"The intervention by the United States in the Dominican Republic
in 1965 has inspired several books, and this one is clearly the
best."-- "Review of Politics."
Drawing on nearly 150 personal interviews with individuals in
the DominicanRepublic and the United States, on rare access to
classified U.S. government documents, and on his own first-hand
experiences during the crisis, Abraham F. Lowenthal rejects
official, liberal, and radical accounts of the intervention.
Instead, he explains it as the product of fundamental premises, of
decision-making procedures, and of bureaucratic politics. In a new
preface, Lowenthal discusses the Dominican intervention in its Cold
War context and in comparative and theoretical perspective. As the
issue of U.S. military action is raised anew--from Iraq to
Bosnia--the lessons of the Dominican crisis will continue to
command attention.
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