|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
With the departure of the Soviet and Cubans from Southern Africa,
Sub-Saharan Africa no longer comprises a part of the West's core
strategic interest. America's experience in Somalia illustrated the
folly of addressing with force what was essentially a humanitarian
problem derived from the utter failure of the economic development
of the third world. The human tragedy in Rwanda highlighted the
seemingly interminable demands for external aid. And Liberia has
depicted the gruesome realities of human failure in the only
African land with at least historic (but non-colonial) ties to the
US. This book provides a thorough examination of one dimension of
peacekeeping in Africa: ECOMOG'S role in the attempt to bring peace
to Liberia and the impact of this operation on the region.
FROM THE AUTHORS - One of the most important and intellectually
fascinating areas of investigation for the student of political
affairs concerns the attempt to understand why man makes war. This
ancient field of inquiry may be addressed at such various levels as
the philosophical and psychological or the institutional and
structural contexts of human behavior. For example, did the recent
wars in Somalia, Rwanda, and Haiti result from clashing ideologies,
tribalism, poverty and class warfare, the cold war, or distant
ramifications of colonial history, or, as has been postulated, the
trees of these countries having been cut down? These plausible
sources of conflict offer insight into various dimensions of
explanations for wars; however, the analysts in this volume focus
on just one aspect of the inquiry. They were charged with the task
of anticipating which specific contentious issues likely will
propel large, organized political units to choose violent means of
acquiring their sociopolitical objectives rather than attaining
them peacefully. The units on which we focus have been
traditionally identified as states, but we recognize that a host of
new sub- and suprastate actors also will play major roles in such
wars; hence, we also will allude to them. The specific issues
identified in the text are by no means completely new sources of
contention. Indeed, we may easily argue that throughout history men
have fought over the same objects and values-only the weapons,
strategies, and tactics in their acquisition have changed. We
concentrate on those issues that we believe will be prominent
sources of contention at the dawn of the twenty-first century. We
knowingly omitted some of the most pervasive and such
well-articulated causes of wars as power-balancing initiatives or
the quest for such natural resources as oil or strategic minerals.
These causes no doubt will prevail as sources of violent conflict,
but they will not likely assume new forms as will those issues
which ' comprise our chapter topics. Air University Press. U.S. Air
Force.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.