In light of the spectacular performance of American
high-technology weapons in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, as well as
the phenomenal pace of innovation in the modern computer industry,
many defense analysts have posited that we are on the threshold of
a revolution in military affairs (RMA). The issue has more than
semantic importance. Many RMA proponents have begun to argue for
major changes in Pentagon budgetary priorities and even in American
foreign policy more generally to free up resources to pursue a
transformed U.S. military --and to make sure that other countries
do not take advantage of the purported RMA before we do. This book
takes a more measured perspective. Beginning with a survey of
various types of defense technologies, it argues that while
important developments are indeed under way, most impressively in
electronics and computer systems, the overall thrust of
contemporary military innovation is probably not of a revolutionary
magnitude. Some reorientation of U.S. defense dollars is
appropriate, largely to improve homeland defense and to take
advantage of the promise of modern electronics systems and
precision-guided munitions. But radical shifts in U.S. security
policy and Pentagon budget priorities appear unwarranted
--especially if those shifts would come at the expense of American
military engagement in overseas defense missions from Korea to Iraq
to Bosnia.
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