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  1. Barton J. Bernstein pared a memo of the meeting. He only recalled the president's remarks a day later and then added a brief paragraph to another memorandum. Put in context alongside the dominant assumption that the bomb would be used against the enemy, the significance of F.D.R.'s occa sional doubts is precisely that they were so occasional ...

  2. 6 de ago. de 2015 · sion of the literature, see Barton J. Bernstein, "The Atomic Bomb and American For-eign Policy, 194i-i-945: An Historiographical Controversy," Peace and Change, II (Spring 1974), i-i6.. BARTON J. BERNSTEIN is associate professor of history at Stanford University and a Hoover Peace Fellow. He has edited, and contributed to, Towards a New Past and

  3. Barton J. Bernstein (born 1936) is Professor emeritus of History at Stanford University and co-chair of the International Relations Program and the International Policy Studies Program. He has published about early Cold War history, as well as about the history of nuclear weapons development and strategy during the 1940s and 1950s.

  4. 3- Barton J. Bernstein, "The Atomic Bomb and American Foreign Policy, 1941-1945: An Historiographical Controversy," Peace and Change 3 (Spring 1974): 1 — 14; J. Samuel Walker, "The Decision to Use the Bomb: A Historiographical Update," Diplomatic History 14 (Winter 1990)197-114. 4.

  5. Barton J. Bernstein Currently, he is working on studies concerning the Cold War and the Truman administration. In the preparation of this article, the author is indebted to Martin J. Sherwin, Gregory Herken, Theodore Friedlander, and James Abrahamson for their generous counsel.

  6. 15 de mar. de 1975 · BARTON J. BERNSTEIN is associate professor of history at Stanford University and a Hoover Peace Fellow. He has edited, and contributed to, Towards a New Past and Politics and Policies of the Truman Administration.A volume on the 1952 presidential election and a short study of the atomic bomb, Hiroshima Reconsidered, will appear in 1975.

  7. Understanding the Atomic Bomb and the Japanese Surrender: Missed Opportunities, Little‐Known Near Disasters, and Modern Memory - BERNSTEIN - 1995 - Diplomatic History - Wiley Online Library.