The Macedonian Question and Preventive Deployment: Lessons for US Foreign Policy
Author
Bassett, Catherine Garland
Subject
Washington and Lee University -- Honors in Politics
Deployment (Strategy)
Europe -- Macedonia
Macedonia -- Ethnic relations
Macedonia -- History
United States -- Foreign relations
Metadata
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Preventive diplomacy and deployment are part of a larger policy debate. The desire to do something, the fear of doing it wrong, and the inertia of doing nothing at all have surfaced now that changes in the international climate have forced changes in US foreign policy. We have alternatively heard calls for increasing interventionism now that the constraints of bipolarity are gone and increasing isolationism now that the threat of the Soviet Union has disappeared. Preventive diplomacy proponents contend that the policy recommendations offered thus far are too narrow and restrictive to cope with the changing security environment. They believe that preventive diplomacy policies offer an alternative to extremes of intervention and isolation. They argue that their policies are tailored to an era of decreasing budgets and increasing demands. While the US would remain involved and engaged around the globe, it would do so at a considerably reduced cost. Their argument is intriguing, especially when tested in its extreme forms (preventive deployment) and around the margin (in areas of questionable relevance to the US). Of the numerous conflicts and crises in the world, I have focused on one case to examine the application of preventive diplomacy, specifically preventive deployment. [From Introduction]