in the aftermath of war US support...DIANE Publishing |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 6
Page 25
... Fishel , The Fog of Peace : Planning and Executing Restoration of Panama ( Car- lisle Barracks , Pa .: Army War College , Strategic Studies Institute , 15 April 1992 ) , 7. Colonel Fishel was deputy chief of the Public Force Liaison ...
... Fishel , The Fog of Peace : Planning and Executing Restoration of Panama ( Car- lisle Barracks , Pa .: Army War College , Strategic Studies Institute , 15 April 1992 ) , 7. Colonel Fishel was deputy chief of the Public Force Liaison ...
Page 26
33. Fishel , 14 . 34. USCINCSO OpOrd ( Operations Order ) 6-88 , to execute Blind Logic , 2. ( Declassified ) 35. Ibid . , 1-2 . 36. Ibid . , 4 . 37. Ibid . ** 38. Ibid . , 5 . 39. Ibid . 40. Ibid . , 6-7 . 3 Chapter 4 Just Cause and ...
33. Fishel , 14 . 34. USCINCSO OpOrd ( Operations Order ) 6-88 , to execute Blind Logic , 2. ( Declassified ) 35. Ibid . , 1-2 . 36. Ibid . , 4 . 37. Ibid . ** 38. Ibid . , 5 . 39. Ibid . 40. Ibid . , 6-7 . 3 Chapter 4 Just Cause and ...
Page 31
... Fishel , The Fog of Peace : Planning and Executing Restoration of Panama ( Car- lisle Barracks , Pa .: Army War College , Strategic Studies Institute , 15 April 1992 ) , 7 , 28 . Colonel Fishel was deputy chief of the Public Force ...
... Fishel , The Fog of Peace : Planning and Executing Restoration of Panama ( Car- lisle Barracks , Pa .: Army War College , Strategic Studies Institute , 15 April 1992 ) , 7 , 28 . Colonel Fishel was deputy chief of the Public Force ...
Page 35
... Fishel points out , this " did not permit the composite unit to build any kind of integrity nor establish sufficient continuity of support . Steele concurs and adds , " the MSG's civil affairs people had a real turnover problem . They ...
... Fishel points out , this " did not permit the composite unit to build any kind of integrity nor establish sufficient continuity of support . Steele concurs and adds , " the MSG's civil affairs people had a real turnover problem . They ...
Page 43
... Fishel , The Fog of Peace : Planning and Executing the Restoration of Panama ( Carlisle Barracks , Pa .: Army War College , Strategic Studies Institute , 1992 ) , 7. Colonel Fishel was deputy chief of the Public Force Liaison Division ...
... Fishel , The Fog of Peace : Planning and Executing the Restoration of Panama ( Carlisle Barracks , Pa .: Army War College , Strategic Studies Institute , 1992 ) , 7. Colonel Fishel was deputy chief of the Public Force Liaison Division ...
Common terms and phrases
According activities Ambassador Hinton Arias Calderón Army assistance Blind Logic Bushnell Caleb Baker chief of staff civil affairs civilian agencies CMOTF Conflict contingency planning coordination corruption democracy democratization in Panama economic effort embassy Endara Eric Arturo Delvalle establish expertise Fishel following Just Cause former PDF Hugo Spadafora Ibid ICITAP implementation infrastructure reconstruction institution interagency interview with author involved issue Jack Pryor joint patrols Kriskovich ment military PSYOPS Military Support Group ministries mission MSG's nation-building National Guard National Police Noriega officers Operation Just Cause Operation Promote Liberty organization Panama strategy Panamanian government Panamanian police personnel planners planning process police force political postconflict situations praetorian rule president problems professional programs projects Pryor interview Psychological Operations PSYOPS PSYOPS Support reservists restoration Ricardo Arias Calderón Ropp section 660 security force SOUTHCOM Southern Command Steele interview task Thurman interview tion Torrijos United USFLG Woerner
Popular passages
Page 1 - A prince should therefore have no other aim or thought, nor take up any other thing for his study, but war and its organisation and discipline, for that is the only art that is necessary to one who commands...
Page 5 - Schumpeterian tradition, this study defines a twentieth-century political system as democratic to the extent that its most powerful collective decision makers are selected through fair, honest, and periodic elections in which candidates freely compete for votes and in which virtually all the adult population is eligible to vote.
Page xi - States have been to safeguard the lives of Americans, to defend democracy in Panama, to combat drug trafficking and to protect the integrity of the Panama Canal Treaty.
Page 11 - See Claude E. Welch, Jr. and Arthur K. Smith, Military Role and Rule: Perspectives on Civil-Military Relations (North Scituate, Mass . : Duxbury Press, 1974) , p~. 256. Welch has pointed out elsewhere that the "modern" organizational characteristics of the armed forces could readily break down after the army has captured power.
Page 1 - We maintain, on the contrary, that war is simply a continuation of political intercourse, with the addition of other means.
Page ix - New York W. Scott Thompson Associate Professor of International Politics The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy Tufts University Medford, Mass.
Page vii - THOMPSON is associate professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University.
Page 13 - Kevin Buckley, Panama: The Whole Story (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991), 14; Scranton, The Noriega Years, 13-14.
Page 67 - At the most general level, the first is the need to recognize postconflict situations as important and complex missions for the Department of Defense. This was clearly not discerned in Panama. The US did not have, at the time of Operation Just Cause, a policy for the period following the use of force.
Page 16 - I did not even spend five minutes on Blind Logic during my briefing as the incoming CINC. . . the least of my problems at the time was Blind Logic. . . We put together the campaign plan for Just Cause and probably did not spend enough time on the...
References to this book
Democracy by Force: US Military Intervention in the Post-Cold War World Karin von Hippel Limited preview - 2000 |