International Affairs

January, 1959, No. 1, Vol. 5

CONTENTS
Two Worlds, Two Foreign Policies Two Worlds, Two Foreign Policies
SUPERIORITY OF SOCIALISM GRAPHICALLY ILLUSTRATED BY THE SEVEN-YEAR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLAN
THE BASIC ECONOMIC PROBLEM OF THE SOVIET UNION
PEACEFUL CO-EXISTENCE AND ECONOMIC COMPETITION OF THE TWO SYSTEMS
THE SOCIALIST COMMUNITY'S SUCCESSES AND THEIR INTERNATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE
THE INFLUENCE OF THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF SOCIALISM ON THE STRUGGLE FOR SOCIAL PROGRESS OF THE WORKERS IN THE CAPITALIST COUNTRIES
ECONOMIC COMPETITION OF THE TWO SYSTEMS AND THE STRUGGLE OF THE UNDERDEVELOPED COUNTRIES FOR GENUINE INDEPENDENCE
SOME NEW TRENDS IN THE POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE WEST EUROPEAN COUNTRIES
THE AGGRESSIVE IDEOLOGY OF IMPERIALISM SUFFERS DEFEAT
The Berlin Question and the Interests of Peace
International Status of Cosmic Space
Aggressive U.S. Navalism: Its Sources, "Theory" and Practice
Behind the Scenes of NATO
The Middle Eastern Situation
The Hazardous Trend of Japanese Foreign Policy
Iraqi Republic's First Steps
The Second Front: Fact and Fiction
Treaty of Everlasting Friendship
The Road to Détente
"A Show-Window"
Trade War
Facing New Tasks
U.S.A. Molds Military Talks
Why a U.S. Fifth Fleet?
Civil War
More Sabre Rattling
The Tense Situation
"Skyblue" Parliament
FOREIGN AFFAIRS CHRONICLE
Professor Blackett's Article
P. M. S. BLACKETT ON THE "THEORY OF A LIMITED NUCLEAR WAR"
Threat to European Peace
Behind the Scenes of U.S. "Aid"
The Search for "New Laws of History"
Instrument of War
An Important Factor in International Relations
LITERATURE ON INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS IN 1959