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U.S. and Russian Policymaking With Respect to the Use of Force
This volume presents case studies of U.S. and Russian peacekeeping and peacemaking operations since the end of the Cold War. The chapters are authored by U.S. and Russian policymakers and/or policy analysts who were neither direct participants in, nor first-hand observers of, the events they describe. Drawing on the evidence presented in the case studies, a concluding chapter compares the political and institutional arrangements and procedures through which the two countries decide whether or not to engage in peacekeeping and peacemaking operations and assesses the implications of the key similarities and differences for combined operations in the future.
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Pages: 225
ISBN/EAN: 0-8330-2468-X
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Contents
Preface HTML
Introduction HTML
Section One: Russian Cases
Chapter 1:
Ossetia-Ingushetia HTML
Alan Ch. Kasaev
Chapter 2:
Chechnya HTML
Emil A. Payin and Arkady A. Popov
Chapter 3:
Tadjikistan HTML
Arkady Yu. Dubnov
Chapter 4:
Trans-Dniestria HTML
Irina F. Selivanova
Chapter 5:
Georgia-Abkhazia HTML
Evgeny M. Kozhokin
Section Two: U.S. Cases
Chapter 6:
Lebanon: 1982-1984 HTML
John H. Kelly
Chapter 7:
Africa In the 1990s HTML
Walter H. Kansteiner
Chapter 8:
The Caribbean Basin HTML
Robert A. Pastor
Chapter 9:
Panama and Haiti HTML
Richard L. Millet
Chapter 10:
Intervention Decisionmaking in the Bush Administration HTML
Arnold Kanter
Chapter 11:
Yugoslavia: 1989-1996 HTML
Warren Zimmermann
Conclusion
Chapter 12:
Russian and American Intervention Policy in Comparative Perspective HTML
Jeremy R. Azrael, Benjamin S. Lambeth, Emil A. Payin, and Arkady A. Popov
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