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U.S. FORCES (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   147103


Ending endless war : a pragmatic military strategy / Bacevich, Andrew J   Journal Article
Bacevich, Andrew J Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract During the Cold War, the United States preferred to husband, rather than expend, its military power. The idea was not to fight but to defend, deter, and contain, a cold peace infinitely preferable to nuclear cataclysm. When U.S. policymakers strayed from this principle, attempting to unify the Korean Peninsula in 1950 [1] or deploying combat troops to Vietnam in the 1960s [2], the results proved unhappy in the extreme.
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2
ID:   179928


Influence through Absence in U.S. Counterinsurgency Interventions? Coercing Local Allies through Threats to Withdraw / Elias, Barbara; Weisiger, Alex   Journal Article
Weisiger, Alex Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In counterinsurgency, U.S. officials often feel trapped by a localally who appears unable to survive the departure of U.S. forces. Advocates for withdrawal argue that only a deadline to depart will induce local governments to accept greater burdens, while critics of this position argue that plans to withdraw embolden insurgents. We argue instead that American leaders gain leverage from U.S. public opinion favouring withdrawal. Analysis of 200+ U.S. demands of local allied governments in Vietnam and Iraq suggests that public pressure for withdrawal is associated with greater local compliance, but that formal U.S. withdrawal plans does not motivate compliance.
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