BOOKS
BOOK LINKS

Search the full text of our books:

Powered by Google™

BROWSE BY SUBJECT



Armed Humanitarians
U.S. Interventions from Northern Iraq to Kosovo

Search the full text of this book:

Powered by Google™
Table of Contents
Robert C. DiPrizio

$25.00 paperback
978-0-8018-7067-5 (34 ctn qty)
2002 256 pp.
Add paperback to shopping cart


Description

Since the end of the Cold War, the U.S. military has found itself embroiled in many "operations other than war." Most controversial of these have been humanitarian interventions, which often lacked a clear majority of either elite or public support. Although the immediate threat represented by the events of September 11, 2001, has coalesced public opinion behind the Bush administration's antiterrorism campaign, it is likely that the debate over humanitarian interventions will again take center stage in the coming years. In this book, political scientist Robert C. DiPrizio examines representative case studies from the recent past to offers insight into how a sitting president might (or should) respond to such future emergencies. DiPrizio examines the factors that lay behind U.S. decisions to send troops into civil conflicts abroad, analyzing both the decision-making process and the domestic and international constraints placed upon them. Focusing on the administrations of George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton, he shows that the president remains the chief player in such decision making, and through six case studies—northern Iraq, Somalia, Rwanda, Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo—he looks in detail at both positive and negative intervention decisions. DiPrizio finds that in each of these cases, motivating factors included a different mix of "soft" security concerns (such as refugee flows, regional stability, alliance credibility, and interalliance tensions), true humanitarian concerns, and domestic politics. DiPrizio concludes with a discussion of the possible impact of America's ongoing antiterrorism campaign on the current Bush administration's policy on humanitarian interventions.

Reviews

"A fresh look at US interventions from a different angle . . . DiPrizio's controversial conclusions challenge some widely held beliefs and therefore can be expected to spark an animated debate that hopefully will help us to understand better one important aspect of humanitarian interventions."—Dieter Janssen, Journal of Peace Research

"This is a clearly written and easy to follow account of American humanitarian interventions in the post—Cold War era, focusing on the motivations for Presidents Bush and Clinton to intervene or (as in the case of Rwanda) not to intervene in response to a humanitarian crisis. The strength of the book lies in its readability and comprehensiveness."—Steven R. David, Johns Hopkins University

Author Information

Robert C. DiPrizio is an assistant professor of international security and military studies at the Air Command and Staff College, Air University, at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama.


The Johns Hopkins University Press | 2715 North Charles Street | Baltimore, Maryland 21218 | (410) 516-6900 | webmaster@jhupress.jhu.edu