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The United Nations and terrorism: Germany, multilateralism, and antiterrorism efforts in the 1970s

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Bernhard Blumenau presents a thorough examination of West Germany's encounter with domestic and international terrorism in the 1970s and how the country contributed to and eventually led the international battle against terrorism at the United Nations.

A study of German foreign policy but also the story of how the UN addressed terrorism in a decade that was strongly marked by this phenomenon, it provides an in-depth archival study of the German motivations for finding an international response to terrorism and the policies Germany pursued in order to achieve this at the UN.

Germany's policies were driven by the sheer need for cooperation, but above all by a desire for global influence.

The United Nations and Terrorism provides detailed accounts of terrorist crises involving the kidnapping and murder of diplomats, the attack on the Munich Olympics, the OPEC siege, and two aircraft hijackings to Entebbe and Mogadishu.

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£44.99
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
1137391987 / 9781137391988
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
03/09/2014
England
English
281 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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