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POST - COLD WAR ERA (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   091992


Justifying war in the post-cold war era: shifting norms of international society? / Kerton-Johnson, Nicholas   Journal Article
Kerton-Johnson, NIcholas Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This article examines presidential justifications for war in two key acts of US military intervention in the post-cold war period. The presidential justifications for the first Gulf War and Kosovo intervention are highlighted to reveal a changing discourse for war.
Key Words NATO  Gulf War  Iraq  KOSOVO  Kuwait  Human right 
International Society  Post 9/11  Post - Cold War Era  Clinton  Bush  Justifying War 
Egoist Morality  Soviet Union  International Law 
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2
ID:   047151


nationalism and internationalism in the post-cold war era / Goldmann, Kjell (ed); Hannerz, Ulf (ed); Westin, Charles (ed) 2000  Book
Goldmann, Kjell Book
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Publication London, Routledge, 2000.
Description xiv, 290p.
Standard Number 0415238919
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
044648320.54/GOL 044648MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   138598


Threatlessness and US grand strategy / Fettweis, Christopher J   Article
Fettweis, Christopher J Article
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Summary/Abstract As the Soviet Union was in the process of collapsing, Georgi Arbatov sent a letter to the New York Times that contained a warning for the United States. Arbatov, who was one of the Kremlin’s leading ‘Amerikanists’, wrote that the Soviets were unleashing a ‘secret weapon’, one ‘that will work almost regardless of the American response’. It was not the stuff of Cold War nightmares, some sort of last-minute deus ex machina from the Academy of Sciences that would rescue the Soviet Union from oblivion. No, in this instance, the weapon was psychological and unequivocal: the Kremlin was about to deprive America of the Enemy.
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