Front cover image for Presidential decisions for war : Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf

Presidential decisions for war : Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf

In 1950, Americans expected that the United States would wage another major war in the near future. Instead, over the course of the next half-century, they fought limited wars against minor powers: North Korea, North Vietnam, and Iraq. In this book, Gary R. Hess explores the ways in which Presidents Truman, Johnson, and Bush took America into these wars. He recreates the unfolding crises in Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf, explaining why the presidents and their advisers concluded that the use of military power was ultimately necessary to uphold U.S. security. The decisions for war are then evaluated in terms of how effectively the president assessed U.S. interests, explored alternatives to war, adhered to constitutional processes, and built congressional, popular, and international support. Once at war, each president as commander in chief faced the challenge of waging a limited war, which imposes restrictions on military operations and objectives and on the extent to which popular emotions can be aroused. After tracing how Truman, Johnson, and Bush responded to unfolding military developments, Hess evaluates the wartime leadership of each president in terms of his effectiveness in coordinating political and military objectives, managing civilian-military relations, communicating objectives and sustaining popular and congressional support, gaining and sustaining international backing, and responding to diplomatic initiatives and opportunities for peace
Print Book, English, 2001
Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2001
Case studies
xiv, 262 pages : maps ; 24 cm.
9780801865152, 9780801865169, 0801865158, 0801865166
43859348
Introduction: Presidential leadership and international crises
Truman and the Korean crisis: "We can't let the U.N. down"
Truman as commander in chief: decision by indecision
Johnson and the Vietnam crisis: "America keeps her word"
Johnson as commander in chief: the strategy of wishful thinking
Bush and the Persian Gulf crisis: "This aggression will not stand"
Bush as commander in chief: the imperatives of coalition warfare
Conclusion: Three presidents and their wars