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Theory and practice of International relations
Changes in the composition of what only a few months ago were termed "satellite" governments, to say nothing of the collapse of the USSR itself, would seem to render any book pretending to explain international relations today out-of- date before it emerges from the printing presses. Then the dramatic implementation of the United Nations security procedure in Kuwait demonstrated the organization's ability to deal effectively with aggression by a strong state against a weak one. No wonder the leader of an even stronger state, whose diplomacy and military might had made possible what President Bush fondly called "the hundred hours' war," felt justified in proclaiming a "new international order.
| 1402-1994 | 327.01 Olo t | Perpustakaan Diplomasi | Tersedia |
| 1403-1994 | 327.01 Olo t | Perpustakaan Diplomasi | Tersedia |
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