Peru and the United States, 1960-1975 : how their ambassadors managed foreign relations in a turbulent era
著者
書誌事項
Peru and the United States, 1960-1975 : how their ambassadors managed foreign relations in a turbulent era
Pennsylvania State University Press, c2010
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [321]-327) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The period 1960-1975 was a time when the United States paid more than the usual amount of attention to relations with Latin America, contending with Castro's efforts to export the Revolution and with Allende's efforts to establish a socialist government in Chile, for example. During this turbulent era, U.S. relations with Peru were fraught with tensions and difficulties, too, as the Kennedy administration wrestled with the question of how to deal with the military regime that took over by coup in 1962, the administration of Lyndon Johnson tangled with Peru over its expropriation of the International Petroleum Company and its effort to establish a two-hundred-mile limit for its territorial waters, and the government under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford had to contend with the policies of a reformist military regime that took an even harder line on expropriation and fishing rights than its civilian predecessor. Using newly declassified records from the U.S. State Department as well as records from the archives of the Peruvian Foreign Ministry, supplemented by interviews with participants from both sides, Richard Walter provides a nuanced look at the complexities of Peruvian-U.S. relations during this important period, highlighting especially the hitherto neglected role of the ambassadors from each country in managing the relationship and influencing the outcomes.
目次
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Peru and JFK
2 Belaunde, LBJ, and the "Mann Doctrine"
3 Belaunde, the Counterguerrilla Campaign, and the Role of the United States
4 Belaunde's Position Begins to Crumble
5 The End of the Belaunde Administration
6 The Coup and Its Aftermath
7 Velasco and the Nixon Administration
8 Public and Private Negotiations
9 Continuity and Some Change
10 Change, Crisis, and Continuity
11 Nixon and Velasco Exit the Scene
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
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