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GEORGE C. MARSHALL LECTURE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   138438


2015 George C. Marshall lecture in military history: George C. Marshall and the ‘Europe-first’ strategy, 1939–1951: a study in diplomatic as well as military history / Stoler, Mark A   Article
Stoler, Mark A Article
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Summary/Abstract As Army chief of staff, secretary of state, and secretary of defense, George C. Marshall played a major role in creating, implementing, and defending the multilateral “Europe-First” global strategy that guided U.S. foreign and military policies through World War II and the Cold War. This lecture explores how and why he did so, emphasizing the decision to defeat Germany before Japan, the postwar European Recovery Program that bears Marshall’s name, and the relief of General Douglas MacArthur during the Korean War for his refusal to accept this grand strategy. In the process it analyzes the complex relationship that exists between diplomatic and military history.
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2
ID:   154876


2017 George C. Marshall lecture in military history: for want of a nail: the impact of shipping on grand strategy in world war II, / Symonds, Craig   Journal Article
Symonds, Craig Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Of all the various ways that American participation in World War II contributed to Allied victory, the most critical, and in the end the most decisive, was American industrial productivity, and particularly shipbuilding. United States ship construction between 1941 and 1945 dramatically outstripped both its own allies and all of its foes combined. The United States was not only the “arsenal of democracy” (Franklin Roosevelt’s phrase) but also the Allies’ shipbuilder, and superiority in shipping is what allowed the Allies to win the Battle of the Atlantic, conduct the D-Day invasion, and mount a simultaneous offensive in the Pacific.
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