Browsing by Subject "Nixon administration"
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Item Held Hostage: America and Its Allies Confront OPEC, 1973 - 1981(2012-07-16) Barr, KathleenThe oil shocks of the 1970s, initiated by the first Arab oil embargo in 1973, stunned the industrialized world. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) controlled a resource that was vital to the national well-being and national security of America and its allies. In the United States, gas lines formed as Americans waited for increasingly costly and scarce fuel. Europeans realized that the energy shortages, which they originally believed to be short-term, might permanently change their lives. This dissertation places the historical debate about the effectiveness of domestic and foreign energy policy within the framework of the global transformations taking place at the end of the twentieth century. The collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1971 and the advent of petrodollars on world currency markets, the emergence of the Soviet Union as an oil exporter, the rise of OPEC as a regulator of oil prices and the consequent decline in the power of the seven major multinational oil companies, and the growth of a global environmental movement, all contributed to the shifting interplay of forces confronting the United States and its allies in the late twentieth century and shaped the debate over national and international energy policy. America's efforts to work with its allies to develop a cohesive national and international energy policy fell victim to the struggle between political autonomy and interdependence in an era of globalization. The allied response to the Iranian hostage crisis and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan highlighted these conflicts within the alliance.Item The overthrow of Chilean President Salvador Allende Gossens(2008-12) Wolf, Ryan; Mosher, Jeffrey; Hart, JustinBetween September 1970 and September 11, 1973, President Richard Nixon’s administration waged an economic and covert CIA campaign on Chilean President Salvador Allende’s Marxist Popular Unity (UP) government. Nixon’s campaign helped create the shortages, inflation, and propaganda necessary to compel Chile’s divided anti-Marxist opposition groups to join the same movement against the government in October 1972. The central thesis of this work is the following: Nixon’s administration helped create the internal conditions that drove groups of anti-Marxist Chileans into a unified movement that manifested itself during the Truckers’ Strike of October 1972 and delivered a mortal blow to the UP. Chile’s anti-Marxist movement weakened the UP so much that the Chilean military easily overthrew Allende on September 11, 1973. The administration, fearing that another Latin American Marxist leader might try to pursue the electoral path to power, used Allende’s fellow countrymen to bring down his democratically elected socialist government before it could spread communism to the rest of Latin America.