1st Edition

Revolution And Intervention In Grenada The New Jewel Movement, The United States, And The Caribbean

By Kai Schoenhals, Richard Melanson Copyright 1986
    234 Pages
    by Routledge

    234 Pages
    by Routledge

    In Part 1 of this book, Dr. Schoenhals places the Grenadian Revolution and its aftermath in historical perspective. He explores the Anglo-French rivalry over the island, the period of slavery, and the British colonial administration and gives particular emphasis to the Gairy decades (1951-1979). His discussion of the People's Revolutionary Government is based on extensive Interviews with the leadership of the New Jewel Movement, foreign diplomats, and Grenadian citizens, and on a review of documents captured by the United States during occupation of the island. In Part 2, Dr. Melanson, after briefly reviewing the nature of U.S. interests In the region and U.S.-Caribbean relations during the Nixon years, focuses on the Carter and Reagan administrations' policies in the Caribbean and relations with the Grenadian government. He examines the justification offered by President Reagan for the 1983 intervention, domestic responses to the action in the United States, and its implications for Reagan's Central American policies. Finally, he considers whether the action will prove to be a prelude to a new domestic consensus about the use of U.S. military power in the Third World.

    Westview Special Studies -- Preface -- Government and Political Leaders -- Grenada: The Birth and Death of a Revolution -- The Historical Background, 1498-1951 -- The Decades Under Gairy, 1951-1979 -- The People's Revolutionary Government, 1979-1983 -- The Downfall of the PRG and the Aftermath -- The United States, the Caribbean, and Grenada -- The United States as a Caribbean Power -- Carter, the Caribbean, and Grenada -- Reagan, "Neocontainment," and the Caribbean -- The Grenada Intervention and U.S. Foreign Policy -- U.S. Foreign Policy Implications

    Biography

    Kai P. Schoenhals, Richard A. Melanson