Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Philosophy of Science

For a long time, a section of scientists have been in the forefront of confronting what fellow scientists perceived as the best approach to the philosophy of science. Science, being a broad subject according to one’s philosophical thoughts, has been undergoing constant changes such that diverse views and ideas exist among contemporary scientists who continue to challenge previous scientific settings. What Creswell (2009) perceives as ‘worldview’ is perceived by others as “paradigms, epistemologies and ontologies, or broadly conceived research methodologies” (p. 6). Philosophy of science (commensurability) pertains to anticipated implications, methods of applications, assumptions used, and foundations that stand as the basis for arguments. Where philosophy exists to clarify propositions and settle controversies surrounding the limitations of natural science (Gattei, 1995), science pursues the relevance of logic.

Epistemology, a branch of philosophy, is concerned with the “study of” and that it addresses questions such as: what is knowledge? How is it acquired? How can a given subject or entity be known? From the Greek word epistēmē, epistemology is concerned with analyzing the nature of knowledge by using justifications to come to the right answer. This is done in order to brush aside skepticisms. In essence, epistemology is the study of the theory of knowledge. Paradigm is used to show, point out, exhibit or expose distinct concepts in a scientific field. Likewise, paradigm can be used to delineate scientific disciplines at any given time. Ontology pertains to the philosophical study of the existence, reality, and nature of entities. 

References

Creswell, J. (2009). Research design: Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods approaches (3rd ed). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Gattei, S. (1995). Karl Popper’s philosophy of science: Rationality without foundations. Routledge studies in the philosophy of science. ISBN 0-203-88719-0 Mater e-Book 

Thursday, August 14, 2014


INTERVIEW WITH DR. ALI SAID FAQI: SOMALI AMBASSADOR TO THE BENELUX AND THE EUROPEAN UNION


Editor’s Note: Besides the array of news and analysis covered on a daily basis by WardheerNews, getting to know the views and ideas of Somali diplomats, distinguished figures, erudite scholars and academicians, political doyens, and individuals and organizations having the desire to make effective changes to the beleaguered, impoverished, and war-ravaged Horn of Africa nation of Somalia has been WardheerNews’ burning desire for close to a decade. The following is an exclusive interview conducted by  our own Adan Makina covering wide-ranging and fascinating topics with Ambassador Dr. Ali Said Faqi, Somalia’s Ambassador to the Benelux and the European Union.
__________________
WardheerNews (WDN): Ambassador Ali Said Faqi, Somalia’s new Ambassador to the EU and Belgium, first welcome to WardheerNews. You hold one of the biggest ambassadorial responsibilities for the Somali nation. Did your appointment to these two positions come to you as a surprise?

Ali Faqi
Amb. Ali Faqi, Somalia’s ambassador to Belgium and EU

Amb. Ali Said Faqi: Yes, indeed it was a complete surprise, unexpected and out of nowhere.   However, I should admit that I had interest to join politics one day in my life time, but I have never dreamed of becoming a diplomat; it was something that never crossed my mind.  Having said that, I am honored to be the Ambassador of Somalia to the Benelux and the European Union.
WDN: Could you share with us your background? 
Amb. Ali: I have a PhD in Toxicology and my research interest is on preclinical drug development with specialty on reproduction and birth defects.  Here are some of my highlights:
I am a Senior Director at a private research institute. I also hold an adjunct associate professor at Wayne State University, School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
I am a Diplomate of American Board of Toxicology (DABT) and a Fellow of the Academy Toxicological Sciences (ATS).  Currently I am an Associate Editor of Reproductive Toxicology Journal and a member of Editorial Board of Open Access Journal of Science and Technology and a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Alzheimer’s Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI).  Moreover, I served on the Board of Scientific Counselors (BOSC) Computational Toxicology at the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) from September 2009 to September 2010.
I am an ad hoc scientific reviewer for several scientific journals including Regulatory Pharmacology and Toxicology, Toxicology Journal, System Biology in Reproductive Medicine, Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology, PLoS ONE and Birth Defects Research Part B: Developmental & Reproductive Toxicology, and Drug and Chemical Toxicology. Other positions held include a past president of Michigan Society of Toxicology and a past president of Toxicologists of African origin.
I have published over 100 scientific papers and reports. I am an editor of a text book “A Comprehensive Guide to Toxicology in Preclinical Drug Development”, a book published by Elsevier in December 2012 and an author/co-author of 10 book chapters. 
WDN: What led you to be involved in politics since you have a science academic background? 
Amb Ali: Let us not forget that since early 2000 shortly after I came to the USA, I was an active member of the Somali Diaspora. I joined Pan-Somali Council for Peace and Democracy(Israaca). Here I met several brilliant Somali intellectuals who still remain as my true fiends.  In principle Israaca was a great political organization aimed at defending the noble cause of Somalia. Unfortunately, our deeply rooted mistrust and lack of experience has led to the demise of Israaca. Afterwards it is not a secret that I became a strong advocate of the plight of the people in Benadir, Lower Shebelle and Jubba. It is in my blood that I detest human right abuses. My activism has helped shape my political views and I strongly believe Somali unity is the only way forward. Therefore, politics was something I always had in my heart.
Nevertheless, I am much concerned about the current state of the Somali affairs because it is almost impossible to reverse the trend.  Besides political wrestling that has constantly paralyzed our nation, there is completely lack of capacity in all institutions. It is not that we don’t have educated people in these institutions; it is the mentality of the people that is devoid of accountability and work ethics.
WDN: WardheerNews has learned that the Somali diplomatic mission residency located in Brussels was in such a great mess since the main administrative building was in a dilapidated condition.  Were you able to reverse the ramshackle state of the said building in Brussels, Belgium? 
Amb. Ali: First and foremost please allow me to deeply thank the military regime of Somalia for acquiring these two buildings (the Chancery and the Ambassador’s residence) in Brussels, Belgium.  These two properties have not been taken care of for the past 23 years. This has resulted in structural damage of large proportion.  We initiated renovating the Chancery with loan money and in a few months the Embassy will have few office spaces and a meeting room.  The residence is still occupied by a Belgian family, but I expect them to move out before the end of this month. It looks like, however, the damage of the residence building is so deep that it would require demolishing the entire building and replacing it with a newer one. It is in my priority list to rehabilitate these buildings before my tenure time expires.
WDN: As the Somali ambassador to the EU, what are your main responsibilities? And do you oversee other Somali missions within the EU? 
Amb. Ali: My responsibility as an ambassador is to represent the government of Somalia in all meetings at EU, ACP, African Union, Arab league, IGAD, and in one-on-one government settings; involve in diplomacy, oversee all of the other diplomats and local staff, enhance the exposure of Somalia, defend the interest of Somalia, and help Somali citizens in need.
No, I don’t oversee other Somali missions in EU besides the ones that I am accredited to. 
WDN: The Somali nation is experiencing turbulent times. How do you see European involvement in resuscitating Somalia politically, socially, and economically?  
Amb. Ali: Europe Union is pretty much determined in helping Somalia. It is actively involved in all projects aimed at reviving Somalia, whether it is in the security sector, fighting piracy, justice reform, constitutional revision, building federal states institutions, reconciliation, economic development, food security, etc. The European taxpayers are demanding concrete results; they want to see their money well spent for the wellbeing of the people of Somalia. We need to grasp this opportunity and benefit from it.
Unfortunately, any political, social and economical progress made in Somalia is always deterred by the pandemic political crisis that has afflicted our country for almost a quarter of century. In the history of every nation that went to civil war, it’s the political will of its citizens that revived those nations; Somalia will not be an exception. No matter how much money the world donates to Somalia, nothing can be attained until we strongly stand together and collectively rehabilitate our nation.
WDN: EU and other countries pledged 2.4 B Euro for the reconstruction of Somalia through the agreement of the New Deal on Sept 16, 2013. This fund has been suspended due to allegations of corruption and lack of transparency. What can you tell us about the status of the New Deal Funds? 
Amb. Ali: The pledges have not been suspended but delayed due to lack of transparent public financial system in our country. The Somali government has committed itself to working with the World Bank to create a system of banking and financial institutions that have checks and balances. This is expected to be completed soon.
WDN: Many people believed members of the delegation from the Somali Federal government for the New Deal, led by President Hassan, were selected through corruption and nepotism and that many had no experience in government affairs. Since you were among those present at the meeting, what can you tell us about such allegations? 
Amb. Ali: I disagree with this allegation. The delegation was composed of the President’s Staff, ministers, parliamentarians, regional leaders and members of the civil society.  However, I am not surprised as negative rumors run Somalia and polarize our society and unfortunately there is nothing that can be done to contest it mainly because there is no effective journalism that can take the story and seek the real truth.  I like to share a personal experience that I witnessed with the Somali media. During the New Deal summit one of the Somali websites ran a commentary accusing me of being a traitor simply because I happened to be an Ambassador of Somalia at the time while the commentator (he/she) was opposed to the New Deal. Do I take this serious? Absolutely no, but I wish to see any accusations against public figures thoroughly investigated; sadly I don’t expect this to happen anytime soon. 
WDN: The current Somali administration is said to be run by incompetent people with AID dependency mentality. Do you believe those who are in position of power are capable of moving Somalia forward? 
Amb. Ali: Moving Somalia forward is not an easy mission, although many in the public may pretend so.  Leadership is a daunting task particularly for countries like Somalia where anarchy and impunity have dominated the lives of the people for over two decades. There is a deep mistrust in our society which then feeds to a negative perception for any leadership.  We need to understand that leaders come and go consequently the public does not need to waste time with individuals in the leadership, but they need to push pressure on the government in building strong institutions. Without strong institutions in place a president or a prime minister will not have any power to fulfill their public and political duties. As a result they will be seen as weak and incompetent.  Regrettably, this is the scenario that is currently prevailing in Somalia. I am confident that President Hassan and his PM are good people; let us give them time and space to lead the country 
WDN: Al-Shabab still controls large parts of Southern Somalia such as the coastal town of Brava which serves as their main strategic base and headquarters. Why can’t the government with the support of AMISOM re-take such an important city?   
Amb. Ali: Experience has shown that military solution is not always the right remedy because securing peace and delivering public services is not the task of the military.  That is why I believe in the liberation plan of the Al-shabab controlled territories the government should include the immediate installation of a strong civil administration with a strong police force that should tackle the vacuum left by the defeat of Al-shabab. The government should also seek public support and funding to aid the transition to peace prior to launching a military campaign.
WDN: How do you perceive Somali political participation, acculturation or assimilation into European culture? 
Amb. Ali: Somalia and Europe have different history, social and political culture; however, there is a lot to learn from Europe. The European Union is an economic and political union of 28 European countries. The EU has enhanced the social, cultural, economical and political integration of European countries.  Europeans may share borders, but have different languages, cultures and traditions. Somalia with a homogenous population share the same language and religion and yet the acceptance and tolerance among its citizens is not something to be desired. In that regard Somalia can learn a lot from the European integration process.  
WDN: Do you have any estimate figure of the number of Somalis in the EU and Belgium in particular?
Amb. Ali: I don’t have an estimate number of Somali migrants in EU, but they may exceed or equal a quarter of a million. In Belgium the estimate is about 2,000 people.
WDN: What were you able to accomplish for the duration you have been Somali ambassador to the EU and Belgium respectively?
Amb. Ali: I don’t know if I can say I have accomplished a lot during my short time in the office, but I have a clear objective which I would like to push hard. As someone who is representing Somalia at this critical period of its history, I have no space for failure. I am committed to changing the Somali image and perception by exhibiting integrity, accountability and strong work ethics. 
WDN: How is your relationship with the Somali Diaspora in the EU? 
Amb. Ali: I am towards building a good relationship with the Somali Diaspora in Belgium and the Netherlands. I have an open policy and my door is open to all, and I have nothing to hide. I like my fellow countrymen and women to conduct themselves kindly and be law abiding citizens in the countries they reside as they need to understand the consequences bad behavior will have for the image of Somalia.  
WDN: Thanks for taking the time to share your views and ideas. 
Amb. Ali: My pleasure.

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Sunday, April 20, 2014

Analytical Paper

Introduction
In recent times, states in modern democracies have been having hard times grappling with the loss of revenues mainly because of limitations placed on them by the federal government or because of the loss of sales taxes as a result of the proliferation of internet business.  Since the last two decades, business over the internet has been skyrocketing such that it has become easier for buyers to conduct business at the convenience of their homes while saving millions of dollars of sales tax. This modern business venture has had adverse repercussions on the smooth running of state administrations whose revenues have been dwindling slowly over the years. Besides property taxes, sales taxes play an important role in the administration of state governments.

Ideal State Taxing System
Finding an ideal economic system for a state confounded by loss of revenue resulting from dwindling internet sales and federal government limitations can be a daunting task for a novice economist struggling with economic terminologies and financial understanding. Beginning with the era of Adam Smith, the man regarded by many economics as the father of capitalism and modern economics, economists have been struggling to find ideal government or state taxation system. The manner of taxation applied by states in the United States reveal differing economic foundations.

Human search for material affluence and political independence is what has been accelerating states’ pursuance of economic stability and encompassing tranquility since the foundations of economics first evolved and democracy became a global phenomenon worthy of embracing. While many would come with convincing and differing ideal state taxing system, in essence, there is no ideal state tax system that is currently unanimously agreed upon by global economists. The best a state can do is to have a grasp of taxes that obstruct growth and investment. Taxes on consumption, value-added taxes, and property taxes such those on immovable property have been found to be the least harmful to growth and investment while taxation on franchise and corporate taxation, taxes on business transactions, taxes on personal income and gross receipts have the hallmarks of having tremendous positive impact on growth and investment.

There are four principles that are tied to taxation. The first one is neutrality which entails avoiding penalizing individuals and businesses on the basis of their income such that the taxpayer is deprived of the right to luxury. The second one is visibility which denotes to mean government transparency so that taxpayers have the visibility of government operations in terms of how taxation is administered. Obscuring the nature of tax deductions by the government would be unconstitutional as the citizen has the right to know government tax management and operations. The third one is fairness which means people should pay taxes with fairness with the poor and rich each paying according to their means. The fourth principle is simplicity which simply means an accurate measurement of income which should be easy to administer.

The City of New York generates revenue from four sources: Personal income tax, property tax, corporate tax, and general sales tax (Edgerton, Haughwout, & Rosen, 2004). When states find it impossible to handle dwindling resources and economic downturn, the best its administrators can do is to devise plans and techniques such as imposing austerity measures on expenditure and other revenue generating procedures such as raising taxes on properties, elevating general tax, and income tax to overcome the downward economic slide. Because it will be futile for a state to embark on taxing loyal citizens without making formal arrangements with the public through consultations, navigating other avenues would produce significant results.

Attracting business conglomerations and charging reasonable fees would be an important step in securing the necessary revenue needed for the upkeep of city operations. Cutting state expenditure through budgetary cuts could save states struggling with withering economies. The misuse of funds by state officials and mushrooming of shadowy programs often lead to financial discrepancies that may be harmful to state financial resources. Raising other taxes other than sales tax could be beneficial for any state since revenue generated from taxes can be applied to social programs and other public goods and services that demand immediate resuscitation.

A thorough auditing of all state income from taxation will have to be thoroughly scrutinized and document in government ledgers. Having a means and ways committee and employing an appropriation committee could be an added advantage since it will be helpful for the state to overcome the horrors of misappropriation of funds. The execution of a state’s budget can be positively maintained if preventive controls are enforced, when therapeutic or diagnostic process is executed, and feedback controls such as making corrections to the budget through the performance of constant budget preparations and reviews (Mikesell, 2011). Executing a dynamic tax collection system and employing well experienced taxmen to manage the tax system will undoubtedly enhance economic growth and help deter embezzlement.

Penalizing tax evaders sends a clear signal to the rest of society that may be tempted to swindle the state of its hard-earned revenues. According to Hyman (2011), when people appear to change behavior with the intention of avoiding tax liability they are engaging in tax avoidance while tax evasion is mainly not complying with existing tax laws and failing to pay due taxes. Internet sales have been skyrocketing in recent years and with the death of Marketplace Fairness Act followed by other bipartisan support may bring in new regulatory measures to boost internet sales tax collection by states.

The Market Fairness Act which is expected to be resuscitated as soon as legislation is passed will allow states to collect internet sales tax from web-based business transactions. Fear of impeding interstate commerce has been the cause of the 1967 and 1992 U.S. Supreme Court Decisions that shielded state sales tax collection (Klein, 2013). What has become known as e-commerce in the U.S. has transformed into a gigantic business a force to reckon with and a venture that has the power to penetrate any region. The consumer should be responsible for the payment internet sales to the state. Many U.S. states are reporting billions of dollars loss of sales tax to the internet and there is little chance these lost monies will be recovered from consumers and internet businesses as long the Supreme Court ruling remains defunct. Despite being dead for over a decade, internet sales tax legislation is expected to be revived soon.

States have many ways of garnering alternative taxes. One example is the lottery tax which could be helpful for states to cover unconventional expenses in the absence of the sales tax. Lottery taxation, according to Oana (2006), is gaining ground in countries such as Romania where there is a plan to tax lottery companies a 10% levy for financing social assistance programs. Even Casino owners are also not exempt from this venture imposed by the government of Romania. Alternative state taxation, according to Mikesell (2011), in case of economic strangulation, include state lotteries and liquor stores that are government-owned utilities and often fall under fiscal monopoly.

Another way for government to generate revenue is through user charges that benefit specific individuals as they are voluntarily purchased from the state. Also, user fees through the sale of licenses help states generate revenue. States can generate revenue from charging the public for the multifarious services it provides or allows to operate. This includes fees charged for operating massage parlors, motor vehicle operation, and hunting licenses. Such licenses have expiration dates thereafter making business operations illegal until the license is renewed and fees paid fully. There are restrictions often placed on local governments by states depending on how much revenue they can generate on their own. State corporate licenses generated a staggering $10 billion in 2008 (Mikesell, 2011). States enjoy significant financial incentives generated from the sale of vehicle. In that same year, according to Mikesell (2011), states generated $49 billion from the sale of general sale of licenses.

User charges, according to Mikesell (2011), have four advantages that include allowing users to demand or register for public service, dramatically improving financing equity for select services, improvement of operating efficiency, and finally, user charges can make dramatic improvement cost-and-price signals for the private market. User charges allow consumers to demand efficiency and equity. However, there are limitations to user charges since non-payers are excludable for the services provided through the user charge. Beneficiaries are not allowed to pay for user charges if the service provided has welfare elements in it. The revenue collected from user charges may be questionable if the charges are substantially beyond the reach of the disadvantaged. Public resentment of exorbitant charges may be cause for alarm and lead to political involvement.

The operation of liquor stores is somehow a different method of monopoly and is evident in seventeen states. It is a distinct monopoly because the liquor sold by these states is distilled in state owned stores. Many states benefit from the proliferation of gambling enterprises. According to Mikesell (2011), as of 2007, total gross revenue from gambling had a gross total of $92.2 billion. Despite the possible moral and social concerns the industry may have on society and despite being a politically vulnerable enterprise, states generation of revenue to the tune of billions of dollars from gambling enterprises must not be taken lightly.

With state collection of casino revenue retarded by private management decision making, in general, casinos businesses are the cause of market downfalls such as the famous horse and greyhound racetracks that have been running empty in modern times. Government-operated off-track betting have been generous to state coffers in the past though there have been substantial drop in universal revenue collection in recent times due to the failure of the enterprise to spread to all corners of the nation. Currently, this formal betting enterprise is restricted to the northeast quadrant only and there is the need to have it spread all over and make it encompassing in the future (Mikesell, 2011).

States have the power to lease large tracts of land for many years and generate income from the holding of a property through leases. Leasing property to the public brings a sense of interdependence and mutual relationships that last for long periods of time as longs as the lessee and the leaser agree on certain formalities. In some instances, leases could last as long as ninety-nine years. Leasing has been a significant business venture and a form of contacting where the follow of revenue is continuous for certain duration. Leases come in various forms as they could be developed properties, warehouses, hangars, cultivable farms, and among other things, industrial machinery and permanent structures that the lessee could use for a business of choice.

Conclusion
States continue to loss unconfirmed billions of dollars through internet sales and taking away sales tax would place a heavy burden on the operation of state administrations. Because there is no agreed upon ideal system of taxation, the best opinion would be to devise ways to keep the current sales tax formality in place and further introduce legislation that would allow states to collect internet taxation. Placing further burden on states would jeopardize their efficient delivery of public goods and services.

References

Edgerton, J., Haughwout, A.F. & Rosen, R. (2004). Revenue implications of New York City’s tax system. Current Issues in Economics and Finance, 10(4). Retrieved from http://www.newyorkfed.org/research/current_issues/
Hyman, DN. (2011). Public finance: A contemporary application of theory to policy (10th ed.). Mason, OH: South-Western, Cengage Learning.
Klein, K.E. (2013). Internet retailer vs. retailer in internet sales tax push. Retrieved from http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-01-10/its-retailer-vs-dot-retailer-in-internet-sales-tax-push
Mikesell, J.L. (2011). Fiscal administration: Analysis and applications for the public sector (8th ed). Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
Oana, D. (2006). Lottery again must pay 10 percent social assistance tax. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, Retrieved from http://ezp.waldenulibrary.org/login?url=http://search.proquest.com.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/docview/465493733?accountid=14872







Tuesday, September 18, 2012

A Summary of Dissertation Chapters

Writing a dissertation requires immense work, meticulous preparation, hard work and dedication to assigned tasks, and careful consideration of what is to be penned down to achieve success in the future. A dissertation is a scholarly document written by doctoral students engaged in its preparation and expecting to be conferred on with the Doctor of Philosophy or PhD in a select field of specialization after its completion. There are five chapters to a dissertation. Each chapter plays a particular role while relaying messages distinct to it. According to Rudestam and Newton (2007), some dissertations require the collective efforts of agencies and institutions.

Chapter I
Chapter one illustrates the significance of a research study. It explains why the study has to be conducted and also the possible and social implications of the study.  Chapter one is the prologue or introduction to the dissertation. It establishes through narrative form the relevant materials to be covered. It pinpoints what the dissertation is all about. It debriefs the reader regarding the dissertation set up and the circumstances of the research. It is of paramount importance that a preview of the chapter be conducted. The introduction contains the background information and the problem statement; it exposes the purpose of the study, the research questions, and the theoretical and/or conceptual framework for the study. The conceptual framework is applied to qualitative studies and to some epidemiological studies that are relevant to other quantitative studies.

In the purpose of study, it is best to provide a short statement that serves as a bond between the problem being addressed and the content of the study under focus. The theoretical foundation will have to be identified while providing its derivation or starting point. An account of how the theory relates to the theoretical propositions and/or major hypotheses will have to be revealed. It is necessary to explain how the theory relates to the study approach and research questions.

There is a need for identifying the conceptual framework and the concept or phenomenon that grounds the study. In qualitative studies, contextual lens is used while in quantitative studies a description of the body of research that supports the need for the study as derived from the literature review is rehearsed. Other features to be incorporated in the chapter include a section and rationale of the tradition or design, a description of the key concept or phenomenon being investigated, a summary of the methodology, and how data was collected and analyzed.

Chapter II
Chapter II deals with the literature review and it is best written when it is used as a launch pad since it is the longest chapter. Students are encouraged to write their dissertations beginning with chapter two as it helps filter important topics in the course of the review process. Chapter two begins with a restatement of the problem and the purpose. It is significant to provide an abstract of existing literature to pinpoint the relevance of the problem. The literature search approach used will have to be documented and a list of accessed library databases and search engines used documented. Where appropriate the student scholar has to indicate the theory or theories used. Also, the student will have to provide the theoretical origin and sources.

Chapter III
In chapter three, it is best to restate the purpose of the study previously described in chapter one. Also, it is a requirement to make a preview of major sections of the chapter. The research design and rationale identifies the research tradition. A statement and definition of the central concepts or phenomenon of the study will have to be fully exposed. It is significant that the role of the researcher be defined and explained. The relationships that exist between the researcher and the participants must also be explained. The management of power relationships and biases will have to be addressed. Every likely ethical issue must be noted for clarity. The methodology will have to be described adequately so that other researchers can replicate it in their studies. It will be significant to mention the selection criteria used in participant identification and how they will be recruited and contacted if need be. Instrumentation is an important component of the data collection process. The various data collection methods and the types of instruments used in the research will have to be documented. To answer the research question, there has to be enough instruments to make the process a reality. The developers of the instruments used in the research must be given credit and mention must be made whether participants have been involved in previous studies.

Chapter IV
This chapter deals with the results of the findings. The purpose of the research questions will have to be reviewed briefly. Changes in instrumentation, in personnel and budgetary interpretation deserve to be defined. The demographics of participants and the characteristics relevant to the study will have to be presented. Data analysis evidence of trustworthiness and results that include tables and figures that illustrate appropriate findings will have to be included in this chapter. According to McNabb (2008), it is a moral obligation for researchers to shield the confidentiality of the participants partaking in the research. According to Kraemer and Jason (1996), research conducted by public administrators has been significantly proliferating in recent years mainly due to the increased use of computing in the workplace. Existing discrepancies or cases that do not conform to data will have to be noted. Patterns or themes must be organized in an orderly manner. A summary of the research questions should pave the way for transition to chapter five.

Chapter V
This chapter exclusively deals with summary, conclusions, and recommendations of the study. A thorough reiteration of why the research is significant will have to be included in chapter five. How the research will be of importance to others will have to be noted. Any limitations that evolved in the course of the study must be elaborated in the final findings. Any necessary recommendations, implications, and how the research will impact society must be noted.

Insight
A dissertation is a unique, scholarly and scientific document that contains the professional findings of a doctoral student. What distinguishes a dissertation from other types of research is that it requires extensive investigation and experimentation before concluding findings. While each and every chapter in a dissertation deals with a particular issue, what arouses the prospective doctoral student and other scientists interested in its perusal are the final results and recommendations that can be used to shape humanity.   

References
Kraemer, K.L. & Dedrick, J. (1996). Computing and public organizations. Center for Research on Information Technology and Organizations. University of Irvine, CA. Retrieved from http://escholarship.org/uc/item/1ck3h5bf

McNabb, D.E. (2008). Research methods in public administration and nonprofit management: Quantitative and qualitative approaches (2nd ed.). Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe.

Rudestam, K.E. & Newton, R.R. (2007). Surviving your dissertation: A comprehensive guide to content and process (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, Inc.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Quantitative Research


In a quantitative research method, surveys strategies of inquiry can be identified by the use of descriptive trends, approaches, or opinions of a given general population and often appear in numerical form (Creswell, 2009). The information gathered from a survey of inquiry is often used to make or generalize laudable claims. The basic purpose or rationale in a survey design is usually sketched out in the proposal or plan. The best way to design survey components in a proposal is to consider the intention of the survey design, the nature of the survey and whether it is cross-sectional or longitudinal. Also, it is practical to show how the results will be interpreted, whether the procedure for sampling individuals is random or non-random, and the scale of the contents addressed, whether items will be collapsed into scales, and the procedure to be applied for testing the survey (Creswell, 2009).

In a survey design, researchers reflect the purpose of the survey and in a sampling procedure address essential aspects that are crucial to the research being implemented. Clustering is used to when it is almost impossible to gather information concerning the population being studied. Stratification, a method of gathering specific characteristics like males and females in a population may be applied so as to come up with a sample reflecting true proportions (Creswell, 2009).

Experimental strategies of inquiry mainly deal with “participants, materials, procedures, and measures” (Creswell, 2009; p. 155). A selection process that is either random or non-random is used in experimental methods. Random sampling is when individuals are representative of a given population that is under experiment. A true experiment is a procedure used when a pool of participants are selected randomly and divided into groups. The term matching participants is used to identify participants sharing certain traits or characteristics. In this pattern, individuals may be categorized as scoring high, medium or low on the pre-test (Creswell, 2009).

There are questionnaires that require to be answered in experimental procedures. Defining the participants in the study, the manner of participant selection, type of variables to be applied, the kind of pilot test to be performed, and the experimental research design to be used are a few topics that need addressing. According to Creswell (2009), the types of experimental procedures to be identified include “…pre-experimental designs, true experiments, quasi-experiments, and single-subject designs” (p. 158). In pre-experimental design, the researcher studies single groups and then provides an intervention during experimentation. The quantitative research method requires thorough thought and reflection and collection of numerous statistical data.

References

Creswell, J. (2009). Research design: Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods approaches (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Friday, December 3, 2010

THE PITFALLS OF THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS IN THE CONTEXT OF U.S. FOREIGN POLICY

US President John F. Kennedy shaking hands wit...Image via Wikipedia

Introduction

Since the beginning of the 19th century, the United States has been the undisputed dominant power in terms of science and technology, military, politics, and economy with the exception of a time in history known as “the Cuban Missile Crisis” when John F. Kennedy’s faulty and hesitant foreign policy promoted and irritated Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev to grasp his surreptitious intention in America’s backyard. Since that fateful day of October 14, 1962 when an American U-2 photoreconnaissance plane captured photographic proof of Soviet missile bases under construction in Cuba, differing views and ideas have been deciphered and written by historians, political scientists, and students of international relations as to what went wrong and why secretive Nikita Khrushchev’s ill-fated operation happened in the first place in America’s backyard without prior knowledge of the U.S. president, the U.S. intelligence services, and American public.

From its inception in 1776 when courageous and heroic American men and women proclaimed their inalienable rights to self determination from the forces of colonial England, the government and people of the United States never imagined Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) would be hauled 7,000 miles all the way from the shores of communist adversary U.S.S.R and assembled a distance spanning ninety nautical miles from Florida on the shores of modern-day Cuba. Just as early seventh century C.E. Chinese rulers of the postclassical era thought the expansive Taklimakan Desert to be a natural barrier against foreign infiltrations and that also the pharaohs of Egypt saw the Sahara Desert as an obstacle for alien invaders, likewise, there was a perception in the United States that the massive Pacific and Atlantic Oceans would safeguard America from foreign aggression. The objective of this research is to uncover the pitfalls of the Kennedy administration for failing to uncover Soviet military build up in Cuba, nondescript Nikita Khrushchev’s fantasy of ensuring Soviet longevity through justification and emulation, and Moscow’s morbid suspicion of foreigners-especially America and Americans.

Soviet Belligerence in Words and in Deeds

Right after the end of the Second World War, in words and deeds, Soviet leaders and Soviet intelligence worked exhaustively without stop ultimately aiming at inflicting significant harm to the United States, to her allies, and to her democratic values. When McCone, in his capacity as the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, presented a memorandum on the Donovan Project regarding the Soviet Cuban-Missiles to JFK on October 11, 1962, “The President requested that such information be withheld at least until after elections as if the information got into the press, a new and more violent Cuban issue would be injected into the campaign and this would seriously affect his independence of action.” In his memoir, Robert F. Kennedy indicated that the president knew nothing about the Soviet missiles in Cuba, “yet several times before the missile crisis erupted, Kenneth B. Keating, a White-manned Republican senator from Rochester, New York, charged that the Soviets were putting missiles on Cuba.”[1] For example, U.S. intelligence experts failed to analyze and preempt the strongly-worded message from the Soviet government carried by the daily Pravda on the morning of February 19, 1962, that read in part:
“Does the U.S. government organize and direct aggression against another country accusing it of having established a social system and a state different from what the United States wanted? If the U.S. government arrogates this right to itself, it is standing on very shaky ground, because it does not…possess the military might that would permit it to dictate conditions to other countries. The U.S. political leaders should take into account that there are other countries possessing no less terrible weapons, standing guard over peace, and prepared to prevent the unloosing of a new war.”
[2] The phrase “direct aggression against another country” is in reference to the United States’ policies toward Cuba while “social system” denotes the communist system established by Fidel Castro in Cuba with help from the Soviet politburo. Khrushchev issued this echoing message as a stern warning to the United States while the administration in Washington remained oblivious and unperturbed.

Soviet Missile Assembly in Cuba

According to U.S. intelligence information gathered on the Soviet build-up in Cuba, there were two types of missiles of distinct deterrence: medium-range and intermediate range. Designed to carry nuclear warheads and capable of travelling 1,100 miles; the medium-range missiles were capable of striking Washington, DC, Mexico City and other cities in the southeastern parts of the United States, Central America and the Caribbean area. The intermediate-range missiles had the capability to strike major cities in the western hemisphere from Hudson Bay in Canada to Lima in Peru. On the other hand, President Kennedy noted that Soviet bombers capable of carrying nuclear warheads were being “uncrated” and assembled in Cuba while Cuban air bases capable of accommodating the bombers remained under construction. [3]

Soviet Global political Irredentism

The Soviet’s undaunted political irredentism and ideological obscurantism predate the Cuban missile crisis. During Josef Stalin’s reign, the Soviet Union embarked on forceful territorial expansion by craftily moving southwards towards Iran and Turkey and by stealthily injecting communist thought into Greek political arena. After World War II the Soviet leaders embarked on a precarious mission of occupying the northern regions of Iran until the prime minister of Iran conceded defeat by promising the Soviets offer of oil to which the Soviets categorically rejected until the United States and Britain got involved with a view to controlling Soviet irredentist tendencies. As for Turkey, Stalin made various demands that included giving up of Turkish regions straddling Soviet borders, joint Soviet-Turkish administration of the Dardanelles Strait, Turkey sever relations with Britain, and lastly but not least, Soviet demand that Turkey lease bases in the Dardanelles Strait exclusively for use by Soviet naval and land forces. In Greece, communism spread like wildfire leading to the formation of a right-wing government. [4]

American Demilitarization and Soviet Expansionism

The expansion of Soviet influence in Eastern Europe coupled with the spread of communism in Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America created prolonged competition between the forces of capitalism and communism. Nonetheless, according to President Harry Truman, the United States was devising an absolute foreign policy of “detachment from foreign concerns”. [5] It was this detachment in the form of demilitarization that in the long run led to “the most rapid demobilization in the history of the world.” Despite the United States’ active-duty personnel drastically dropping from 12 million in 1945 to a mere 1.5 million in 1948, on the other hand, weighted against the dilapidated, disenfranchised, and demoralized Soviet military power, the United States, assisted by the largest and the deadliest nuclear arsenals, enjoyed leverage over the seas. [6]

This unprecedented sweeping reduction of active-duty personnel by the U.S. sent commotion across continental Europe especially among nations that relied on American defense against anticipated Soviet aggravations. Ironically, “the United States lacked the ground forces required to intervene in anything greater than a minor conflict”.[7] American global political estrangement boosted Soviet leaders’ ill-conceived and detrimental willpower which consequently tremendously accelerated their convoluted ideological foundations across the globe undeterred. In addition, America’s sublime alienation sped up the evolvement of unparalleled despotic and authoritarian leaders in Asia, Eastern Europe, and Africa in the runner-up to the Cold War. Compared to the enormous Soviet global sphere of control at the height of communism, apart from providing unreserved protection to its compacted NATO allies in the European continent and the cluster of territories under its trusteeship, the United States enjoyed little global dominance while the Soviet Union’s malevolent communist ideology blanketed continental Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin and South America, and the Caribbean.

The Rise of John Fitzgerald Kennedy

The Cuban missile crisis happened at a time when the president of the United States, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, kept his brother Robert F. Kennedy who at that time was the United States Attorney General-as his closest confidant and advisor. [8] This task would have been left to someone with profound knowledge of national security issues-issues related to the containment of the Soviet Union’s unabashed spherical predation and growing global communist antagonism. Perhaps the youthful forty-three old John Fitzgerald Kennedy-the youngest president by then-did not seriously heed the advice of the aging Eisenhower-an advice in the form of a warning that pinpointed the growing global communist offensive and the threat posed by Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev-leader of the egregious Soviet Union (Aleksandr and Naftali, p.79). [9] At that time Soviet leader Khrushchev and his foreign minister Andrei Gromyko and others considered the new president of the United States, John F. Kennedy, “a typical pragmatist” while Soviet Americanists saw Kennedy’s position on USA-Soviet relations as being quite contradictory. [10] Under Khrushchev, Russian people always saw America as inferior technologically and militarily. After the first “beep beeps” of Soviet Sputnik 1 in space, NASA also blasted Explorer 1 into space as a countermeasure to Russian space race at which Khrushchev remarked: “but it is no larger than an apelsinchik” (tiny orange). [10] Paradoxically, the strongest man in the western hemisphere during the Cuban Missile Crisis, John F. Kennedy, was unwilling and unprepared to invade Cuba despite being pushed by Foster Dulles-the man who in the waning years of his life “maintained that the Democratic Party’s policy of "containment" must be replaced by a policy of "liberation." What United States foreign policy needed, he said, was more "heart." [11]

Fidel Castro: Dedicated Communist

Fidel Castro climbed the ladder of success with the promise of transforming the Caribbean island into a conspicuous Shangri-La. In contrast, Cuba under Castro transformed into a dragon’s lair. Despite preferring “godless communism” to the virtues of peace, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness enjoyed by his neighbor, America, Fidel Castro-the revolutionary zealot and doyen of socialism, hung crucifixes and pictures of Virgin Mary on the walls of his office. He reportedly admonished envoys and diplomats with the parting words: “all that needs to be done will be done, [for] it is the Madonna who is sending you.” [12] Fidel Castro’s meteoric rise to power culminated in his resentment of the U.S. such that his coining of the pejorative phrase “yanqui imperialism” resonated across central and south America where Spanish remained the established lingua franca.

For several decades, there have been conflicting political, social, and economic rifts between the leaders of the United States on one side and those of Cuba and the U.S.S.R on the other. To ensure enhanced national security measures, hawkish U.S. civilian and military leaders preferred the use of force against Cuban leadership before, during, and after the infamous Cuban missile crisis. Consequently, the defeat of the communist regime in Havana would have ushered in the overall annexation of the island after the dust settles. The thought by some American leaders that the imposition of tough economic sanctions would cause unprecedented economic strangulation and in the end herald abrupt change in the Cuban political hierarchy preposterously failed to materialize. For dovish JFK and his ardent supporters in government, dismantling Soviet-Cuban hostility toward the U.S. and her allies entailed the use of strategies that reconciled with democratic expectations and norms. Such constraints and others of like measure placed on presidential powers unquestionably created intrinsic predicament in JFK’s pursuit of legitimate national security prerogatives.

Constrained U.S. Foreign Policy

For many decades American foreign policy remained a victim of tumult and political confusion. An aura of political malevolence and penumbra of mistrust ludicrously contaminated America’s congressional, senatorial, and presidential operations. The placing of precipitous limitations on presidential powers and erosion of confidence intensified the defeat of raison d'être among members of the legislature. Since the formation of pluralism, political parties in the American landscape-Democratic, Republican, and moderates alike-have been at loggerheads regarding the direction the nation ought to be steered. Besides, JFK was surrounded by a staff that had conflicting ideas and mixed reactions about how to handle the Cuban missile crisis. Some called for the elimination of the Soviet missiles positioned against the U.S.; others like General Maxwell Taylor-the fine-looking Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) who got in to trouble during the Eisenhower era for advocating a “flexible response” for the military in place of the then-prevailing doctrine of “massive retaliation”-expressed that “the balance of terror might well tilt in favor of Russia.”[13] Even some senior echelons of the U.S. government begrudged JFK most notably high-profile Dean Acheson who perceived young JFK as “…little more than a spoiled brat for whom the father had purchased a seat in Congress.”[14] JFK had little trust even for John McCone-the man who succeeded John Dulles as the highest-ranking CIA operative. In early August 1962, McCone assigned Philippe L. Thiraud de Vosjoli who was Washington chief for French intelligence to go to Cuba and have a glimpse of the island. Upon returning to Washington, DC de Vosjoli presented compelling evidence regarding Soviet missiles directed at the U.S. An agitated McCone asked JFK to take action about the Cuban threats. Because McCone was a Republican, the Kennedy’s gave little attention to his information. However, McCone’s reports were leaked to the GOP who accused the president of appeasing Castro. [15] When General Lansdale included in his memo the expression “including the liquidation of leaders”, he was persuaded by his immediate assistant William K. Harvey-“to delete those four words” [16]

“That Infernal Little Cuban Republic”

The United States’ abhorrence of Cuba stretches back to the days of Theodore Roosevelt who is reported to have told a friend in 1906: “I am so angry with that infernal little Cuban republic that I would like to wipe its people off the face of the earth. All we have wanted from them was that they would behave themselves and be prosperous and happy so that we would not have to interfere. And now, lo and behold, they have started an utterly unjustifiable and pointless revolution.”[17] Cuba under Castro had always been a no-win situation for every sitting U.S. president because the administration in Havana remained hard to pin down even in places as far as Africa where Cuba remained an adversary to U.S. political commitments in the underdeveloped continent crippled by mismanagement and pathetic corruption such that a Washington Post headline decried: “U.S. powerless to contain Cuba in Africa” while Zbigniew Brzezinski who was making a report to his immediate boss, the president, exclaimed: “we are stuck on Africa.” [18] Even after Eisenhower and Kennedy had departed the world for the afterlife, Fidel Castro, continued to blow his own horn by bragging: “we will still be here in another 20 years.” [19] Decades later, during the 1980 campaign, flamboyant Ronald Reagan proposed a blockade of Cuba while his new secretary of State, Alexander M. Haig jr., had a more stringent measure: invasion. Almost all U.S. presidents shared similar mental images in their concerted attempts to restrain the tiny Cuban republic. Speaking to an audience of supporters at a campaign in 2004 at a time when ailing Ronald Reagan was battling Alzheimer and while Alexander Haig remained semiretired in Northern Virginia, George W. Bush, echoed the riveting point: “I’ve got a plan to spread freedom, not only in the greater Middle East but also in our own hemisphere, in places like Cuba.” Regardless of undertaking wide-ranging and profound foreign policy measures during his tenure of office, George W. Bush did little to effect change in Cuba consequently embarrassing wealthy Cuban-American campaign contributors and regular voters who populate the crucial state of Florida. In his final years of office, while responding to a question from the audience-a question in relation to U.S. foreign policy commitment in Cuba-George W. Bush had no other explanation other than stating: “One day the good Lord will take Fidel Castro away.” [20]

Soviet Dissemination of Propaganda

The Russians were adept at deceiving foreign leaders who felt inspired by communist principles with medallions of prestige and honor at grandiose ceremonies attended by a retinue of public figures with twenty-one gun salute, cocktail parties, and theatrical performances at the famous Bolshoi theatre in Moscow. From Latin America to Asia to Africa the number of foreign dignitaries lining up at the Kremlin to be showered on with praise must have been vast and boundless. “The payment of an honorarium was one of the traditional tools the Kremlin used to stroke foreign communists, leaders of national-liberation movements or “progressive cultural elites.” [21] While the Russians were deficient in military intelligence inside the U.S. at the time of the missile crisis, one thing is certain: U.S. national security services enjoyed superior and rigorous infiltration and information gathering structures inside the Soviet Union. On the contrary, the Soviets enjoyed superfluous and extraordinary array of intelligentsia where communism thrived such that Soviet military advisors and multifarious intelligence networks-despite espousing inferior intellectual paraphernalia in context and arrangement-flourished in Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America, South America, Eastern Europe, the Caribbean, and the Middle East. Working in concert with host nations besieged by European domination, colonialism, and imperialism-nations whose inexperienced lackadaisical leaders attached great value to Leninist-Marxist ideology- the Soviets, through reckless dissemination of propaganda and rigorous deception, conscientiously exploited every conceivable economic fiber of these retarded nations. Seeing that the United States was turning a blind eye to the rest of the world with the exception of Western Europe where the U.S. had vested interests, the Soviet Union promptly expanded its sphere of influence clandestinely through antiquated blueprints such that it did not even shy away from setting base in America’s backyard.

U.S. Missiles in Turkey

Immediately after the defeat of Germany and Japan in World War II and up until that momentous day when a U.S.-owned U2 Spy Plane relayed back what became known as the “historic images” that triggered the Cuban Missile Crisis, Soviet leaders perceived their country as inimitable, formidable, and invincible and far superior to the U.S. militarily and ideologically. Even with the proliferation of Soviet military buildup across the globe during the Cuban missile crisis, the administration in Washington, DC remained reluctant at deterring Soviet global threat. Thus, we could assume that the farewell reproach by statesman Eisenhower fell on John F. Kennedy’s deaf ears. Although many contemporary historians may allude the Soviet missile build-up in Cuba to be a countermeasure to the U.S. U2 spy plane shot by the Soviets over Soviet Union airspace, in contrast, to Anatoly Dobrynin-the man who remained Soviet ambassador to the United States during the terms of six American presidents, from John F. Kennedy to Ronald Reagan-“the Soviets had been perturbed by the presence of NATO missiles in Turkey. [22]

The Soviet Union may have been a dedicated ally of the U.S. during World War II, but the truth of the matter is, it transformed into a venomous serpent immediately after the war concluded, perhaps in direct retaliation for the 20 million Russian lives lost and the devastation wrought from 1939 to 1945. By championing communism-an ideology that vehemently denounced American system of free enterprise in the strongest terms-Soviet leaders fervently took a perilous road for the sake of, needless to say, empowering and disseminating their godless ideology of collectivism while feverishly denigrating the democratic system of governance enjoyed by the United States and her western European allies.

Ineffective United Nations

Because of the veto power enjoyed by the two superpowers-the U.S. and Russia, the United Nations, the highest organization having jurisdiction over matters pertaining to international disputes, remained equally ineffective in settling the Cuban missile crisis. The U.N. was either ineffective or at the sidelines during the siege of Berlin, in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and in Afghanistan. Historically, whenever a dispute arose with incumbent Soviet politburos, leaders of the United States oftentimes preferred settling matters of concern through diplomatic means even though the behaviors of key holders to the Kremlin may have appeared obstinate and inappropriate. [23] According to a very informative and important document available on George Washington University web site, “Fidel Castro recommended to the Kremlin a harder line against Washington, even suggesting the possibility of nuclear strikes. The pressure stopped after Soviet officials gave Castro a briefing on the ecological impact on Cuba of nuclear strikes on the United States.”[24]

Analysis

Like past and current political analysts, political scientists, presidential historians, diplomatic observers, and the multitudes of international relations students who remain skeptical about how the Kennedy administration handled the Cuban Missile Crisis, arguably, the administration of the day did not apply the required skills nor did it institute the right measures to outmaneuver the Soviets before the deadly weapons reached America’s backyard. Lack of rigorous national security arrangements, the failure to infiltrate to the core Soviet-Cuban global conspiracy, and the absence of collective efforts to safeguard U.S. security from outside dangers by the National Security Council (NSC), enabled Khrushchev to clandestinely set base in communist Cuba. The absence of rigid national security establishment hindered the United States’ determination to restrain the spread of communism and to contain the Cuban missile crisis. Had there been close cooperation between the various sectors of the national security establishment and had there been profound monitoring of the spread of communism in the Caribbean peninsula, the spate of Soviet aggression would have been curtailed and kept at bay through preemption-a doctrine that came to fore during the reign of George W. Bush. However, after decades of baffling U.S. political misgivings toward the Soviet Union, it was the reflections and initiatives of George Keenan that gave the United States the strength of character to contain the Soviet Union-a long-term policy espousing fortitude and good judgment that proved productive during the presidency of Ronald Reagan. George Keenan, the U.S. Charge d’affaires in Moscow and author of the cable known to history as the “long telegram”, was a bright career Foreign Service diplomat and Soviet expert and a Princeton nonconformist who left significant footprints that benefited several U.S. presidents.

Endnotes

[1] Robert Smith Thompson, Missiles of October: The Declassified Story of John F. Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis, Simon and Schuster, Simon and Schuster Building, Rockefeller Center, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020
[2] Robert Smith Thompson: Ibid., p. 139

[3] Lieutenant Colonel Maureen M. Lynch (USMC0): Cuba, Castro, and the Cuban Missile Crisis
http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/report/1995/LMM.htm
(Accessed December 3, 2010)

[4] Steven W. Hook et al., American Foreign Policy since World War II (18 Ed.), 2300 N Street, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20037

[5] Steven W. Hook et al: Ibid., p. 33

[6] Stephen E. Ambrose, Rise to Globalism: American Foreign Policy since 1938, 5th rev. ed. (New York: Penguin, 1988), 79.

[7] Robert A. Pollard, Economic Security and the Origins of the Cold War, 1945-1950, New York, Columbia University Press, 1985.

[8] Norman Polmar et al., Defcon-2: Standing on the Brink of Nuclear War During the Cuban Missile Crisis, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey (P7)

[9] Aleksandr Fursenko and Timothy Naftali, “One Hell of a Gamble”: The Secret History of the Missile Crisis, W.W. Norton & Company Ltd., 10 Coptic Street, London WC1A 1

[10] Fursenko and Naftali: Ibid., p.1X

[11] Robert Robinson, Black on Red: My 44 Years in the Soviet Union, An Autobiography by Black American, Acropolis Books, LTD., Alphons J. Hackl, Publisher, Colortone Building, 2400 17th St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20009

[12] John Dulles, Arlington National Cemetery Website, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Foster_Dulles#Bibliography
(accessed June 1, 2010)

[13] Fursenko and Naftali: Ibid., p. 29
[14] Robert Smith Thompson: Ibid., p. 187
[15] Robert Smith Thompson: Ibid., p.82
[16] Robert Smith Thompson: Ibid., p. 162
[17] Robert Smith Thompson: Ibid., p.163

[18] Lars Schoultz, That Infernal Little Cuban Republic: The United States and the Cuban Revolution, The University of North Carolina Press (2009)

[18] Lars Schoultz: Ibid., p. 320
[19] Lars Schoultz: Ibid., p. 3

[20] Remarks at a Debate Watch Party, Coral Gables, Florida, 30 September 2004, WCPD, 2196; remarks at New Port, Rhode Island, 28 June 2007, WCPD, 2 July 2007, 882.

[21] Fursenko and Naftali: Ibid., p. 45

[22] Obituary, Anatoly Dobynin, published 08 Apr 2010
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/politics-obituaries/7568616/Anatoly-Dobrynin.html
(Accessed December 3, 2010)

[23] Henry Kissinger, Diplomacy, Simon and Schuster, Rockefeller Center, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

[24] William Burr and Svetlana Savranskaya, Previously Classified Interviews with Former Soviet Officials Reveal U.S. Strategic Failure Over Decades, Washington, DC September 11, 2009.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/nukevault/ebb285/index.htm
(Accessed June 28, 2010)

Bibliography

Aleksandr Fursenko and Timothy Naftali, “One Hell of a Gamble”: The Secret History of the Missile Crisis, W.W. Norton & Company Ltd., 10 Coptic Street, London WC1A 1PU

David Isenberg, The Pitfalls of U.S. Covert Operations, Cato Policy Analysis No. 118 Retrieved July 3, 2010 from
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/PA118.HTM

John Dulles, Arlington National Cemetery Website,
Retrieved July 3, 2010 from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Foster_Dulles

Lieutenant Colonel Maureen M. Lynch (USMC): Cuba, Castro, and the Cuban Missile Crisis, retrieved July 3, 2010 from
http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/report/1995/LMM.htm

Robert Smith Thompson, Missiles of October: The Declassified Story of John F. Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis, Simon and Schuster, Simon and Schuster Building, Rockefeller Center, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 1002

William Burr and Svetlana Savranskaya, Previously Classified Interviews with Former Soviet Officials Reveal U.S. Strategic Failure Over Decades, Washington, DC September 11, 2009.
Retrieved July 3, 2010, 2010 from
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/nukevault/ebb285/index.htm

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