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Title Beyond Gunboat Diplomacy: Forceful Applications of Airpower in Peace Enforcement Operations
Published Ft. Belvoir Defense Technical Information Center JUN 1995

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Description 89 pages
Summary Military intervention short of full scale war is not a new phenomena as a means of pursuing national interests. However, with the end of the cold war military intervention has taken a new twist in the form of peace operations. The U.S. Air Force in particular is being used as a tool of national policy in peace enforcement operations with increasing regularity. Currently the USAF is involved in the conflict in the former Yugoslavia and maintains an air presence in both Turkey and Saudi Arabia to control the Iraqi repression of its civilian population. This raises a fundamental question about when and how airpower should be used as an effective coercive force in peace enforcement operations. Peace enforcement is a military intervention in an on going conflict which uses military force to coerce one or more belligerents to comply with mandated restrictions. The purpose of this intervention is to create the proper security conditions such that other peace efforts such as humanitarian relief and diplomatic peacemaking can help the belligerents resolve the conflict without the use of force. This thesis uses PROVIDE COMFORT in northern Iraq and UNITAF/UNISOM II in Somalia as case studies to examine how airpower influences peace enforcement operations
Analysis PROVIDE COMFORT
UNIFAF/UNISOM II
Subject Iraq.
Case studies.
Somalia.
Coercive force.
Air power.
Peacekeeping.
Military forces(U.S.)
Warfare.
Air force.
Policies.
United states government.
Security.
Theses.
Civilian population.
Intervention.
Military Operations, Strategy and Tactics.
Form Electronic book
Author Tubbs, James O
AIR UNIV MAXWELL AFB AL SCHOOL OF ADVANCED AIRPOWER STUDIES