News

Charlie English delves into the CIA's attempts to combat communism via literature including '1984' in a book that reminds, in ...
Author Charlie English joins Morning Joe to discuss the new book 'The CIA Book Club: The Secret Mission to Win the Cold War ...
Brewer’s new book completes Cold War trilogy. Southwestern Oklahoma State University History professor Landry Brewer’s new book, "ColdWar Texas," will hit the shelves Aug. 1, according to a ...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, as the Soviet Union imposed ideological control across Eastern Europe, the CIA ...
This book's utility to military historians and serious students is undeniable. A broadly published historian, Professor Jonathan M. House currently teaches military history at the U.S. Army Command ...
The Cold War didn’t end history, but it did remove whatever benefits might have remained in fighting another world war. Despite an overwhelming U.S. advantage in nuclear weapons at the time of the ...
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and President Ronald Reagan at the 1985 Geneva Summit. William Inboden argues that Reagan, not Gorbachev, was primarily responsible for ending the Cold War.
Soviet troops in Moscow in 1986. Fearmongering and wishful thinking marked the relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War, writes Martin Sixsmith. (Peter ...
In his review of “The War of Nerves” (Books, Aug. 13), Stephen Budiansky selects extracts from my book to suggest, improbably, that it propounds a claim of moral equivalence between the two ...
Charlie English delves into the CIA's attempts to combat communism via literature including '1984' in a book that reminds, in an age of book bans, how powerful stories — and reading — can be.