Table of contents : Contents Acknowledgments Introduction I. Origins of the Foreign Aid Program 1. The Prospect of an American World Order 2. Planning for Reconstruction: the Strategy of Deferment 3. Planning a Wilsonian World: The Strategies of Co-optation and Propaganda 4. American Diplomacy and the Reconstruction Issue in 1946 5. Deferring the Reconstruction Issue—Again II. The Truman Doctrine 1. Winter 1946-7 2. Breakthrough on Foreign Aid 3. The Truman Doctrine as an Instrument of Propaganda 4. A First Try to Escape the Truman Doctrine III. Foreign Aid and Internal Security 1. The President Announces a Domestic Truman Doctrine 2. The Battle Over Employee Loyalty 3. Internal Security and the Campaign for Foreign Aid IV. The Marshall Plan 1. Planning the Marshall Plan 2. The Marshall Plan and American Economic Policy 3. The Marshall Plan and the Western Bloc 4. The Politics of the Marshall Plan 5. Return to Crisis Politics V. The Cold War at Home 1. Focusing the Internal Security Issue: Spring 1947 2. Policing Internal Security 3. Education for Security 4. Internal Security and Interim Aid VI. The Battle for the European Recovery Program 1. The Alignment of Forces 2. The Campaign for E.R.P. 3. E.R.P. and Crisis Politics: The War Scare of 1948 4. The Institutionalization of the Truman Doctrine VII. Internal Security, E.R.P., and the Politics of 1948 1. Another Debate on Foreign Aid, Another Drive Against Subversives 2. The Republicans Try to Recapture the Internal Security Issue VIII. The Legacy of the Truman Doctrine 1. The Failure of the Marshall Plan _ 2. MacArthur and McCarthy Notes Bibliography Index