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Just over six decades ago, the United States was a nation trying to
adhere to a largely isolationist outlook, the potential power of
the atom was yet to be fully realized and had certainly not been
weaponized, and the defense of our nation was entrusted to a
secretary of war and a secretary of Navy. The many changes in the
years since World War II have been spectacular and fundamental.
There is a fascinating interconnectivity among at least three
threads that run through that period. The role of nuclear weapons,
the rise of an independent Air Force, and the shaping of national
and international security through arms-control agreements have all
had their most profound development in this time frame. The
relation between the newly created Air Force in 1947 and the
growing reliance by this country on nuclear weapons for deterrence
and defense is a well-known story. The impetus that these nuclear
devices gave to negotiations on arms control is also well-covered
ground; although, of course, arms-control encompasses more than
nuclear armaments. How about a third connection? Where has the Air
Force been in the arms control arena? Is it a story of interest? I
submit that it is an important story and the history of the United
States Air Force is fundamentally incomplete without recounting how
the junior service has shaped various arms treaties and been shaped
by them. This book is about arms control, so it is most appropriate
to begin with a discussion of arms control as a construct within US
national security policy during the Cold War and in its immediate
aftermath. The classic description of arms control as a strategic
policy construct remains that of Thomas Schelling and Morton
Halperin in their seminal 1961 work, Strategy and Arms Control. We
believe that arms control is a promising . . . enlargement of the
scope of our military strategy. It rests essentially on the
recognition that our military relation with potential enemies is
not one of pure conflict and opposition, but involves strong
elements of mutual interest in the avoidance of a war that neither
side wants, in minimizing the costs and risks of the arms
competition, and in curtailing the scope and violence of war in the
event it occurs.
Are you searching for spiritual inspiration due to a terminal
illness or in need of consolation due to the loss of a loved one,
the loss of your job or the loss of your home? Then read Joy Cometh
in the Morning, A Compilation of Inspirational Verses from The Holy
Bible New Testament in the King James Version and allow yourself to
be comforted by God's Word and His Amazing Grace
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