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utive Secretary on Uates Objectives and Programs for National Security, NSC68 (April 14, 1950), 7. 12. John Foster Dulles, Foundations of Peace (address to the Veterans of Fn Wars, New York, August 18, 1958). 13. Gee H. W. Bush faced a similar issue after Saddam Husseins forces had been expelled from Kuwait in 1991. 14. Shen Zhihua,Mao, Stalin, and the Korean War: Trilateral unist Relations in the 1950s, trans. Neil Silver (London: Routledge, 2012), 140. 15. Jian,as Road to the Korean War: The Making of the SinoAmeri frontation (New York: bia Uy Press, 1994), 149ndash;50. On the ese leaderships analysis of the war and its regional implications, see alsei N. Goncharov, John W. Lewis, and Xue Litai,Uain Partners: Stalin, Mao, and the Korean War (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Uy Press, 1993); Henry Kissinger,On a (New York: Penguin Press, 2011), chap. 5; Shen,Mao, Stalin, and the Korean War;and Shu Guang Zhang,Maos Military Romanticism: a and the Korean War, 1950ndash;1953 (Lawrence: Uy Press of Kansas, 1995). 16. See Chapter 5. 17. General Omar N. Bradley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testimony before the Senate ittees on Armed Services and Fions, May 15, 1951, inMilitary Situation in the Far East, hearings, 82nd g., 1st sess., pt. 2, 732 (1951). 18. See Peter Braestrup,Big Story: How the Ameri Press and Televisioed and Interpreted the Crisis of Tet 1968 inam and Washington(Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1977); Robert Elegant, How to Lose a War: The Press and Viet Nam,Enter (London), August 1981, 73ndash
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