For an excellent treatment of these questions, see BrodieBernard, War and Politics (New York, 1973), Chapter 7
3.
See KnorrKlausRosenauJames N.(Eds.): Contending Approaches to International Politics (Princeton, 1969)
4.
WaltzKenneth N., Man, the State, and War (New York, 1954)
5.
WatsonAdam, Diplomacy—The Dialogue between States (London, 1982), Chapter XI
6.
For the unity of international guerilla strategy, see LittleM.R., “The Evolution and Future of Revolutionary Guerilla Warfare and Terrorism,”Royal United Services Institute Journal for Defence Studies (London), Vol. 129, no. 2, 1984
7.
For an assessment of overall strategic aims, see King-HarmanAnthony L., “NATO Strategy—A New Look,”RUSI Journal for Defence Studies, Vol. 129, no. 1, 1984
8.
MorgenthauHans, Politics Among Nations (New York, 1978), p. 10
9.
There is now a vast literature on this subject. For example, linked to the divisions in the paragraph, see: (a) ColsonElizabeth, Planned Change—The Creation of a New Community (Berkeley, 1982) and Stephen Chan, “International Development Assistance—the Politics of a Community,” New Zealand International Review (Wellington), November-December, 1984. (b), and (c) John Cathie, The Political Economy of Food Aid (London, 1982). (d) Amartya Sen, Poverty and Famines—An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation, (London, 1981)