Abstract

Big-Bomber Symington. Aiming at the Presidency

Josephson, Matthew | May 26, 1956 issue

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That the U.S. have reached a sort of global impasse in the cold war and in its long-sustained arms race with the Russian-centered powers has become plain enough, by now, for all men with eyes to see. Such an outcome was predicted by experts at almost every stage of the cold war, as the U.S. undertook to build ever newer scientific weapons, each more "absolute" than the last. The sense of a real stalemate in technological arms is borne in upon the U.S. again as a result of the hearings that have been conducted since April 16, 1956 before a special Senate subcommittee headed by Senator W. Stuart Symington.

See Also:

ARMS race; COLD War; SYMINGTON, W. Stuart; LEGISLATORS -- United States; UNITED States; SOVIET Union
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