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ID113162
Title ProperDevising exit strategies
LanguageENG
AuthorCaplan, Richard
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)'Before we send our troops into a foreign country, we should know how and when we're going to get them out', US National Security Adviser Anthony Lake intoned in 1996, two years after the precipitate withdrawal of US forces from Somalia. Yet rarely has this requirement been met. Planning for exit as precisely as Lake's comments would suggest is difficult if not impossible, as the Clinton administration would discover in Bosnia and Herzegovina only months later. No one can foresee the circumstances that will obtain, and the course adjustments they may necessitate, once an operation has been launched. But this is not to say that more informed planning for exit is not possible. Not only has the subject of exit strategies received comparatively little sustained scholarly attention; it is also fair to say that policy in this area has been more ad hoc than carefully thought out.
`In' analytical NoteSurvival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 54, No.3; Jun-Jul 2012: p.111-126
Journal SourceSurvival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 54, No.3; Jun-Jul 2012: p.111-126
Key WordsAnthony Lake ;  Somalia ;  Bosnia and Herzegovina ;  Exit Strategy ;  United States ;  Exit Strategy in Vietnam


 
 
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