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ID163696
Title ProperSend Good Vibes, Guns, and Money
Other Title InformationThe Institutionalisation of United States Drug Diplomacy toward Mexico, 1969–1989
LanguageENG
AuthorHoopes, Michael
Summary / Abstract (Note)The State Department played a leading role in the struggle within the United States government to define and implement America’s foreign drug policy throughout the late twentieth century. After their participation in 1969’s Operation Intercept illustrated the central importance of Mexican national sovereignty in bilateral relations, United States diplomats worked to institutionalise an aversion to unilateral American action on drug issues south of the Rio Grande. Over time, both the co-operative framework cultivated between American and Mexican officials throughout 1970s and an especially turbulent chapter in bilateral relations during the 1980s helped to establish further the State Department’s highly conciliatory approach to drug diplomacy that today remains a defining characteristic of joint Mexican–American efforts to combat the production and traffic of illicit drugs.
`In' analytical NoteDiplomacy and Statecraft Vol. 29, No.4; Dec 2018: p.667-691
Journal SourceDiplomacy and Statecraft Vol: 29 No 4
Key WordsMexico ;  United States ;  Good Vibes ;  Drug Diplomacy ;  1969–1989


 
 
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