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Alternative Military Strategies for the Future
DOI link for Alternative Military Strategies for the Future
Alternative Military Strategies for the Future book
Alternative Military Strategies for the Future
DOI link for Alternative Military Strategies for the Future
Alternative Military Strategies for the Future book
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ABSTRACT
In this volume, prominent civilian and military experts in defense, representing the maritime-continental coalition, military reform, and noninterventionist schools of thought, outline the changes in military strategy, policy, and force structure that they believe the United States must adopt if it is to cope successfully with threats to national security in the 1980s and 1990s. The authors analyze US interests and objectives, the changing strategic environment, and the major security threats facing the United States in the coming decades. They also discuss what they believe is the proper mix of political, economic, and military instruments for dealing with fixture threats. The alternative strategies they present are wide-ranging and comprehensive, running the gamut from a strategic withdrawal from global commitments to proposals for increasing US power projection and forcible entry capabilities in the Third World. In many ways the chapters are critical of current and past approaches to military strategy. The authors believe it is essential that strategists understand the existing critiques of current U.S. military strategy in order to make the correct policy decisions for the future.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Part I
Introduction
chapter Chapter 1|19 pages
Competing Military Strategies: Problems and Prospects
part Part II|63 pages
Strategic Environment
chapter Chapter 2|26 pages
US Strategy and the World of the 1980s: Some Western European Perspectives
chapter Chapter 3|20 pages
Optimism Versus Pessimism: A Soviet View of the Strategic Environment
chapter Chapter 4|15 pages
Planning for the Most Likely Contingencies: The Foreign Policy Context
part Part III|62 pages
Coping with the Strategic Environment
chapter Chapter 5|46 pages
Competing Views of the Central Region Conventional Balance
part Part IV|81 pages
Alternative Military Strategies