Description
This is a story of David vs. Goliath in international relations. The Bolivian Revolution and the USA, 1952 to the Present recounts how Bolivia, after its Revolution of 1952, interacted with the USA. Within the wake of its victory Within the Second World War, the USA had began to undertake ambitious nation-building projects Within the Third World the usage of the tool of economic aid, as it had successfully done with the Marshall Plan for Western Europe. Bolivia represented the first of these experiments, and its process and outcome have much to let us know in regards to the limits of U.S. power. Bolivia proved capable not only of achieving compromises in reaction to U.S. initiatives but also of influencing U.S. policy through its own actions. Unlike most other studies of the Revolution, this book follows the story through the early 1970s and traces the shifting relationships between the two countries over a longer span of time. Someone who wants to remember the significance of the election of Evo Morales in 2006, which represented a return to the original revolutionary spirit of 1952, and the nature of Bolivian-U.S. relations as of late will find this book to be very important reading.