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The American political discourse on the Cuban missile crisisGuttieri, Karen Rochelle January 1990 (has links)
This thesis examines and critiques the American political discourse on the
Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The event itself is past, yet words used to
describe and explain the missile crisis capture and give meaning to the
experience. The meaning of the crisis begins in a basic sense, then, with the
discourse. The increasing availability of material evidence has reinvigorated
the discourse on the missive crisis. Where relevant, recent evidence will be
employed to critique previous and recent interpretations of the this seminal
event.
Consensus and debate are both to be found in the discourse on the
Cuban crisis. First, there is a large body of shared understanding, or
conventional wisdom, on the crisis. Secondly, there is disagreement as to
the meaning of the crisis in recent manifestations of the discourse. The
essay will use a propaganda model lo examine the politically necessary
mythology embodied in the conventional wisdom. This thesis will use a
tendency analysis approach to organize the debate on the missile crisis,
along the lines of ideological schools of thought, and within the context of a
larger American nuclear debate. The propaganda and the tendency analyse
models complement the general approach of discourse. These models have
been developed specifically for the study of politics, yet the methodology of
each is statement analysis; as such these models are rooted in language,
ana so conform with the general discourse approach.
Security is the common referent of both the conventional wisdom and
the current debate. In particular, the President, as the custodian of nuclear
weapons, is the principle actor responsible for national security. The
powerful image of the President dominates the conventional wisdom, and retains significance in the contemporary ideological debate on the lessons of
the missile crisis.
The nuclear arsenal at the disposal of the President endows him with
great, but double-edged power. The paper concludes with some general
observations on the special significance of Presidential leadership as
represented in the discourse on the missile crisis, and as necessitated in
confronting crises in general. First, in crisis, there is little time for the
President to make difficult decisions. Secondly, there may be greater
devolution of authority to the military forces deployed to convey the
credibility of American deterrence. As such, the subordination of force to
policy must remain sound. The image of the President is, of necessity, an
image which combines prudence and strength. Manufactured images are
not enough however. Policy must be tested in terms of its alleged purpose.
Likewise, doctrine must be evaluated in terms the purpose of the policy it is
designed to support. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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John F. Kennedy's foreign policy : a study of its formation in 1961Morgan, Donald Dudley January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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Moral masculinity: the culture of foreign relations during the Kennedy administrationWalton, Jennifer Lynn 05 March 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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A theory of group decision-making applied to the Bay of Pigs and Cuban Missile Crisis decisionsSlade, Lester Stephen 01 January 1973 (has links)
This study of political decision-making stressing the process of decision-making in a group setting is, in part, a reaction against traditional approaches of political analysis.
The study of international relations is overburdened with historical studies of the interaction between states. The classic approach to the study of a given decision by one government affecting another might be called the “rational actor model”. This model treats the state as the entity reaching the decision. The decision itself is seen as behavior that reflects a rational purpose or intent. The central concepts of the model center around the calculated weighing of goals, alternatives, consequences, and choices. The “rational actor model” is the dominant method of current political analysis.
I will implicitly contend in this paper that the concept of foreign policy as a rational process of gathering information, setting alternatives, and making decisions is not an adequate tool of understanding. In fact, the “rational actor model” does not make sense out of much political phenomenon. I will directly contend in this paper that a process model of political decision-making provides an adequate and helpful tool for the understanding of political decisions.
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The Struggle Against Bandits: The Cuban Revolution and Responses to CIA-Sponsored Counter-Revolutionary Activity, 1959-1963Rossodivito, Anthony, M 01 January 2014 (has links)
Following the 1959 victory of the Cuban revolution, the United States government along with the CIA and their Cuban émigré allies immediately undertook a campaign of subversion and terrorism against the Cuban revolution. From 1959 until 1963 a clandestine war was waged between supporters of the revolution and the counter-revolutionary organizations backed by Washington. This project is a new synthesis of this little-known story. It is an attempt to shed light on a little known aspect of the conflict between the United States government and the Cuban revolution by bringing together never-before seen primary sources, and utilizing the two distinct and separate historiographies from the U.S. and Cuba, concerning the clandestine struggle. This is the story of Cuba’s resistance to intervention, the organization of the counter- revolution, and finally how the constant defeat of CIA plots by the Cubans forced changes in U.S. strategy concerning intervention in Cuba and in other parts of the developing world that would have far-reaching and long-last effects.
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