This is a study of modern French politics and history, discussing the five presidents from 1959 to the present - looking at similarities, the foreign policies they pursued and domestic policies they practised.
该书试图在一个更广泛的历史、政治和意识形态的背景下来理解骇人的“9·11”袭击事件。书中提供了对美国对外政策、反美主义和伊斯兰教原教旨主义真正的深远见识等内容。
See Vine Deloria Jr. and David E. Wilkins, Tribes, Treaties, and Constitutional Tribulations (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999), 70. 3. See Sean Teuton, “Internationalism and the Native American Scholar,” in Identity Politics ...
A friendly observer’s shocking discoveries On September 11, 2001, Peter Scowen’s sister escaped the 54th floor of the World Trade Center’s south tower barely moments before it collapsed.
Rogue Nation: Why America is the Most Dangerous State on Earth
See N. N. Bolkhovitinov , ' Russian - American Cultural Relations : An Overview , ” in RussianAmerican Dialogue on Cultural Relations , 1776-1914 . Edited by Norman E. Saul and Richard D. McKinzie ( Columbia , MO : University of ...
International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS), The FARC Files: Venezuela, Ecuador, and the Secret Archives of “Raul Reyes” (London: IISS, 2011), 148. 22. Ibid., 60. 23. “Chavez: Take FARC off terror list,” CNN, January 11, 2008, ...
It asserts that three core political values-liberty, order, and equality- must be allocated by societies through law and policy. This book shows that the optimal allocation is pure balance.
Presents an indictment of the rampant anti-Americanism that has become so integral to British and European culture. Deploying humour and irony, this title takes the reader on a journey into the distorted world of British America-hatred.
'The Invaded' explores the United States' military occupations of Nicaragua (1912-33), Haiti (1915-34), and the Dominican Republic (1916-24), proposing not only that opposition to US intervention was more widespread than commonly ...
Analysis of the wider background to the terrorist attacks of September 11th, which examines the reasons for such violent hatred of the US and the gulf between American perceptions of its own society and those of other nations.