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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page essay on the three types of international relations—personal, domestic and systems, and how these are all being utilized to avert war and support human rights issues in Iraq (1998). Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Intrel.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
method of commerce and exchange, and the systems method, which came into larger play when the League of Nations and then the United Nations were formed. Each of these
general forms has value in times of war. While a personal approach is still an option, like Clintons personal (one-on-one) desire to end the Iraqi biochemical factory, a multivariable
approach is desirable-and when the UN is considered in this light, it is that approach that is effecting success in Iraq. The
United Nations just survived a shake-up. In 1991 it was posited that the UN was outdated now that the Cold War had ended, and should go the way of
its progenitor, the League of Nations. The question was how can the worlds peacekeeper protect the nationalism of its individual members and advocate for individual human rights when every
contributing nation has divergent ideals? (Ghali 2). Well, the UN has been vindicated because, despite the fact that the Berlin Wall came down and the former Soviet Union decided
to democratize, the UN is desperately needed. It, as a system of individual states, is the reason that the Second Gulf War has not come about.
When viewed from a Cold War vantage point and the fact that thousands of U.S. veterans who returned from the First Gulf War are spreading related
biochemical diseases around the world today, it is easy to see why President Clinton wants to put an end to Saddam Husseins biochemical weapons factories ("Clinton Texts"). However, blowing
up those factories is not good for all nations of the Earth-and Clintons desire to put a quick end to the Iraqi threat should not be the first line of
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