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Trappings of Power - Ballistic Missiles in the Third World (Paperback, Annotated Ed)
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Trappings of Power - Ballistic Missiles in the Third World (Paperback, Annotated Ed)
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Since the beginning of the crisis precipitated by Iraq's invasion
of Kuwait in August 1990, the threat posed by Iraq's arsenal of
ballistic missiles has been the focus of international attention.
In the opening days of the U.S.-led military counteroffensive
beginning on January 16, 1992, Iraq launched ballistic missiles
against population centers in Israel and military bases in Saudi
Arabia. The attacks intensified the terror of the war and prompted
renewed efforts by the multinational force to destroy Saddam
Hussein's military machine. The countries aligned against Iraq were
prepared for attacks by chemically armed missiles, but Iraq's
missile force proved to be of little military consequence. The
missiles that survived the opening hours of Operation Desert Storm
were conventionally armed, inaccurate and unreliable. Most of those
that were actually launched either were intercepted by American
antimissile defenses or failed to hit vital targets. But the
political impact of the missiles was inestimable. The strikes
symbolized Iraq's determination to prosecute the war no matter what
the cost. By threatening to involve Israel, they created severe
tensions and posed the risk that multinational military coalition
would be dissolved, and they underscored the potential
vulnerability of all the states in the region to Iraqi aggression.
In this book, Janne E. Nolan argues that the use of missiles is a
harbinger of the altered international security environment
confronting the Untied States and its allies in the late twentieth
century. Long believed to be a distant prospect, the adoption of
technological resources to missile development is already occurring
in over a dozen developing countries, many of them long-standing
regional antagonists. These capabilities present complicated
challenges to American interests and foreign policy, challenges
that have only begun to be explored as a result of the Iraqi
crisis. The author examines the evolution of the international
technology market, surveys third world missile programs, and
analyzes the military significance of ballistic missiles in
potential third world combat. She also discusses the way in which
domestic and international policy decisions are made to promote or
restrain the export of military technology, and assesses the
strengths and weaknesses of current policy. Finally, she emphasizes
the need for institutional reforms to balance the requirements of
protecting the technological edge on which the United States relies
for its own security against the growing pressures of international
miniaturization.
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