Fires All Around the Horizon: The U.N.'s Uphill Battle to Preserve the Peace
Fires All Around the Horizon reports on the performance of the United Nations as a peacekeeping agency during its first four decades—its successes, failures, and limitations. Written by an award-winning diplomatic correspondent who frequently observed the conflicts and discussions generated in the United Nations first-hand, this volume describes and analyzes more than 30 conflicts, from Palestine and Korea through the Falkland Islands and Grenada. For each, the author examines the origin of the conflict, who was responsible, and what role, if any, the United Nations played in restoring and maintaining peace. Written with a keen eye for detail and political nuance, this fascinating book offers the reader a well-grounded awareness not only of the United Nation's peacekeeping efforts, but also of the major international conflicts of our time.

In addition to describing the conflicts themselves, Harrelson interweaves discussions of the critical issues these conflicts raised — the Cold War, the location of the United Nations, decolonization, the United Nations in transition, the seating of Red China, the battle with South Africa. He shows that the United Nations has enjoyed some measure of success in its peacekeeping function, but has often been ineffective — primarily due to the readiness of member nations to resort to force to settle disputes. By providing a broad historical perspective of the United Nation's peacekeeping efforts, Harrelson enables the student of international politics to form a more realistic picture of what can be expected of that organization as a peacekeeping force in the future.

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Fires All Around the Horizon: The U.N.'s Uphill Battle to Preserve the Peace
Fires All Around the Horizon reports on the performance of the United Nations as a peacekeeping agency during its first four decades—its successes, failures, and limitations. Written by an award-winning diplomatic correspondent who frequently observed the conflicts and discussions generated in the United Nations first-hand, this volume describes and analyzes more than 30 conflicts, from Palestine and Korea through the Falkland Islands and Grenada. For each, the author examines the origin of the conflict, who was responsible, and what role, if any, the United Nations played in restoring and maintaining peace. Written with a keen eye for detail and political nuance, this fascinating book offers the reader a well-grounded awareness not only of the United Nation's peacekeeping efforts, but also of the major international conflicts of our time.

In addition to describing the conflicts themselves, Harrelson interweaves discussions of the critical issues these conflicts raised — the Cold War, the location of the United Nations, decolonization, the United Nations in transition, the seating of Red China, the battle with South Africa. He shows that the United Nations has enjoyed some measure of success in its peacekeeping function, but has often been ineffective — primarily due to the readiness of member nations to resort to force to settle disputes. By providing a broad historical perspective of the United Nation's peacekeeping efforts, Harrelson enables the student of international politics to form a more realistic picture of what can be expected of that organization as a peacekeeping force in the future.

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Fires All Around the Horizon: The U.N.'s Uphill Battle to Preserve the Peace

Fires All Around the Horizon: The U.N.'s Uphill Battle to Preserve the Peace

by Max Harrelson
Fires All Around the Horizon: The U.N.'s Uphill Battle to Preserve the Peace

Fires All Around the Horizon: The U.N.'s Uphill Battle to Preserve the Peace

by Max Harrelson

Hardcover

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Overview

Fires All Around the Horizon reports on the performance of the United Nations as a peacekeeping agency during its first four decades—its successes, failures, and limitations. Written by an award-winning diplomatic correspondent who frequently observed the conflicts and discussions generated in the United Nations first-hand, this volume describes and analyzes more than 30 conflicts, from Palestine and Korea through the Falkland Islands and Grenada. For each, the author examines the origin of the conflict, who was responsible, and what role, if any, the United Nations played in restoring and maintaining peace. Written with a keen eye for detail and political nuance, this fascinating book offers the reader a well-grounded awareness not only of the United Nation's peacekeeping efforts, but also of the major international conflicts of our time.

In addition to describing the conflicts themselves, Harrelson interweaves discussions of the critical issues these conflicts raised — the Cold War, the location of the United Nations, decolonization, the United Nations in transition, the seating of Red China, the battle with South Africa. He shows that the United Nations has enjoyed some measure of success in its peacekeeping function, but has often been ineffective — primarily due to the readiness of member nations to resort to force to settle disputes. By providing a broad historical perspective of the United Nation's peacekeeping efforts, Harrelson enables the student of international politics to form a more realistic picture of what can be expected of that organization as a peacekeeping force in the future.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275929978
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 02/21/1989
Pages: 302
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

MAX HARRELSON, served, for many years, as reporter, correspondent, and editor for the Associated Press. He is the former co-editor of Public Papers of the Secretaries-General of the United Nations and is now retired.

Table of Contents

The U.N.'s First Year Chilled by Cold War
Headquarters in New York: Good, Bad or Maybe
The United States Responds to Soviet Balkan Vetoes with Truman Doctrine
The U.N. Gets a Tough One: Palestine
The U.N. Goes to War
Quiet Diplomacy Ends Berlin Blockade
Indian and Pakistan Battle over Kashmir
The Suez War
The Soviet Union Intervenes in Hungary
The United States Intervenes in Guatemalan and Lebanon
The Soviet Union and the West Clash Over Decolonialization
The U.N. in a Changing World
The Congo Experience
France and Tunisia Clash over Bizerte Naval Base
The Bay of Pigs and Cuban Missile Crisis
West Irian, Yemen, and Malaysia
Vietnam and the U.N.'s Handsoff Policy
Cyprus
Confrontation on Peace-Keeping Assessments
On the Use of Forece: The Dominican Republic and Czechoslovakia
Trouble in Africa: Southern Rhodesia and Biafra
The Six-Day War in the Middle East
Nationalist China Out—Red China In
The U.N.'s Frustrating Battle with South Africa
Round Four: The Yom Kippur War
Tempest around the Persian Gulf
The Soviets Try to Tame Afghanistan
Guns Roar in The South Atlantic
United States Invades Grenada
The U.N. Enters Its Fifth Decade
Bibliography
Index

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