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  1. On the hawk-dove spectrum, hawks emphasize competitive elements, the need to keep up one's military strength to deter war; also they are ready to use that strength periodically in order to defend their own sphere of interest and to reduce the adversary's. Their favorite historical analogy is Munich and the appeasement of 1938.

  2. Aug 21, 2023 · Studies that explore American hegemony and the defense industry contend that hawks generally dominate US foreign policymaking, whereas studies that explore partisan polarization and congressional divisions show that hawks and doves battle for control over this policy domain.

  3. Nov 23, 2009 · Starting in February 2005 (with the one exception of a jump to 51% in February 2006), fewer than half of Americans judged the Iraq war to have been the right decision. By the time of the November 2008 presidential election, the decision-split registered at 39% right versus 50% wrong.

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  4. Oct 18, 2012 · In our blog this week, we uncover a little known-story in a new publication The Joint Chiefs of Staff and National Policy, Vol. 8, 1961-1964 that reveals some of the behind-the-scenes debates between the pro-airstrike hawks and the pro-blockade doves in the Kennedy administration.

  5. Fifty years ago, in March 1966, 47% of Americans described themselves as hawks on the Vietnam War -- wanting to step up the fighting -- while 26% described themselves as doves, wanting to slow...

  6. Oct 11, 2012 · The original hawks and doves. For Cuban missile crisis fans, there is a lot of interesting new material in the Robert F. Kennedy records that were partially opened today after a decades-long...

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  8. DOVES AND HAWKS are terms applied to people based upon their views about a military conflict. A dove is someone who opposes the use of military pressure to resolve a dispute; a hawk favors entry into war.

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