TY - BOOK ID - 137886609 TI - U.S. involvement in Central America : three views from Honduras AU - Ronfeldt, David F. AU - Kellen, Konrad. AU - Millett, Richard AU - United States. PY - 1989 PB - Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation, DB - UniCat KW - Nationalism KW - History KW - Central America KW - United States KW - Honduras KW - Relations KW - Politics and government KW - Military policy. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:137886609 AB - This study, completed in September 1988, is based on interviews conducted in 1985 and 1986 with three Hondurans: Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, Cesar A. Batres, and Victor Meza. It reports on the way U.S. involvement in Central America is apparently being perceived in Honduras and how this may affect local political and military behavior, including security cooperation with the United States. The interviews substantiate the enduring and pervasive importance of nationalism as the prism through which local elites look at security issues. The interviews acknowledge the benefits Honduras obtains from U.S. involvement in the region. They also illuminate a growing sense of the costs and risks a small country faces in an alliance with the United States against an external threat that the small country faces to a lesser degree and that the United States seems unable to handle directly in an efficient way. Finally, the interviews warn about a slowly growing, unexpected potential for anti-Americanism in a country that has never been anti-American. The significance of the interviews seems to extend beyond Honduras, reflecting broader trends in strategic thinking in Latin America, suggesting that Latin American strategic thinking about the United States is entering a new phase. ER -