The defence of white power : South African foreign policy under pressure
著者
書誌事項
The defence of white power : South African foreign policy under pressure
(Studies in international security, 28)
Macmillan in association with the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1988
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注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
As a culmination of a decade's research by a former senior US intelligence analyst on South African affairs, this book examines the role of domestic politics, security concerns and bureaucratic conflict in South Africa. From his perspective as a seasoned observer of southern Africa's politics and regional security, the author presents an incisive analysis of the foreign policy process and shifting strategies under Vorster and P.W.Botha. He shows how domestic race policies pose the dominant constraint on foreign policy and analyzes the successes and failures of Botha's destabilization strategy. Finally he assesses the worsening policy environment facing the white minority leadership in the 1990s and its implications for regional security. The author also wrote "South Africa in Namibia" and "Southern Africa - Regional Security Problems and Prospects".
目次
Introduction: South African foreign policy in context - PART 1 PERSPECTIVES - The Impact of Afrikaner Experience - Perception of South Africa's International Role - PART 2 THE MAKING OF FOREIGN POLICY - Decision-Making and the Foreign Policy Process - Foreign Policy in Defence of Apartheid - PART 3 SHIFTING FOREIGN POLICY STRATEGIES - Deteriorating Security and Policy Reappraisal (1974-78) - Growing Militancy and Isolation under P.W.Botha - Namibia Policy and the War in Angola - Regional Destabilisation: the New Outward Policy? - PART DETERIORATING RELATIONS WITH THE WEST - Foreign Policy Responses to the West - Pretoria's Nuclear Diplomacy - Epilogue - Index
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