The United States - Russian Military cooperation in implementation force operations in Bosnia
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Authors
Kondev, Roumen I
Subjects
U.S.-Russian Military Cooperation
IFOR
Bosnia
Ethno-Nationalism
International Community Peace Effort
Balkan's Conflict
IFOR
Bosnia
Ethno-Nationalism
International Community Peace Effort
Balkan's Conflict
Advisors
Moran, Daniel
Tsypkin, Mikhail
Date of Issue
1997-12
Date
Publisher
Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
Language
eng
Abstract
Yugoslavia's rapid disintegration amid violence and war in 1991 came as a shock to the outside world. The war was a result of an organized program of domestic conflict waged along ethno-cultural lines by a threaten powerful elite. The response of the international community has been marked by considerable confusion and inconsistency. With most of the major obstacles that characterized the Cold War now removed, there seemed to be a more favorable environment for effective U.S.-Russian cooperation in matters of mutual interests in international security. This notwithstanding, the U.S.-led initiative to cooperate with Russia to find a lasting solution to the Bosnian crisis ran into impediments from the very onset. This thesis will argue that the causes of these impediments were rooted in Russia's domestic political and economic constraints, coupled with a nostalgia to exercise the leverage of a super-power over the Bosnian peace process. The Balkans is only of secondary national interest to Russia and the United States. Nevertheless, the Balkans constitute an area of extensive interaction between the two countries. The Bosnian conflict offers a good case study for examining the causes of the impediments to U.S.-Russian cooperation
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Thesis
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Distribution Statement
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
