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Full Description
In 1972, Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme's fierce condemnation of the Christmas Bombings of the North Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong led to a breakdown in diplomatic relations at the highest level between Sweden and the United States. The author argues that Sweden's official position of neutrality allowed its Prime Minister greater independence of action on the international stage. Palme opposed the American military intervention in Southeast Asia for its violation of Vietnamese self-determination. Superpower aggression against one small country threatened all others, including Palme's own. At the same time, the diplomatic freeze did not substantially damage Swedish-American relations. In spite of the tension with the Nixon White House, Stockholm and its embassy in Washington maintained excellent relations with Congress, with many ordinary Americans, and even with Nixon's own State Department.
Contents
Chapter One: The Early Evolution of Olof Palme and Swedish Vietnam Policy
Chapter Two: The Accession of Olof Palme
Chapter Three: The Christmas Bombing and Consequent Diplomatic Freeze
Chapter Four: Sweden and the American Prisoners-of-War in North Vietnam
Chapter Five: Reconciliation with Washington
Chapter Six: The Postwar Reconstruction of Vietnam and Swedish-American Relations



