non liberal
John Foster Dulles
1888–1959
Also known as: Mr. Dulles, Dulles
How John Foster Dulles is discussed in this archive
Referenced in 2 other works — including SATYAM EVA JAYATE , and India's Nuclear Ambitions: Minoo Masani as a Liberal Peacenik .
In SATYAM EVA JAYATE : Dulles's doctrine of brinkmanship is the object of Rajaji's foreign-policy critique in 'Brinkmanship at Suez', where it is read as a Cold War posture that compels peace-loving nations into unjust concessions.
In India's Nuclear Ambitions: Minoo Masani as a Liberal Peacenik : John Foster Dulles is named as the US secretary of state whose doctrine of brinkmanship Rajaji contrasted unfavourably with Khrushchev's unilateral test moratorium, situating Rajaji's nuclear stance in the Cold War context.
Mentioned in (2)
Primary works (1)
- SATYAM EVA JAYATE · n.d.
- "Rajaji subjects John Foster Dulles's doctrine of brinkmanship to biting analysis, arguing that nuclear deterrence compels peace-loving nations to concede unjust terms" — Summary of 'Brinkmanship at Suez'; frames Dulles as the policy author whose doctrine Rajaji takes apart
Opinion pieces (1)
- India's Nuclear Ambitions: Minoo Masani as a Liberal Peacenik
- "Rajaji seems to have leaned favorably towards Khrushchev in his writings in the late 1950s, probably because Khrushchev first politely refused to pay heed to his call and then went on to announce a unilateral test moratorium. This, for Rajaji, stood in contrast with belligerent US posturing and the doctrine of brinkmanship under John Foster Dulles" — contextualising Rajaji's relative sympathy for Khrushchev against Dulles's confrontational Cold War posture