Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.

The reasons why the United States led a multinational coalition and intervened militarily to reverse the annexation of Kuwait by Iraq has been widely debated. This essay presents the systemic-cum-national interest and the psychological approach in examining the reasons for the intervention and the f...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chen, Jeffrey Kwang Wai.
Other Authors: Ang, Cheng Guan
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14444
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-14444
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-144442020-11-01T08:06:53Z Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War. Chen, Jeffrey Kwang Wai. Ang, Cheng Guan S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Social sciences The reasons why the United States led a multinational coalition and intervened militarily to reverse the annexation of Kuwait by Iraq has been widely debated. This essay presents the systemic-cum-national interest and the psychological approach in examining the reasons for the intervention and the form that it took. While the systemic-cum-national interest approach is able to explain military intervention owing to various national interests in collusion with that of United States' national interest, the reasons why it took the form that it took remains unexplained. In contrast, the psychological approach is able to explain not only why military intervention took place (owing to the 1930s Munich analogy), the form that it took, was owing to the perceived failure of Vietnam. Thus, the objective and strategy of the 1990-1 Gulf War was taken from the two lessons of history that impacted on President Bush, as he made the decisions leading to militarily intervention. In conclusion, both the systemic-cum-national interest and psychological approaches were important; as the former was the precondition while the latter explained the form it took. In essence, both approaches need not be antithetical to one another, rather they were opposite sides of the same coin that lead to Bush's decision to wage war against Iraq to reverse the annexation of Kuwait. Master of Science (Strategic Studies) 2008-11-13T09:19:55Z 2008-11-13T09:19:55Z 1999 1999 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14444 Nanyang Technological University application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Chen, Jeffrey Kwang Wai.
Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.
description The reasons why the United States led a multinational coalition and intervened militarily to reverse the annexation of Kuwait by Iraq has been widely debated. This essay presents the systemic-cum-national interest and the psychological approach in examining the reasons for the intervention and the form that it took. While the systemic-cum-national interest approach is able to explain military intervention owing to various national interests in collusion with that of United States' national interest, the reasons why it took the form that it took remains unexplained. In contrast, the psychological approach is able to explain not only why military intervention took place (owing to the 1930s Munich analogy), the form that it took, was owing to the perceived failure of Vietnam. Thus, the objective and strategy of the 1990-1 Gulf War was taken from the two lessons of history that impacted on President Bush, as he made the decisions leading to militarily intervention. In conclusion, both the systemic-cum-national interest and psychological approaches were important; as the former was the precondition while the latter explained the form it took. In essence, both approaches need not be antithetical to one another, rather they were opposite sides of the same coin that lead to Bush's decision to wage war against Iraq to reverse the annexation of Kuwait.
author2 Ang, Cheng Guan
author_facet Ang, Cheng Guan
Chen, Jeffrey Kwang Wai.
format Theses and Dissertations
author Chen, Jeffrey Kwang Wai.
author_sort Chen, Jeffrey Kwang Wai.
title Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.
title_short Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.
title_full Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.
title_fullStr Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.
title_full_unstemmed Analogies at war : Munich, Vietnam, and the Bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 Gulf War.
title_sort analogies at war : munich, vietnam, and the bush administration decision-making during 1990-1 gulf war.
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14444
_version_ 1683492989892034560