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Kenneth Kaunda, the United States and Southern Africa

Autor Andy DeRoche
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 noi 2017
Kenneth Kaunda, the United States and Southern Africa carefully examines US policy towards the southern African region between 1974, when Portugal granted independence to its colonies of Angola and Mozambique, and 1984, the last full year of the Reagan administration's Constructive Engagement approach. It focuses on the role of Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda, the key facilitator of international diplomacy towards the dangerous neighborhood surrounding his nation. The main themes include the influence of race, national security, economics, and African agency on international relations during the height of the Cold War. Andy DeRoche focuses on key issues such as the civil war in Angola, the fight against apartheid, the struggle for Namibia's independence, the transition from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe, and bilateral US/ Zambian relations. The approach is traditional diplomatic history based on archival research in Zambia and the USA as well as interviews with key players such as Kaunda, Mark Chona, Siteke Mwale, Vernon Mwaanga, Chester Crocker, and Frank Wisner. The result offers an important new insight into the nuances of US policy toward southern Africa during the hottest days of the Cold War.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350054424
ISBN-10: 1350054429
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 233 x 155 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:NIPPOD
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Offers important insights into the influence of issues such as race, economics and national security on Africa's historical international relations

Notă biografică

Andy DeRoche is a history instructor at Front Range Community College, USA. His previous publications include Andrew Young: Civil Rights Ambassador (2003) and Black, White and Chrome: The United States and Zimbabwe (2001).

Cuprins

Prelude: Kaunda's 1975 US Visit and Overall SignificanceIntroduction: Rise of Kaunda, Zambian Independence and UDI, 1960-741. Kaunda Gets Uncle Sam's Attention, 1974-752. Debating Policy toward the Angolan Civil War, 1975-763. April 1976: Kissinger's Landmark Speech and Kaunda's Response4. Kissinger's Southern African Shuttle Diplomacy in 19765. Too Good to Be True: Kaunda and Carter Cooperate on Zimbabwe, 1976-796. Kaunda Asserts Agency: From Wanting US Missiles to Buying Soviet MIGs, 19807. Confronting Constructive Engagement and CIA Spies in Lusaka, 1981-828. Last Big Dance: Kaunda Meets Reagan and Hosts a Key Conference, 1983-84Epilogue: Kaunda's Ongoing Global Presence, 1994-2014BibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Lucid, well-researched, and rich in anecdotes, it successfully documents Kaunda's diplomatic initiatives in southern Africa, highlights his non-aligned approach to regional and global issues, and reveals some of his shady dealings with the U.S. . [It] will certainly appeal to students, policymakers and ordinary people keen to comprehend how diplomatic relations involving small, poor countries and superpowers evolved during the Cold War with its complex world politics.
Andy DeRoche makes several important contributions with this thoroughly researched, vibrantly written study. These include establishing Zambian leader Kenneth Kaunda as a prominent figure in international relations during the latter years of the Cold War, redefining Africa as an important player-and not a helpless pawn-in Cold War diplomacy, and strongly arguing that the issue of race continued to play an important, and often debilitating, role in U.S. diplomacy with Africa after the mid-1960s.
This book provides a powerful insight into the relations of one African leader with a global superpower and in doing so reveals the importance of the interaction between African liberation and the Cold War. DeRoche brilliantly guides the reader through complex international negotiations with a steady hand and crystal clear prose. This study is an important new contribution to our understanding of Africa's place in global diplomatic history in the late twentieth century.
".DeRoche makes good use of newly declassified documents and recent memoirs by former officials, offering impressive detail. .[I]nsights and pithy observations on US and African leaders abound; the author portrays presidents Kennedy, Ford, and Carter sympathetically, others less so. DeRoche advances the ongoing revision of Zambia's post-independence history, still acknowledging Kaunda as nation builder but also revealing his shrewd practical politics. The book exposes Kaunda's authoritarian tendencies, especially after proclaiming one-party rule in 1972. Overall, a welcome, realistic view of an iconic figure who unflaggingly supported African liberation.
There is no doubt that this is a significant monograph, attractively published.