Description
The US and Latin The us after the Cold War looks on the almost quarter-century of relations between The US and Latin The us for the reason that Berlin Wall fell in 1989. An academic and up to date high-level U.S. policymaker, Crandall argues that any lasting analysis should be viewed through a fresh framework that allows for the steadily unexpected episodes and outcomes in U.S.-Latin American relations. Crandall’s book examines the policies of three post-Cold War presidential administrations (Bush Sr., Clinton, and Bush Jr.) during the prism of three very important areas: democracy, economics, and security. Crandall then introduces a couple of case studies of U.S. policy in Latin The us, such as Cuba, Brazil, interventions in Haiti, Colombia, Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela, Mexico, and Argentina’s financial meltdown.