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226 result(s) for "Gabriel Kolko"
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World in Crisis
World in Crisis is a new book from one of the world's leading scholars. Gabriel Kolko provides a panoramic overview of the problems facing the US and the world today. Each chapter covers a key topic, spanning a range of international issues including the current financial crisis, the limits of US foreign policy, the politicisation of intelligence, and why a war with Iran would be likely to culminate in disaster for the US. Kolko also outlines why changes in military technology make all wars, no matter who fights them, increasingly futile. At the heart of the book is the idea that the international system is in the grip of a great transition. Kolko shows how America is losing its dominance, and examines the profound changes we are experiencing as it is forced to accept the limits of its military power.
Vietnam: Anatomy of a Peace
Vietnam has experienced huge political and economic development since the war. In Anatomy of a Peace, Gabriel Kolko looks at the main economic phases the Communist Party has embarked upon since 1986 and outlines the transition to nascent capitalism. He also explores Vietnam's relations to its neighbours and the US in the light of social and psychological national features. Based on extensive research and over 30 years first hand experience, Anatomy of a Peace is a timely examination of recent history and developing economies in Asia. Gabriel Kolko argues that neither an intentional socialist or market strategy have determined recent Vietnamese history and, in fact, the Communist Party has little control over development during peace time.
Vietnam y el futuro de la política exterior de los Estados Unidos
Es aún demasiado pronto para los Estados Unidos eva­luar definitivamente el significado histórico de la Guerra del Vietnam para la distribución mundial del poder, porque la guerra no ha terminado todavía, y porque realmente puede continuar por muchos años más en diversas formas. Las consecuencias morales y humanas de la guerra para la población indochina misma, son ya bastante claras: después de las inmensas penalidades sufridas, la curación empieza lentamente; la Guerra de Indochina opaca la leyenda de David y Goliath, y se convierte en la guerra más cuidadosamente estudiada de la época moderna, .un evento que dotará de repu­tación heroica y de autoridad moral a los vietnamitas en el mundo por venir, dones no igualados por lo me­nos en nuestra generación.
Vietnam: anatomy of a peace : Vietnam's transition to the market
Vietnam has experienced huge political and economic development since the war. In Anatomy of a Peace, Gabriel Kolko looks at the main economic phases the Communist Party has embarked upon since 1986 and outlines the transition to nascent capitalism. He also explores Vietnam's relations to its neighbours and the US in the light of social and psychological national features.Based on extensive research and over 30 years first hand experience, Anatomy of a Peaceis a timely examination of recent history and developing economies in Asia. Gabriel Kolko argues that neither an intentional socialist or market strategy have determined recent Vietnamese history and, in fact, the Communist Party has little control over development during peace time.
Vietnam
The author argues in this text, that victory in 1975 caught the Communists wholly unprepared to cope with the reconstruction of the war-torn nation. The text looks at the economic programme the Communist Party has embarked upon since 1986 and describes the decline of its socialist ideology and transition to nascent capitalism. Based on research and first-hand experience, the text offers a portrait of the profound dilemmas the nation confronts today. Market reforms are producing serious social and economic difficulties in Vietnam; inequality is creating a class society and industrial workers are amongst the most exploited in the world. In the light of these problems, the author outlines how Communists are failing to cope with the contradictions between daily realities and their original idealistic aims. He argues that neither a socialist nor a market strategy has determined recent Vietnamese history and that in fact, the confused Communist Party has had little control over economic developments since their victory.
Vietnam
Vietnam has experienced large political and economic development since the war. This book argues that victory in 1975 caught the Communists wholly unprepared to cope with the reconstruction of the nation. Much is explored in this book.
The Financial Crisis
The problem with writing about the world economy and finance, and the causes of the present global crisis, is that each day’s news makes what preceded it seem almost irrelevant. It is impossible to keep up with the topic ... or the losses. Is it a trillion dollars, as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicted it would be in early 2008? Or is it far more, as others have since contended? The world economy and finance presents the most obscure and complex problem for everyone: both the intellectually radical and those who have power and money to gain or to
Alliances and NATO
A century before the Bush Administration made Russia an enemy by pushing NATO eastwards and proposing antimissile systems in Poland and the Czech Republic, America believed that Russia was its potential foe. Brooks Adams and his close friend, President Theodore Roosevelt, thought there was a Slav menace and Roosevelt secretly supported the Japanese in their war with Russia in 1903. In the post-1945 period, President Truman and his advisers often relied on the will of Czar Peter the Great, a known forgery, to fathom Stalin’s true intentions, placing communism in the chain of Russian expansionism. Lenin allowed the West to
Israel
In late 1949 I worked on a boat taking Jews from Marseilles to Haifa, Israel. Jews from Arab nations were in the front of the boat, Europeans in the rear. I was regarded by many of the Europeans as some sort of freak because I had a United States passport and so could stay in the land of milk and honey. One man wanted me to marry his daughter – which meant he too could live in that land of plenty. My Hebrew became quite respectable but the experience was radicalizing or, I should say, kept me radical, and I have