Lives at Risk: Hostages and Victims in American Foreign Policy
Lives at Risk: Hostages and Victims in American Foreign Policy is the first book that provides the historical content needed to understand terrorism and America's responses to terrorist acts. Historian Russell D. Buhite here examines key instances of hostage-taking throughout U.S. history, from the late eighteenth century to the 1980s, and shows how our policies have evolved and how previous experiences can help us deal with terrorist threats today.
Professor Buhite begins this study with a discussion of the special problems that the United States has faced in dealing with hostage crises. The subsequent chapters then proceed chronologically through U.S. history, narrating major hostage incidents and tracing changes in Washington's stance toward terrorists. Lives at Risk will appeal to teachers of courses in foreign policy, diplomatic history, general history, and political science.
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Lives at Risk: Hostages and Victims in American Foreign Policy
Lives at Risk: Hostages and Victims in American Foreign Policy is the first book that provides the historical content needed to understand terrorism and America's responses to terrorist acts. Historian Russell D. Buhite here examines key instances of hostage-taking throughout U.S. history, from the late eighteenth century to the 1980s, and shows how our policies have evolved and how previous experiences can help us deal with terrorist threats today.
Professor Buhite begins this study with a discussion of the special problems that the United States has faced in dealing with hostage crises. The subsequent chapters then proceed chronologically through U.S. history, narrating major hostage incidents and tracing changes in Washington's stance toward terrorists. Lives at Risk will appeal to teachers of courses in foreign policy, diplomatic history, general history, and political science.
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Lives at Risk: Hostages and Victims in American Foreign Policy
Lives at Risk: Hostages and Victims in American Foreign Policy is the first book that provides the historical content needed to understand terrorism and America's responses to terrorist acts. Historian Russell D. Buhite here examines key instances of hostage-taking throughout U.S. history, from the late eighteenth century to the 1980s, and shows how our policies have evolved and how previous experiences can help us deal with terrorist threats today.
Professor Buhite begins this study with a discussion of the special problems that the United States has faced in dealing with hostage crises. The subsequent chapters then proceed chronologically through U.S. history, narrating major hostage incidents and tracing changes in Washington's stance toward terrorists. Lives at Risk will appeal to teachers of courses in foreign policy, diplomatic history, general history, and political science.
Russell D. Buhite is professor of history and head of the History Department at the University of Tennessee.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction: Terrorism and American Foreign Relations Chapter 2 The Barbary Pirates: Terrorist Tormentors of the Early Republic Chapter 3 A Question of Character: The Mailed Fist of the Nineteenth Century Chapter 4 A Study in Contradition: Theodore Roosevelt's Responses to Hostage Crises Chapter 5 At Risk in War and Revolution: Bargaining with the Soviet Union Chapter 6 Trial in Mukden: Hostages of the Chinese Communists Chapter 7 The Pueblo Crisis: Hostages of North Korea Chapter 8 Revolutionaries in Control: Hostages of Iran Chapter 9 Dealing with Brigands and Believers: An Appraisal Chapter 10 Appendix: Major Hostage Incidents in U.S. History