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Wiley InterScience

Presidential Studies Quarterly

Presidential Studies Quarterly

Volume 36 Issue 1, Pages 27 - 37

Published Online: 8 Feb 2006

© 2010 Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress



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The Truman Doctrine: Containing Communism and Modernity
DENNIS MERRILL 1
  1 University of Missouri-Kansas City
Correspondence to   Dennis Merrill is professor of history at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. He is coeditor with Thomas G. Paterson of Major Problems in American Foreign Relations and is general editor of the thirty-five-volume series A Documentary History of the Truman Presidency. He has written books and articles on U.S. relations with the Third World.
Copyright 2006 Center for the Study of the Presidency

ABSTRACT

This article examines the enunciation in March 1947 of the Truman Doctrine. The doctrine pledged the United States to "assist free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures." Although the statement was initially aimed at winning congressional support for U.S. aid to Greece and Turkey, where the administration feared Soviet penetration, it ultimately underpinned U.S. Cold War policy throughout Europe and around the world. Moreover, the doctrine addressed a broader cultural insecurity regarding modern life in a globalized world. The administration's concern over communism's domino effect, its media-sensitive presentation of the doctrine, and its mobilization of U.S. economic and military power to modernize unstable regions marked the advent of a modern U.S. foreign policy. In its maintenance of military preponderance, its nation-building activities, its organization of alliances, its advocacy of "regime change," and its resort at times to limited war against armed insurgencies, the Truman Doctrine foreshadowed the contemporary Bush Doctrine against international terrorism.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1741-5705.2006.00284.x About DOI

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