In the 1960s, U.S. foreign policy had two bugbears: the Soviet Union and Cuba. The United States wished to prevent another Cuban Revolution and Fidel Castro’s rise to power, through policies like the Alliance for Progress. As the United States continued to worry about potential leftist revolutions across the region, Ecuador became a setting for this battle over hearts and minds.
Tex Harris Keep Your Hands Above Your Head
Relationships - Women in the Foreign Service
Brunei
Nixon in China- A Question of Interpretation
South Africa, DeKlerk and the End of Apartheid
Peace Baby: the First Drive from Egypt to Israel in 1980
William Harrop on Using Soccer Balls to Build Goodwill in Guinea
Tish Butler on the 1983 Beirut US Embassy Bombing
Blowing the Whistle on American Corruption in Russia
Basketball: The Fifth Basket of the Helsinki Final Act and the Effects on U.S.-Soviet Relations
CNN, Tanks, and Glass Walls: The August 1991 U.S.S.R. Coup
Mission Unspeakable: When North Koreans Tried to Kill the President of South Korea
Teaching the Foreign Service to Speak Foreign Languages
Getting the U.S. President to Write to the President of Guatemala About Human Rights (Hint – It’s Who You Know)
Escape from Japanese Internment in China
South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Observing the Fiftieth Anniversary of VJ-Day in Japan
"The Wild West" - Peshawar and the Afghan Mujahedeen
Take This Job and Shove It, Mr. Kissinger
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