|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
This volume takes a perspective on the debate over deterrence
theory that has never been used before. Other books either address
the differences between the two competing schools of thought--those
who support Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) and those who support
nuclear warfighting--or examine particular policies from within the
perspective of one or the other school of thought. Cori Dauber
examines deterrence theory at a structural level, which allows a
focus on the similarities between the major perspectives on nuclear
strategic doctrine. By examining such issues as validity standards
and the evaluation of evidence, Dauber is able to assess deterrence
as a theory of persuasion, and to examine the way deterrence
discourse so shapes the thinking of policy makers and analysts that
it still drives our analysis of alternatives, even in the
post-Soviet era. Dauber concludes that deterrence is a system
designed to use weapons capabilities as a form of non-verbal
communication with an Other--for the last forty years, the Soviet
Other. Understanding these rhetorical structures and the way they
function is essential in predicting the restrictions that
deterrence places on the way the United States responds to foreign
nations. Cold War Analytical Structures and the Post Post-War World
serves as a model for how scholars in argument and persuasion can
apply their methods to real world situations.
The Information in Warfare Working Group (I2WG) of the U.S. Army
War College (USAWC) is pleased to present this anthology of
selected student work from Academic Year 2009 representing examples
of well-written and in-depth analyses on the vital subject of
Information as Power. This is the fourth volume of an effort that
began in 2006. The I2WG charter calls for it to coordinate and
recommend the design, development and integration of content and
courses related to the information element of power into the
curriculum to prepare students for senior leadership positions.
This publication is an important component of that effort.
Terrorist attacks today are often media events in a second sense:
information and communication technologies have developed to such a
point that these groups can film, edit, and upload their own
attacks within minutes of staging them, whether the Western media
are present or not. In this radically new information environment,
the enemy no longer depends on traditional media. This is the
"YouTube War." This monograph methodically lays out the nature of
this new environment in terms of its implications for a war against
media-savvy insurgents, and then considers possible courses of
action for the Army and the U.S. military as they seek to respond
to an enemy that has proven enormously adaptive to this new
environment and the new type of warfare it enables.
|
You may like...
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R459
Discovery Miles 4 590
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.