| The Future Role of France in Morocco. |
09 JAN 1973 |
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| Authors:
Paul J. Allison; ARMY WAR COLL CARLISLE BARRACKS PA
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 | The French presence in Morocco has lasted over fifty years and has left an indelible mark on the cultural, political, and economic systems of that North African country. After independence from France, Morocco discovered that it could not provide the fulfillment of the desires of her people without the aid of her former colonizer. France, for her part, was willing to aid her former colony in its nation-building efforts and ... |
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| Australia in Southeast Asia: Interests, Capacity, and Acceptability. |
DEC 1970 |
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| Authors:
Henry S. Albinski; RESEARCH ANALYSIS CORP MCLEAN VA
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 | This study considers factors that may impact on enlarged roles for Australia in contributing to security in Southeast Asia, in the context of potential reductions in US unilateral responsibilities for Southeast Asian security. It examines traditional Australian assumptions regarding security in the Southeast Asia region, Australian-US relations, Australia's material capabilities in fields related to defense, and the attitudes of the main political parties and related interest groups toward Southeast Asian ... |
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| U.S. Strategic Alternatives and Access Problems. Volume III. Political and Strategic Alternatives. |
JUL 1969 |
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| Authors:
Stephen A. Oren; Peter Mayer; Leila M. Meo; Misha Kadick; James F. McGarry; WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORP WALTHAM MASS ADVANCED STUDIES GROUP
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| Burma and Southeast Asian Regionalism. |
MAY 1969 |
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| Authors:
Kathryn E. Rafferty; RESEARCH ANALYSIS CORP MCLEAN VA
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 | The study examines Burmese reaction to the format of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), its relations with the members of ASEAN, and other foreign and domestic factors that might affect Burmese participation in ASEAN and/or other organizations for Southeast Asian regional cooperation. Because of a major objective of Burmese foreign policy--to remain neutral in relations with all nations and to maintain friendly relations with Communist China--membership in ... |
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| SOCIAL IDEOLOGY AND REACTIONS TO INTERNATIONAL EVENTS. |
FEB 1967 |
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| Authors:
Philip Worchel; TEXAS UNIV AUSTIN
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 | The study is an attempt to test the implications of a theory of social ideology concerning reactions to international crises. It was postulated that each individual, as a product of socialization, develops an ideological orientation towards others in which they are conceptualized as good, strong, and humanistic on one end of a continuum and bad, weak, and 'object' on the other end of the continuum. It was suggested that each ... |
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| 'COUNTERINSURGENCY' AND RESEARCH IN 1970, |
24 MAY 1965 |
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| Authors:
Joseph M. Goldsen; RAND CORP SANTA MONICA CALIF
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 | Counterinsurgency is discussed as fundamentally a political and policy problem. The need for quality research and intensive study of U. S. capabilities and the consequences of our foreign policy, particularly at the high levels of strategic planning and organization, is stressed. |
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| THE PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTOR IN SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY, |
07 MAR 1957 |
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| Authors:
Robert C. Tucker; RAND CORP SANTA MONICA CALIF
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 | Stalin's death is considered as an implication for change in the motivation of Soviet foreign policy. The operative aim of the politics of cold war as practiced by Stalin after World War II was total control of foreign territory and people. The Stalinist picture of the world as cleanly divided between two antagonistic camps was a reflex of this drive for total control. One of its consequences was to exclude ... |
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