
Contents
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Defending Economic Interests Abroad? Defending Economic Interests Abroad?
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Regional Interests and Choosing Sides Regional Interests and Choosing Sides
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Central America Central America
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Nicaragua: A Serial Aggressor Nicaragua: A Serial Aggressor
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Libya: North Africa's Serial Aggressor Libya: North Africa's Serial Aggressor
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The Middle East: The Early Years The Middle East: The Early Years
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The Eisenhower Years: Egypt The Eisenhower Years: Egypt
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The Eisenhower Years: Syria The Eisenhower Years: Syria
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The Middle East in the Kennedy Years The Middle East in the Kennedy Years
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A Turning Point in the Middle East A Turning Point in the Middle East
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Conclusion Conclusion
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5 The Critical Test: U.S. Interventions
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Published:July 2012
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Abstract
This chapter describes previous research on economics and U.S. military involvement abroad. It reports qualitative data from international conflicts in the Middle East, North Africa, and Latin America, where the United States intervened in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The United States supported Egypt in its conflict with Libya in 1985, and Egypt interfered along with the United States in the Libya-Sudan conflicts to show its support for U.S. policies in North Africa. During the Eisenhower years, U.S. preparation for a widespread conflict proved efficient, and Syria withdrew from Jordan to prevent U.S. military action. The Kennedy administration demonstrated its friendliness to both sides of the Saudi-Egypt conflict and brought the Yemeni civil war to a peaceful resolution. The status quo should be preserved and the land and sea routes safe for international trade should be kept in order to understand the U.S. choice of sides in international conflicts.
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