View the Executive SummaryThis Letort Paper covers U.S. military interventions in civil conflicts since the end of the Cold War. It defines intervention as the use of military force to achieve a specific objective (i.e., deliver humanitarian aid, support revolutionaries or insurgents, protect a threatened population, etc.) and focuses on the phase of the intervention in which kinetic operations occurred. The analysis considers five conflicts in which the United States intervened: Somalia (1992-93), Haiti (1994), Bosnia (1995), Kosovo (1999), and Libya(2011). It also reviews two crises in which Washington might have intervened but chose not to: Rwanda (1994) and Syria (2011-12). The author examines each case using five broad analytical quest...
This study examines the variation in the form of intervention in the Middle East and North Africa du...
Intervention has been a vital instrument of statecraft for the United States yet following Iraq and ...
Why is there apparent inconsistency in U.S. presidential military intervention decisions when cases ...
Internal conflict continues to be the most common form of organized violence, most often occurring i...
Humanitarian intervention by the United States has increased since the end of the Cold War. This the...
This thesis seeks to identify the factors necessary to drive the United States to intervene in a hum...
Aproved for public release, distribution is unlimited. In a post-cold war environment, U.S. military...
Paper Presented at the University of Toronto Political Science Undergraduate Research Colloquium 201...
During the Cold War era, U.S. foreign policy goals concentrated on containing Soviet expansion. Cont...
The purpose of this study is to identify the conditions that support successful third-party interven...
Balancing humanitarian intervention with the possibility of a string of interventions leaving the U....
Humanitarian intervention has always been an interesting but controversial phenomenon in internat...
Operation Unified Protector (Libya, 2011) is the latest example of how a limited-means military inte...
The emergence of the United States as the world’s sole hegemon at the end of the Cold War is a much-...
U.S. MILITARY INTERVENTION IN THE POST-COLD WAR ERA: A CASE-STUDY ANALYSIS OF PRESIDENTIAL DECISION...
This study examines the variation in the form of intervention in the Middle East and North Africa du...
Intervention has been a vital instrument of statecraft for the United States yet following Iraq and ...
Why is there apparent inconsistency in U.S. presidential military intervention decisions when cases ...
Internal conflict continues to be the most common form of organized violence, most often occurring i...
Humanitarian intervention by the United States has increased since the end of the Cold War. This the...
This thesis seeks to identify the factors necessary to drive the United States to intervene in a hum...
Aproved for public release, distribution is unlimited. In a post-cold war environment, U.S. military...
Paper Presented at the University of Toronto Political Science Undergraduate Research Colloquium 201...
During the Cold War era, U.S. foreign policy goals concentrated on containing Soviet expansion. Cont...
The purpose of this study is to identify the conditions that support successful third-party interven...
Balancing humanitarian intervention with the possibility of a string of interventions leaving the U....
Humanitarian intervention has always been an interesting but controversial phenomenon in internat...
Operation Unified Protector (Libya, 2011) is the latest example of how a limited-means military inte...
The emergence of the United States as the world’s sole hegemon at the end of the Cold War is a much-...
U.S. MILITARY INTERVENTION IN THE POST-COLD WAR ERA: A CASE-STUDY ANALYSIS OF PRESIDENTIAL DECISION...
This study examines the variation in the form of intervention in the Middle East and North Africa du...
Intervention has been a vital instrument of statecraft for the United States yet following Iraq and ...
Why is there apparent inconsistency in U.S. presidential military intervention decisions when cases ...