ABSTRACT

John Girling’s book, first published in 1980, investigates the relationship between America and the Third World, centring on three main themes: the nature of American involvement in the Third World, the challenge posed by the rival Super-Power; and the Changes both in US-Soviet relations (from containment to détente) and in the Third World. Three propositions are put forward: that the overriding interest of American foreign policy maker is in the stability of the global system of relationships; that this interest coincides with most Third World élites; and that the global system normally operates peacefully, although continually subject to internal and external challenges.

chapter 1|12 pages

Perspectives on the Third World

part I|88 pages

Revolution

chapter 2|27 pages

Revolutionary motivation

chapter 3|32 pages

Structural context

chapter 4|23 pages

General theory of revolution?

part II|121 pages

Intervention

chapter 5|15 pages

US foreign policy: two perspectives

chapter 7|10 pages

Limited war

chapter 8|23 pages

Counter-insurgency: analysts and operators

chapter 9|23 pages

Implications of involvement

chapter 10|14 pages

Conclusion: the global condition