In April 1965, a popular rebellion in the Dominican Republic
toppled the remnants of the U.S. backed Trujillo dictatorship
setting the stage for the master tinkers of America's Cold War
machine. In this groundbreaking study, Eric Thomas Chester
carefully reconstructs the events that followed into a thriller of
historical sweep, and creates a stunning portrait of how the U.S.
government--from President Lyndon Johnson on down--used the
Dominican Republic as a tool of its imperial arrogance.
Eric Thomas Chester explains how the U.S. intervention was in
the tradition of gunboat diplomacy as well as a consequence of Cold
War ideology, and the Cuban Revolution. After the withdrawal of
U.S. troops from Haiti in 1934 and the initiation of Roosevelt's
so-called "good neighbor policy," the United States had refrained
from sending its own troops to intervene in Latin America. The 1965
invasion broke this pattern and reinitiated an era of direct armed
intervention in Latin America. The result was that by early May,
with more than thirty thousand troops deployed, there was a greater
U.S. military presence in the Dominican Republic than in South
Vietnam.
In this fascinating account, Chester makes extensive use of
recently declassified diplomatic and intelligence documents to
offer a nuanced and textured study of the workings of covert as
well as diplomatic initiatives and provides a thorough analysis of
U.S. Cold War foreign policy in the region.
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