War & Diplomacy: From World War I to the War on Terrorism.
Mattox, Henry E.
War & Diplomacy: From World War I to the War on Terrorism
Reviewed by Henry E. Mattox
Andrew Dorman and Greg Kennedy, Eds. War & Diplomacy: From
World War I to the War on Terrorism. Dulles, Va.: Potomac Books, 2008,
245 pp., $60.00, (ISBN 978-1-57488-943-7).
This interesting collection of essays addresses in analytical terms
the interaction of armed force and diplomacy, reaching, not
unexpectedly, a general conclusion that the two aspects of international
relations are necessarily intertwined. The two are not, however,
co-dependent in equal terms. The studies reflect in outline the
successes of diplomacy in avoiding, postponing, and mitigating war, as
they show equally well the failures of diplomacy in avoiding or ending
armed conflict. Each case examination by one of eight scholars stands on
its own with regard to diplomacy's helpfulness in affecting, for
better or worse, a conflict of the past century.
The case studies undertaken range from the countdowns to the First
and Second World Wars through the Iraq War. In between, somewhat
curiously, other essays concern France and the Algerian uprising and
Britain and the Falklands/Malvinas conflict. Kosovo provides the focus
of an essay. All include useful data and interpretation. (The Britain
and Europe focus of the volume derives from the fact that all but one of
the contributors is affiliated with a British university and the eighth,
with the Royal Military College of Canada.) The countdown to the First
World War struck this reviewer as especially informative. Editor
Dorman's discussion of the Iraq War, however, while accurate in
outline, does not appear to address adequately the controversy in
American and British intelligence circles on the validity of assertions
that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
A final point: This volume includes a highly useful bibliography.