The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, revised edition

In the spirit of historians Howard Zinn, Gwynne Dyer, and Noam Chomsky, Jacques Pauwels focuses on the big picture. Like them, he seeks to find the real reasons for the actions of great powers and great leaders. Familiar Second World War figures from Adolf Hitler to Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin are portrayed in a new light in this book. The decisions of Hitler and his Nazi government to go to war were not those of madmen. Britain and the US were not allies fighting shoulder to shoulder with no motive except ridding the world of the evils of Nazism.

In Pauwels' account, the actions of the United States during the war years were heavily influenced by American corporations -- IBM, GM, Ford, ITT, and Standard Oil of New Jersey (now called Exxon) -- who were having a very profitable war selling oil, armaments, and equipment to both sides, with money gushing everywhere. Rather than analyzing Pearl Harbor as an unprovoked attack, Pauwels notes that US generals boasted of their success in goading Japan into a war the Americans badly wanted. One chilling account describes why President Truman insisted on using nuclear bombs against Japan when there was no military need to do so. Another reveals that Churchill instructed his bombers to flatten Dresden and kill thousands when the war was already won, to demonstrate British-American strength to Stalin.

Leaders usually cast in a heroic mould in other books about this war look quite different here. Nations that claimed a higher purpose in going to war are shown to have had far less idealistic motives. The Second World War, as Jacques Pauwels tells it, was a good war only in myth. The reality is far messier -- and far more revealing of the evils that come from conflicts between great powers and great leaders seeking to enrich their countries and dominate the world.

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The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, revised edition

In the spirit of historians Howard Zinn, Gwynne Dyer, and Noam Chomsky, Jacques Pauwels focuses on the big picture. Like them, he seeks to find the real reasons for the actions of great powers and great leaders. Familiar Second World War figures from Adolf Hitler to Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin are portrayed in a new light in this book. The decisions of Hitler and his Nazi government to go to war were not those of madmen. Britain and the US were not allies fighting shoulder to shoulder with no motive except ridding the world of the evils of Nazism.

In Pauwels' account, the actions of the United States during the war years were heavily influenced by American corporations -- IBM, GM, Ford, ITT, and Standard Oil of New Jersey (now called Exxon) -- who were having a very profitable war selling oil, armaments, and equipment to both sides, with money gushing everywhere. Rather than analyzing Pearl Harbor as an unprovoked attack, Pauwels notes that US generals boasted of their success in goading Japan into a war the Americans badly wanted. One chilling account describes why President Truman insisted on using nuclear bombs against Japan when there was no military need to do so. Another reveals that Churchill instructed his bombers to flatten Dresden and kill thousands when the war was already won, to demonstrate British-American strength to Stalin.

Leaders usually cast in a heroic mould in other books about this war look quite different here. Nations that claimed a higher purpose in going to war are shown to have had far less idealistic motives. The Second World War, as Jacques Pauwels tells it, was a good war only in myth. The reality is far messier -- and far more revealing of the evils that come from conflicts between great powers and great leaders seeking to enrich their countries and dominate the world.

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The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, revised edition

The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, revised edition

by Jacques R. Pauwels
The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, revised edition

The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, revised edition

by Jacques R. Pauwels

eBooksecond edition (second edition)

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Overview

In the spirit of historians Howard Zinn, Gwynne Dyer, and Noam Chomsky, Jacques Pauwels focuses on the big picture. Like them, he seeks to find the real reasons for the actions of great powers and great leaders. Familiar Second World War figures from Adolf Hitler to Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin are portrayed in a new light in this book. The decisions of Hitler and his Nazi government to go to war were not those of madmen. Britain and the US were not allies fighting shoulder to shoulder with no motive except ridding the world of the evils of Nazism.

In Pauwels' account, the actions of the United States during the war years were heavily influenced by American corporations -- IBM, GM, Ford, ITT, and Standard Oil of New Jersey (now called Exxon) -- who were having a very profitable war selling oil, armaments, and equipment to both sides, with money gushing everywhere. Rather than analyzing Pearl Harbor as an unprovoked attack, Pauwels notes that US generals boasted of their success in goading Japan into a war the Americans badly wanted. One chilling account describes why President Truman insisted on using nuclear bombs against Japan when there was no military need to do so. Another reveals that Churchill instructed his bombers to flatten Dresden and kill thousands when the war was already won, to demonstrate British-American strength to Stalin.

Leaders usually cast in a heroic mould in other books about this war look quite different here. Nations that claimed a higher purpose in going to war are shown to have had far less idealistic motives. The Second World War, as Jacques Pauwels tells it, was a good war only in myth. The reality is far messier -- and far more revealing of the evils that come from conflicts between great powers and great leaders seeking to enrich their countries and dominate the world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781459408739
Publisher: James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers
Publication date: 03/06/2015
Series: Formac First Novels , #35
Sold by: De Marque
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Jacques R. Pauwels has taught European history at a number of universities in Ontario, including York, Waterloo and Guelph. He is the author of The Great Class War 1914–1918Big Business and Hitler and The Myth of the Good War, revisionist histories of the rise of fascism and the World Wars. His books are read around the world and have been published in French, Italian, Spanish, German, Dutch, Russian, Turkish and Korean. An independent scholar, Pauwels holds PhDs in history (York) as well as political science (U of T). He lives in Brantford, Ontario.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Foreword to the New English Edition

Foreword: Objectives and Methodology

Chapter 1     Introduction: America and the Myth of the "Great Crusade"

Chapter 2     The American Power Elite and Fascism

Chapter 3     America and the Red Peril

Chapter 4     The War in Europe and America's Economic Interests

Chapter 5     Fall 1941: The Tide of War Turns in Front of Moscow

Chapter 6     The United States at War with Japan and Germany

Chapter 7     Class Warfare on the American Home Front

Chapter 8     A Second Front for Stalin, or a Third Front in the Air?

Chapter 9     Stalin's Soviet Union: An Unloved but Useful Partner

Chapter 10     The Liberation of Italy: A Fateful Precedent

Chapter 11     The Long Summer of 1944

Chapter 12     The Successes of the Red Army and the Yalta Agreements

Chapter 13     Dresden: A Signal for Uncle Joe

Chapter 14     From Roosevelt's "Soft Line" to Truman's "Hard Line" toward Stalin

Chapter 15     An Anti-Soviet Crusade?

Chapter 16     The Winding Road to the German Surrender(s)

Chapter 17     America Between Confidence and Concern

Chapter 18     Nuclear Diplomacy and the Onset of the Cold War

Chapter 19     A Useful New Enemy

Chapter 20     Corporate Collaboration and the So-called "De-Nazification" of Germany (1)

Chapter 21     Corporate Collaboration and the So-called "De-Nazification" of Germany (2)

Chapter 22     The United States, the Soviets, and the Post-war Fate of Germany

Chapter 23     After 1945: From the Good War to Permanent War

Endnotes

Acknowledgements

Select Bibliography

Index

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