1st Edition

The Wilson–Johnson Correspondence, 1964–69

Edited By Simon C. Smith Copyright 2015
336 Pages
by Routledge

336 Pages
by Routledge

336 Pages
by Routledge

Less than a year after the assassination of President Kennedy brought Lyndon B. Johnson to the White House, Harold Wilson became British Prime Minister. Over the next four years, the two men governed their countries through unprecedented crises, both domestic and international. To provide a better understanding of the transatlantic relationship, this volume provides for the first time all the... Read more
Contents: Introduction; Labour’s return to power, nuclear sharing, Rhodesia, and the escalation of the Vietnam War, March 1964-March 1966; Dissociation, NATO, and the continuing crisis in Rhodesia, March 1966-January 1967; The Wilson-Kosygin talks, crisis in the Middle East, the defence review, and the devaluation of Sterling, January-December 1967; Withdrawal from east of Suez, Wilson’s visit to Moscow, gold and monetary crises, Vietnam peace initiatives, and the end of the Johnson presidency, January 1968-January 1969; Dramatis personae; Further reading; Index.

Biography

Simon C. Smith is Professor of International History at the University of Hull. His publications include: British Relations with the Malay Rulers from Decentralization to Malayan Independence, 1930-1957 (1995); British Imperialism, 1750-1970 (1998); Kuwait, 1950-1965: Britain, the al-Sabah and Oil (1999); Britain’s Revival and Fall in the Gulf: Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the Trucial States, 1950-1971 (2004); British Documents on the End of Empire: Malta (2006); Reassessing Suez: New Perspectives on the Crisis and its Aftermath (2008); Ending Empire in the Middle East: Britain, the United States and Post-war Decolonization, 1945-1973 (2012). He is currently working on a book on Britain’s post-imperial relations with the Gulf.