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OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM - OIF (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124170


Intervention and dreams of exogenous statebuilding: the application of liberal peacebuilding in Afghanistan and Iraq / Dodge, Toby   Journal Article
Dodge, Toby Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The central thesis of this article is that when faced with state collapse, rising violence, and a complex stabilisation effort, the US, UN, and NATO in Afghanistan and the US and Britain in Iraq, deployed the dominant, if not only, international approach available, Liberal Peacebuilding. The article traces the rise of Liberal Peacebuilding across the 1990s. It argues that four units of analysis within neoliberal ideology, the individual, the market, the role of the state and democracy, played a key role within Liberal Peacebuilding, allowing it to identify problems and propose solutions to stabilise post-conflict societies. It was these four units of analysis that were taken from the Liberal Peacebuilding approach and applied in Afghanistan and Iraq. The application of a universal template to two very different countries led directly to the fierce but weak states that exist today.
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2
ID:   130697


Operation Iraqi Freedom: revisited / Pechurov, S. L   Journal Article
Pechurov, S. L Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The article discusses the war against Iraq in 2003. Topics discussed includes an assessment of the views voiced by U.S political and military leaders, foreign military experts, and veterans of Operation Desert Storm and Iraqi Freedom. An overview of the operations by the U.S. armed forces and their allies during the war was also presented.
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3
ID:   133409


Taking mines seriously: mine warfare in China's near seas / Truver, Scott C   Journal Article
Truver, Scott C Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract A mine is a terrible thing that waits. The easy way is always mined. Any ship can be a minesweeper-once. Sea mines and the need to counter them have been constants for the U.S. Navy since the earliest days of the Republic. In January 1778, patriot David Bushnell used floating kegs of gunpowder fitted with contact firing mechanisms to attack a British fleet anchored in the Delaware River above Philadelphia. Four British sailors died trying to retrieve the kegs-an early example of the challenges of explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) against an unknown threat-but the ships were unscathed. Since that uncertain beginning, mines and mine countermeasures (MCM) have figured prominently in the Civil War, Spanish-American War, both world wars, Korea, Vietnam, numerous Cold War crises, and Operations DESERT STORM and IRAQI FREEDOM.
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