Soldiers in peacemaking: the role of the military at the end of war, 1800-present
In: New approaches to international history
In: New Approaches to International History Series
Cover -- Half-Title -- Series -- Title -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction -- Part I Politico-Military Relationship -- 2 Peacemaking and Civil-Military Relations, 1918-23 -- 3 The Post-Cold War US Army and Debates over Peacekeeping Operations -- 4 Soldier or Diplomat?: The Gray Area of UN Peacekeeping in Cambodia -- 5 United Nations Military Observers in Former Yugoslavia: Strategic Influencers or Sitting Ducks? -- Part II The Military and the Population -- 6 Turning "Enemies" into "Friends": The Role of the Military in Peacemaking in France after Napoleon (1815-18) -- 7 "War against War": The Anti-militarist Activities of Greek War Veterans (1922-5) -- 8 Building Insecurity?: Military and Paramilitary Forces in Postwar Czechoslovak Borderlands (1945-8) -- Part III The Military as a Source of Expertise -- 9 Alexei Orlov, General of the Russian Army and Military in the Service of Diplomacy -- 10 The Naval Officer, a Peacekeeper in Europe (1815-48)?: Keeping European Peace Overseas and Consolidating French Naval Power -- 11 Soldiers versus Veterans: Peacemaking in Britain after Napoleon -- 12 The Price of Disobedience: The Eastern French Army in Albania (1918-25) -- Bibliography -- Notes on Contributors -- Index -- Copyright.
In: New approaches to international history
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