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This volume offers the first detailed statement by a contingent of
RAND thinkers on the contours of a redefined Atlantic partnership.
In the world emerging since the end of the Cold War, the United
States and Europe have strikingly common global security and
economic interests. But their ability to advance those interests,
together, depends on the willingness of Europe to take on greater
responsibilities, the willingness of the United States to share
leadership, and the vision of both to form a far more ambitious
partnership than the one of today's official policies. This work
will interest policy and research audiences in world affairs,
global business readers, and others engaged in or thinking about
America's international role and relations.
This collection of essays collectively offers detailed statements
by a contingent of RAND analysts on the contours of a redefined
Atlantic partnership. In the wake of the end of the Cold War, the
authors point to the viability of shifting particular financial,
strategic, political, and other responsibilities from America to
Europe without jeopardising either areas defence. Individual
chapters explore economic features of the proposed partnership,
projected changes in NATO, challenges on Europe's eastern periphery
and the greater Middle East, and desireable shifts in institutions
and policies from European and American perspectives. The essays
represent the culmination of several years of work at RAND on the
subject of NATO enlargement and restructuring of the Atlantic
Alliance. The work should be of interest to policy and research
audiences in international relations, security analysis, political
science, and European and American studies.
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Terrorism Net Assessment
Terrence K. Kelly, David C. Gompert, Karen M Sudkamp
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R379
Discovery Miles 3 790
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) is investing heavily in
information systems to support net-centric military capabilities
and joint operations. With such programs as Global Information Grid
Bandwidth Expansion (GIG-BE), Transformational Satellite
Communications Systems (TSAT), Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS),
and Net Centric Enterprise Services (NCES), DOD is creating a
global information backbone and striving to get useful bandwidth
and information services to the warfighter. After declining in the
1990s, spending on communications and intelligence has grown by 50
percent since 2001. Yet, the investment in networks still is not
enough to harness the full power of information for national
defense.
China's emergence begs a fresh look at power in the world
affairs-more precisely, at how the spread of freedom and the
integration of the global economy, due to the information
revolution, are affecting the nature, concentration, and purpose of
power. Perhaps such a luck could improve the odds of responding
wisely to China's rise.
The U.S. defense sector is not experiencing economic gains from the
use of IT like those of other IT-rich sectors. In the economy at
large, remarkable improvements in IT price-performance over the
last quarter-century have yielded greater productivity and better
IT-based products and services at lower costs. In contrast,
increased defense capabilities, despite their growing IT content,
have meant increased costs.
The second half of the 20th century featured a strategic
competition between the United States and the Soviet Union. That
competition avoided World War III in part because during the 1950s,
scholars like Henry Kissinger, Thomas Schelling, Herman Kahn, and
Albert Wohlstetter analyzed the fundamental nature of nuclear
deterrence. Decades of arms control negotiations reinforced these
early notions of stability and created a mutual understanding that
allowed U.S.-Soviet competition to proceed without armed conflict.
The first half of the 21st century will be dominated by the
relationship between the United States and China. That relationship
is likely to contain elements of both cooperation and competition.
Territorial disputes such as those over Taiwan and the South China
Sea will be an important feature of this competition, but both are
traditional disputes, and traditional solutions suggest themselves.
A more difficult set of issues relates to U.S.-Chinese competition
and cooperation in three domains in which real strategic harm can
be inflicted in the current era: nuclear, space, and cyber. Just as
a clearer understanding of the fundamental principles of nuclear
deterrence maintained adequate stability during the Cold War, a
clearer understanding of the characteristics of these three domains
can provide the underpinnings of strategic stability between the
United States and China in the decades ahead. That is what this
book is about. David Gompert and Phillip Saunders assess the
prospect of U.S.- Chinese competition in these domains and develop
three related analytic findings upon which their recommendations
are built. The first is that in each domain, the offense is
dominant. The second is that each side will be highly vulnerable to
a strike from the other side. And the third is that the retaliating
side will still be able to do unacceptable damage to the initiating
party. Therefore, the authors make an important recommendation:
that the United States propose a comprehensive approach based on
mutual restraint whereby it and China can mitigate their growing
strategic vulnerabilities. Unlike the Cold War, this mutual
restraint regime may not take the form of binding treaties. But
patterns of understanding and restraint may be enough to maintain
stability. Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs,
Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense
University Press.
Published by the National Defense University, Institute for
National Strategic Studies, Center for the Study of Chinese
Military Affairs. From the foreword by Hans Binnendijk: "The first
half of the 21st century will be dominated by the relationship
between the United States and China. That relationship is likely to
contain elements of both cooperation and competition. Territorial
disputes such as those over Taiwan and the South China Sea will be
an important feature of this competition, but both are traditional
disputes, and traditional solutions suggest themselves. A more
difficult set of issues relates to U.S.-Chinese competition and
cooperation in three domains in which real strategic harm can be
inflicted in the current era: nuclear, space, and cyber. Just as a
clearer understanding of the fundamental principles of nuclear
deterrence maintained adequate stability during the Cold War, a
clearer understanding of the characteristics of these three domains
can provide the underpinnings of strategic stability between the
United States and China in the decades ahead. That is what this
book is about. David Gompert and Phillip Saunders assess the
prospect of U.S.- Chinese competition in these domains and develop
three related analytic findings upon which their recommendations
are built. The first is that in each domain, the offense is
dominant. The second is that each side will be highly vulnerable to
a strike from the other side. And the third is that the retaliating
side will still be able to do unacceptable damage to the initiating
party. Therefore, the authors make an important recommendation:
that the United States propose a comprehensive approach based on
mutual restraint whereby it and China can mitigate their growing
strategic vulnerabilities. Unlike the Cold War, this mutual
restraint regime may not take the form of binding treaties. But
patterns of understanding and restraint may be enough to maintain
stability."
The probability of conflict between the United States and China
over Taiwan has diminished in recent years. The chief potential
flashpoint for war, a Taiwanese declaration of independence, has
become less likely as Taiwan's independence movement has waned and
economic ties with the mainland have strengthened. Should the
independence movement in Taiwan regain political momentum, however,
the potential for U.S. military intervention in the Taiwan Strait
would increase. Further, the perception of U.S. vulnerability in
the region could invite assertiveness. So, despite the fact that
armed conflict between the United States and China is in no one's
interest, China's burgeoning power requires that critical factor
sin U.S. plans for the defense of Taiwan be examined. This
collection of essays offers just such an examination. It looks at
China's growing strength, the strategies underlying U.S. plans for
military intervention in the Strait, U.S. vulnerabilities, and
options for how these vulnerabilities might be overcome through the
development of new technologies and strategies. The U.S. defense
commitment to Taiwan, thought tacit and conditional, has been a
long-standing strategic constant. America's ability to prevent the
invasion or coercion of Taiwan, however, is more variable. As the
Defense Department's most recent report to Congress on Chinese
military power indicates, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) has
embarked on a concerted effort to modernize, with the goal of being
able to conduct (and counter) the sort of rapid, precise,
information-intensive operations of which the U.S. military is now
capable. Of particular concern in a Taiwan scenario is China's
growing ability to track, target, and destroy U.S. carrier strike
groups (CSGs), which are the fulcrum of American military strategy
in the region. The Defense Department reports that the PLA is
focused on targeting surface ships at long ranges, perhaps as far
as the "second island chain," east of Japan and as far south as
Guam. China is amassing the intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance (SR) and strike assets needed to conduct long-range
precision attacks. These growing capabilities are coupled with PLA
doctrine that emphasizes preemption and surprise attack; the
potential significance of this turn of thought was underscored by
China's January 2007 demonstration of antisatellite weapon. China's
growing capabilities demand that the United States carefully review
the evolving military balance in the western Pacific and consider
the implications for further strategy. Each essay addresses a key
part of the Taiwan intervention puzzle. The compilation moves from
an overview of U.S. strength and China's growing military abilities
(Gompert); to two pieces on China's present and future military
technology (Cheung) and personnel (Lo) resources; to an examination
of a particular threat to U.S. regional power, China's improving
ISR capabilities (Mulvenon); to a review of U.S. maritime
(McDevitt) and aerial (Shlapak) strengths and vulnerabilities; to a
piece on how some aerial vulnerabilities could be allayed with UAVs
(Libicki); to an analysis of U.S. options to better deter Chinese
aggression (Gompert and Long); to a forward-looking article on how
a new U.S. fleet architecture could change the balance of power in
a Taiwan Strait conflict (Johnson).
Considers potential Chinese responses to U.S. transformation
efforts and offers possible U.S. counterresponses. For the past
decade, Chinese military strategists have keenly observed the
changes in U.S. national strategy and military transformation. This
report examines the constraints, facilitators, and potential
options for Chinese responses to U.S. transformation efforts and
offers possible U.S. counterresponses (particularly in light of
whether Taiwan moves toward or away from formal independence).
This volume offers the first detailed statement by a contingent of
RAND thinkers on the contours of a redefined Atlantic partnership.
In the world emerging since the end of the Cold War, the United
States and Europe have strikingly common global security and
economic interests. But their ability to advance those interests,
together, depends on the willingness of Europe to take on greater
responsibilities, the willingness of the United States to share
leadership, and the vision of both to form a far more ambitious
partnership than the one of today's official policies. This work
will interest policy and research audiences in world affairs,
global business readers, and others engaged in or thinking about
America's international role and relations.
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