America and Britain: Was There Ever a Special Relationship?

America and Britain: Was There Ever a Special Relationship?

by Guy Arnold
America and Britain: Was There Ever a Special Relationship?

America and Britain: Was There Ever a Special Relationship?

by Guy Arnold

Hardcover

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Overview

Britain's political and military elite has for decades nurtured the idea that enduring ties bind the interests of London and Washington, in good times and bad. Irrespective of the end of the Cold War, the 9/11 attacks and the economic rise of the East, these links are allegedly impregnable. But how accurate a picture is this? Are the British engaged in a monumental act of self-delusion?

Guy Arnold investigates the 'American disease' at the heart of Whitehall, which, he argues, has tied British policies too closely to those of Washington. The "special relationship" became a Foreign Office priority and gave Britain the illusion of power it no longer enjoyed. As Churchill put it acidly, "the British and the Americans were stuck with each other - a junior partner and a senior partner respectively". For the Americans it provided a way of keeping Britain 'on side' but in return Washington accelerated Britain's imperial decline.

The Americans always saw Britain in Europe as a Trojan Horse to safeguard their interests and as a military outpost for their global ambitions. They derided or ignored the "special relationship", even in their dealings with Thatcher and Blair, and latterly the Foreign Office has failed to convince President Obama of its unique importance.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781849043281
Publisher: Hurst
Publication date: 06/01/2014
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.60(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Guy Arnold is a freelance writer specialising in international affairs with particular emphasis on Africa, and the author of some fifty books, including Africa: A Modern History 1960-2005.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Collapse of Power
2. 1940-1945: US Policies, British Responses
3. The Attlee Years, 1945–1951
4. Churchill and the Atlantic Alliance
5. Eden And Suez
6. Macmillan
7. The Nuclear Question
8. Wilson and Vietnam
9. Heath Takes Britain into the EEC
10. Margaret Thatcher
11. John Major
12. Tony Blair
13. Britain and Europe
14. Cameron And Obama: Bonding
15. Problems
16. Different Perspectives
17. The Growing American Imperium
18. British Options and Missed Opportunities
19. The United States: A Turning Point?
20. How to Relate to the Big Power Line-Up
21. NATO
22. Great Britain: An Exit Strategy
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