Rolling Back Revolution

The Emergence of Low Intensity Conflict

By (author) Ivan Molloy

Ebook (VitalSource) - £90.00

Publication date:

20 July 2001

Length of book:

320 pages

Publisher

Pluto Press

ISBN-13: 9781849641081

Ivan Molloy analyses the de-facto foreign policy strategy of Low Intensity Conflict as propagated by the United States. He recounts how LIC emerged during the Reagan Administration as a way of counteracting the legacy left by the Vietnam War, which constrained America from getting involved in direct military intervention. Part covert, part overt, LIC was developed as a low-cost and low-risk method of dealing with revolutionary movements and post-revolutionary governments (usually Marxist) considered threatening to national interests. As such, this secretive strategy was an integral component of the Iran-Contra affair, and at the heart of the Reagan Doctrine.

Molloy argues that LIC was a means of civilianising and privatising America's foreign policy. He reveals that LIC was always more of a political, rather than military, tool. The United States used LIC selectively in the 1980s to combat guerrilla movements and undermine targeted regimes to achieve its foreign policy objectives. The author uses Nicaragua and the Philippines as major case studies to analyse the profile of this multi-dimensional strategy as it emerged in the 1980s. He also demonstrates - using such examples as Cuba, Yugoslavia and East Timor - that this complex strategy is still evident today and even pursued by other states.
'There is much to recommend about Molloy's book. He accurately portrays the swing towards neoconservative thinking which preceded Reagan's arrival in office and traces the history of the development of of LIC with admirable clarity and detail'