ABSTRACT

In this book, some of Philip Towle’s major contributions are brought together to shed light on the Cold War and its aftermath.

Topics include the build-up of chemical and nuclear weapons, the attack on New York’s World Trade Center in 2001, intervention in overseas conflicts and the role of the Church. The first section concentrates on the ways in which the West has interfered in conflicts around the world from the Vietnam War to Bosnia, Afghanistan and Iraq, and explains why intervention worked in former Yugoslavia but not in countries such as Vietnam, Afghanistan or Libya. The second section focuses on arms control and disarmament, how they were linked to intervention – particularly through the fear of terrorism – and how and why some arms control measures succeeded, and some did not.

Intervention and Disarmament: In a Culturally Diverse World is useful for postgraduates and scholars interested in international affairs and warfare in the modern world.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part One|76 pages

Intervention

chapter 1|6 pages

Culture and Intervention (Winter 1999)

chapter 2|10 pages

Politics and Religion

chapter 3|10 pages

The Strategy of War by Proxy (March 1981)

chapter 4|11 pages

Should the West Arm Guerrillas? (1988)

part Two|70 pages

Nuclear Weapons and Disarmament

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 8|13 pages

Blackett and Nuclear Weapons (2003)

chapter 10|10 pages

Arms Control and Declining Powers (May 1980)

chapter 12|9 pages

Autocrats and MDW (2006)

chapter 13|5 pages

Forced Disarmament Without War