List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
1. The False Promise of Covert Regime Change
2. Causes: Why Do States Launch Regime Changes?
3. Conduct: Why Do States Intervene Covertly versus Overtly?
4. Consequences: How Effective Are Covert Regime Changes?
5. Overview of U.S.-backed Regime Changes during the Cold War
6. Rolling Back the Iron Curtain
7. Containment, Coup d'état and the Covert War in Vietnam
8. Dictators and Democrats in the Dominican Republic
9. Covert Regime Change after the Cold War
Notes
Index
Lindsey A. O’Rourke is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Boston College. Her research focuses on regime change, international security, and US foreign policy.
Any debate over the relative merits and demerits of regime change
as a legitimate tool of foreign-policy needs to begin with Lindsey
A. O'Rourke's fantastic book. It's a well-written, important work
that should productively inform foreign-policy debates going
forward. Essential reading.
*The National Interest*
This is a book for scholars and policy makers; the footnotes are
copious and extensive.
*Choice*
Covert Regime Change is a valuable book that sheds light on an
important issue.
*Survival: Global Politics and Strategy*
Unlike many other books built around accounts of CIA plots, Covert
Regime Change takes a scholarly and quantitative approach. It
provides charts, graphs, and data sets. Meticulous analysis makes
this not the quickest read of any book on the subject, but
certainly one of the best informed. O'Rourke injects a dose of
rigorous analysis into a debate that is often based on emotion.
*Global Research*
O'Rourke's work provides ample evidence that attempts at forcible
regime-change are unlikely to achieve desired ends at a reasonable
cost.
*Christopher Preble, War on the Rocks*
Well researched and argued, it places the initial debate over
covert action within the national security decisionmaking process
during the first years of the Cold War.
*International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence*
In this well-researched and clearly written book, Lindsay A.
O'Rourke vigorously argues that during the Cold War U.S. officials
repeatedly launched covert interventions in foreign countries, even
though most of the operations failed to effect regime changes,
because the officials saw them as cheap ways to enhance U.S.
security and power.... A well-executed, valuable study.
*Journal of American History*
O'Rourke's book offers a onestop shop for understanding
foreignimposed regime change. Covert Regime Change is an impressive
book and required reading for anyone interested in understanding
hidden power in world politics.
*Political Science Quarterly*
O'Rourke's contribution to the history of US foreign relations,
intelligence history, and international relations theory is not
just valuable but also original. O'Rourke's dataset identifies more
than 60 covert efforts to bring about regime change... pursued by
the United States between 1947 and 1989. Few authors have sought to
chronicle and analyze them as comprehensively and systematically as
O'Rourke, and no one has succeeded as she has. We owe her a great
debt.
*Parameters*
O'Rourke challenges the historiography by showing that regime
change actions, both covert and overt, were the principal action of
the US during the Cold War, and in doing so, she joins the
ever-growing number of critics who argue that covert actions are
ineffective instruments of US foreign policy and national
security.
*H-Net*
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