No Longer on the Front Lines: U. S. Bi-Lateral Assistance and the Role of the Agency for International Development

After fifty years of engagement, the Cold War is over and the United States has won. The former Soviet Union has gone from being a united adversary to a collection of independent states, each reliant on outside assistance to help finance its economic recovery. Similarly, the Berlin Wall has fallen a...

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description After fifty years of engagement, the Cold War is over and the United States has won. The former Soviet Union has gone from being a united adversary to a collection of independent states, each reliant on outside assistance to help finance its economic recovery. Similarly, the Berlin Wall has fallen and the two Germanies have reunited. With the end of Apartheid and the recent referendum in South Africa, for possibly the first time in history a controlling group has voted itself out of power. Within the course of a decade, almost all of the countries in Latin America have gone from being dictatorships to democracies. And for the first time since the Camp David Accords, the Middle East is engaging in collective peace negotiations which may lead to settlement of one of this century's longest disputes. In short, the world has recently witnessed monumental political changes, potentially of an order of magnitude never before experienced. These changes will inevitably redefine the course of history, and shape how the world enters the 21st century.
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source DTIC Technical Reports
subjects AFRICA
BERLIN
COLD WAR
COLLECTION
DEMOCRACY
ECONOMICS
FINANCE
FOREIGN AID
Government and Political Science
HISTORY
LATIN AMERICA
MIDDLE EAST
NEGOTIATIONS
POLICIES
POWER
RECOVERY
SHAPE
SOUTH AFRICA
TIME
UNITED STATES
USSR
WALLS
title No Longer on the Front Lines: U. S. Bi-Lateral Assistance and the Role of the Agency for International Development
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