This article uses recently declassified records to analyze the American intervention in Lebanon between 1982 and 1984 and the confrontation with Libya between 1981 and 1986. In both cases, the US responded to a terrorist attack with military force. Especially after the attacks in Lebanon, members of the administration started to elaborate a comprehensive strategy to fight terrorism which focused on pre-emptive strikes against states deemed to be supporters of terrorism. The strike on Libya in April 1986 was the first implementation of this strategy and, furthermore, regime change had been attempted both before and after this strike. The article argues that the policy of the Reagan administration in the fight against terrorism was a combinat...
While much of the record of American statecraft through the 1980s discloses bold policies which subs...
This article analyzes the recent Israeli military withdrawal from southern Lebanon in the context of...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 100-112).Psychological warfare is dissimilar to military...
On Tuesday morning, 11 September 2001, the United States was attacked by a small terrorist cell from...
Ronald Reagan entered the White House in 1981 as the president who had promised to confront the fore...
This well researched and clearly written study of U.S. combat with Libya in the 1980s has important ...
This thesis is a study on the use of military force in United States peacemaking in Lebanon between ...
This paper examines the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing and its impact on United States foreign counter...
The construction of any kind of sustained political violence, including large-scale counter-terroris...
American strategies to deal with terrorist attacks against Americans in Lebanon in the 1980s and by ...
Abstract. During the Cold War, the Reagan administration justified American support to the Noriega d...
Despite President Reagan’s historic foreign policy success in ushering in the collapse of the Soviet...
This diplomatic and military history offers a new interpretation of the origins of the three fightin...
American recently declassified records give evidence that Qaddafi did not meet any significant oppos...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of History, Washington State UniversityIn the 1980s, a terrorism crisis t...
While much of the record of American statecraft through the 1980s discloses bold policies which subs...
This article analyzes the recent Israeli military withdrawal from southern Lebanon in the context of...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 100-112).Psychological warfare is dissimilar to military...
On Tuesday morning, 11 September 2001, the United States was attacked by a small terrorist cell from...
Ronald Reagan entered the White House in 1981 as the president who had promised to confront the fore...
This well researched and clearly written study of U.S. combat with Libya in the 1980s has important ...
This thesis is a study on the use of military force in United States peacemaking in Lebanon between ...
This paper examines the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing and its impact on United States foreign counter...
The construction of any kind of sustained political violence, including large-scale counter-terroris...
American strategies to deal with terrorist attacks against Americans in Lebanon in the 1980s and by ...
Abstract. During the Cold War, the Reagan administration justified American support to the Noriega d...
Despite President Reagan’s historic foreign policy success in ushering in the collapse of the Soviet...
This diplomatic and military history offers a new interpretation of the origins of the three fightin...
American recently declassified records give evidence that Qaddafi did not meet any significant oppos...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of History, Washington State UniversityIn the 1980s, a terrorism crisis t...
While much of the record of American statecraft through the 1980s discloses bold policies which subs...
This article analyzes the recent Israeli military withdrawal from southern Lebanon in the context of...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 100-112).Psychological warfare is dissimilar to military...