One of the most common criticisms of current U.S. security
policy is that it lacks an overarching strategy, leading to a
tendency to address problems and crises individually and in
isolation as they arise. This study provides a broad description of
the contemporary global security environment and an examination of
U.S. security policy since the end of the Cold War. Traditional
threats, such as those associated with major theater war, now
coexist with newer nontraditional threats. The authors maintain
that a sound strategy must support the ability of a country to
hedge and adapt to a highly volatile security landscape. That, in
turn, is accomplished through an executive level organizational
mechanism to authoritatively integrate and execute a cogent
national policy.
Understanding the key concepts of strategy and strategy
formation is essential in order to place specific challenges--such
as global instability and state failure--in an appropriate
strategic context. The contributors outline the conceptual guidance
for a relevant strategy to deal with the myriad political,
economic, informational, and deterrence threats and challenges
generated in today's unstable, chaotic, violent, and ambiguous
global security environment. Their conclusions are unequivocal. The
United States must come to grips with the fundamentally transformed
nature of security challenges and opportunities of the 21st
century. To do so requires a significant change in how the country
develops its security strategy and how the country is organized to
plan and implement that strategy.
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