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FOREIGN POLICY INTERESTS (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   148145


Decision making in using assassinations in international relations / Schilling, Warner R; Schilling, Jonathan L   Journal Article
SCHILLING, WARNER R Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract WARNER R. SCHILLING and JONATHAN L. SCHILLING analyze how leaders weigh the costs and benefits of using assassination to advance their foreign policy interests. They conclude that the decision-making process is prone to bias, especially when dependent on the identity of the likely successor.
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2
ID:   139653


India's engagement with the world: contemporary foreign policy interests / Khobragade, Vinod   Article
Khobragade, Vinod Article
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Summary/Abstract Vinod Khobragade discusses India’s contemporary prime foreign policy interests. While keeping its democratic setup alive, India has shed traditional foreign policy objectives and made new choices reflecting the changing patterns of international politics. The aim is to boost holistic development and make the country one of the leading though benign powers of the world.
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3
ID:   149502


Why presidents sometimes do not use intelligence information / Roberts, Patrick S; Saldin, Robert P   Journal Article
Roberts, Patrick S Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract PATRICK S. ROBERTS and ROBERT P. SALDIN identify reasons why presidents sometimes do not use intelligence information. They argue that presidents may opt for “opacity” so as not to act on intelligence information that could upset the global strategic balance or their foreign policy interests. They discuss this phenomenon using as a case study the alleged Israeli-South African nuclear test in 1979.
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