract historian. Edward J. Drea obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas following military service in Japan and Vietnam. He spent many years as a senior historian with the U.S. Army and is the author of MacArthur’s ULTRA: Codebreaking and the War Against Japan and other books and articles on military history.
Lead author Lawrence Kaplan is University Professor of History and Director of the Lemnitzer Center for NATO and European Studies at Kent State University and Adjunct Professor of History at Georgetown University
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Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Hardcover with DJ, 664 pages. Orange boards with gold lettering on spine and gold seal on cover. Grayscale pictorial DJ in very good condition, light shelf wear to corners and page edge at top of spine. Book is in very good condition, pages are unmarked and clean, binding is tight and strong. Includes two sections of black and white photographs. The McNamara Ascendancy, 1961-1965. Seller Inventory # Fred5-3160
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Hardcover. Condition: Fine in very good dust jacket. Presumed first edition/first printing. xii, [2], 664 p. Illustrations. Charts. Notes. Note on Sources and Selected Bibliography. Index. A narrative history and assessment of the early years of Robert McNamara's tenure as Secretary of Defense, including McNamara's relationship with Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, the transformation of the Department of Defense as a part of Kennedy's New Frontier, and the Pentagon's handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis, Bay of Pigs episode, and onset of the Vietnam War along with other major national security events and developments during a turbulent and momentous period of the Cold War. Seller Inventory # 64915
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