Introduction
Part I: The Roosevelt Foreign Policy: An Ambiguous Legacy, by
Justus D. Doenecke
1: Roosevelt to William Phillips, Acting Secretary of State
2: Memorandum on Neutrality by R. Walton Moore, Assistant Secretary
of State, August 27, 1935
3: President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Quarantine" Speech, October
5, 1937
4: The Atlantic Charter, August 14, 1941 (White House News
Release)
5: War on Submarines, Radio Address by President Roosevelt,
September 11, 1941
6: Transcription of Press Conference at Casablanca, January 24,
1943
Part II: The Roosevelt Foreign Policy: Flawed, but Superior to the
Competition, by Mark A. Stoler
1: The Neutrality Acts, 1935–1939
2: President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Proposal for Lend-Lease Aid to
Great Britain, December 17 and 29, 1940
3: President Roosevelt's War Message, December 8, 1941
4: The Teheran Conference Minutes, November 29–30, 1943
5: The Churchill-Roosevelt Agreement on Atomic Energy, September
18, 1944
6: The Yalta Protocol of Proceedings
7: Roosevelt's Messages to Stalin and Churchill, 1945
Bibliography
Justus D. Doenecke is professor of history at the New College of Florida. Mark A. Stoler is professor of history at the University of Vermont.
Both scholars cover the whole of FDR's foreign policies in a
concise yet nuanced fashion, they present intellectually consistent
arguments that gibe with their own previous scholarship, and they
bring authority to their different perspectives with objectivity
and without any 'Cross-Fire' hype.
*Garry Clifford, University of Connecticut*
Among our best, and most provocative scholars who are writing on
the FDR years, Justus Doenecke and Mark Stoler are also
distinguished teachers. In this book their scholarship and teaching
skills mesh to provide alternative overviews of
Roosevelt—accompanied by well-chosen, revealing documents—that will
trigger debates inside and outside of the classroom.
*Walter LaFeber*
Opens up the issues and sources for one of the critical periods of
20th-century history in a novel, interesting, and useful way.
*David Reynolds, Cambridge University, author of From Munich to
Pearl Harbor*
In this provocative volume, two distinguished historians reappraise
Franklin Roosevelt's highly controversial foreign policies from
divergent perspectives. Roosevelt's record, they agree, was neither
black nor white but mottled. But how mottled, and why, and compared
to what alternatives? Roosevelt's defenders and detractors—and the
still uncommitted—will profit from pondering the differing answers
that Doenecke and Stoler offer.
*George H. Nash, author of The Life of Herbert Hoover*
Debating Frankline D. Roosevelt's Foreign Policies illustrates how
events and policies are open to differing interpretations. As a
result, it is an outstanding book for those embarking on the study
of history in general and U.S. diplomatic history in
particular.
*The Journal Of Military History*
There is no better way to become familiar with the fascinating
journey made by FDR from inexperienced new president to an
architect of victory and of the postwar world. Doenecke and Stoler
neatly lay out the arguments over Roosevelt's policies, debates
that are surprisingly relevant to the world of the early 21st
century.
*Warren F. Kimball, Robert Treat Professor of History, Rutgers
University*
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