ABSTRACT

This is the first introduction to the United Nation's activities during the Cold War period. It combines a history of the UN with a broader account of east-west diplomacy during the Cold War and after. Norrie MacQueen begins by looking at the formation, structure and functions of the UN. Then, within a chronological framework, he assesses its contribution to international security from the emergence of the UN's peacekeeping role in 1945-56 right through to UN operations in the 1990s in Angola, Somalia and Bosnia.

part |2 pages

PART ONE BACKGROUND

part |2 pages

PART TWO ANALYSIS

part |2 pages

PART THREE ASSESSMENT

part |1 pages

PART FOUR DOCUMENTS

chapter 5|1 pages

The Soviet Union and the veto

chapter 6|1 pages

The Unified Command in Korea

chapter 11|1 pages

The withdrawal of UNEF from Egypt, 1967

chapter 15|2 pages

Khrushchev and the ‘troika’ proposal

chapter 18|2 pages

Forming the Cyprus Force

chapter 22|1 pages

Kurt Waldheim on the Lebanon force

chapter 24|3 pages

Operation Desert Storm