Want this question answered?
Truman was against Dulles.Eisenhower, by contrast, favored what John Foster Dulles created, a policy called "massive retaliation".
A policy aimed at furthering the interests of the United States abroad by encouraging the investment of U.S. capital in foreign countries. - Answers.com I believe you are thinking of "Dollar Diplomacy". Dulles Diplomacy is the notion set forth by John Foster Dulles that believes in force and pressure is the best way to deal with enemies. During Dulles' time as Secretary of State these "enemies" were communists.
Policy of Boldness
The Reagan Doctrine was pretty much a return to the ideas of John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State under Eisenhower. Reagan promised that the United States would support any anti-Communist struggle anywhere in the world. That meant economic, political, and military aid.
Internationalism
John Foster Dulles
Truman was against Dulles.Eisenhower, by contrast, favored what John Foster Dulles created, a policy called "massive retaliation".
Brinksmanship was John Foster Dulle's belief that only by going to the edge of war could the united states prevent war. NovaNet
Brinkmanship was a foreign policy practiced in the 1950s by President Eeisenhower's secretary of State John Foster Dulles. The term came from Dulles's policy of pressing Cold War issues with the Soviet Union to the brink of war. Hence "brinkmanship."
John Foster Dulles exercised a powerful influence as Secretary of State during the Eisenhower administration. He was known for his strong anti-communist stance, particularly with his policy of "brinkmanship" and the development of the idea of massive retaliation as a deterrent to Soviet aggression. Dulles played a key role in shaping US foreign policy during the Cold War.
A policy aimed at furthering the interests of the United States abroad by encouraging the investment of U.S. capital in foreign countries. - Answers.com I believe you are thinking of "Dollar Diplomacy". Dulles Diplomacy is the notion set forth by John Foster Dulles that believes in force and pressure is the best way to deal with enemies. During Dulles' time as Secretary of State these "enemies" were communists.
Dulles was an anti communist who supported deterence.
== == John Foster Dulles believed that communism was evil. He found it impossible to consider the Soviet Union anything but an enemy of the democratic beliefs of the United States. He did not believe a nation could be neutral in the Cold War. One must be for democracy and the ideals of the US Constitution, or support communism. Dulles divided the world into "us" and "them." You were either a supporter of the US foreign policy ideals, or an enemy of the US. Dulles believed the US should use such agencies as the CIA to ensure a pro-US government in nations. An example was seen in 1953 when the US helped the Shah of Iran overthrow a government disliked by the US. Dulles advocated a policy of brinkmanship--taking the US to the brink of war in our relations with communism and the USSR in particular.
John Foster Dulles is best known for his role as secretary of state under President Eisenhower. As with many others, Dulles believed in the US policy of containment regarding the expansion of communism.
The two men wanted to prevent communism. American policy included the threat that nuclear weapons would be used against US enemies.
Policy of Boldness
Brinksmanship