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Latin American Security Challenges - A Collaborative Inquiry from North and South: Naval War College Newport Papers 21 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R284
Discovery Miles 2 840
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Latin American Security Challenges - A Collaborative Inquiry from North and South: Naval War College Newport Papers 21 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R284
Discovery Miles 2 840
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Sometimes lost in the deluge of attention devoted to national
security challenges in the Middle East and Asia is the importance
of America's own backyard, the countries and waters of Latin
America and the Caribbean. Even as the United States combats
terrorists and their state supporters in the greater Middle East,
and even as long-range planners cast wary eyes on the growing power
of China, American strategists cannot and should not neglect the
threats or challenges closer to home. After all, as this volume and
others point out, Latin America is a key economic partner, both a
market for American products and a source of many of the goods
North Americans have come to take for granted. Moreover, the
distance between the two regions is not great; inevitably crises
and festering problems in Latin America lead to such problems in
the United States as illegal immigration. Conversely, the American
struggles against al-Qa'ida and other transnational threats may
bring unwanted attention to places like the tri-border region as
terrorists transit or seek refuge. Newport Paper 21, Latin American
Security Challenges: A Collaborative Inquiry from North and South,
helps reopen the door to serious analyses of the relationship
between Latin American national security issues and American
strategic interests. The monograph consists of an introduction and
conclusion and three substantive essays analyzing specific issues
facing Latin America. The first builds upon the concepts of failed
states and borderless regions to suggest how criminals and perhaps
terrorists can find refuge and perhaps support in localities
outside the control of states. The second essay provides a solid
introduction to the interconnection of economic behavior and the
national security threats facing both Latin American governments
and the United States. The final essay speculates on the interest
of China in the region, with particular attention to the potential
roles played by immigration and Chinese ownership of firms charged
with operation of both access ports to the Panama Canal. It is our
hope that this work will help reinvigorate sound thinking about
U.S. policies toward Latin America and encourage closer cooperation
between strategists and scholars in both regions. Such cooperation
would provide real benefits to the national security communities
and military establishments in the United States and many critical
Latin American countries.
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