|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
What are the key factors that will shape the post-Soviet military
system? Leading experts assess the geostrategic context in which
leaders must operate, the nature of future war, foundations of
military power, dilemmas confronting a multinational military
force, problems in managing a nuclear arsenal, civil-military
relations, economic priorities and problems, and ethnic questions.
This current evaluation of how war and the Soviet Union are being
transformed is an invaluable study for students and experts in
military studies, political science, and the social sciences
generally. In this collection of important perspectives, Soviet
military elites and influential civilian policymakers discussed
what previous and present developments will require in the future.
This collaborative effort examines what Moscow sees as important
requirements. The study analyzes Soviet forecasting methodologies,
naval developments, views about theater warfare in Europe,
developments in C3I, the role of space, the Soviet military
economy, mobilization regimes, Soviet views on American military
thought, perspectives on the initial period of warfare and changes
in operational arts. Chapter endnotes and reference lists point to
major sources of Soviet scholarship.
This book, first published in 1993, examines the security concerns
of the Central European countries in the immediate aftermath of the
Cold War. The collapse of the Soviet Union brought considerable
uncertainty and instability to its satellite states, now free from
Moscow's influence. This collection of essays by leading Central
European experts analyses the problems and difficulties faced by
these countries, as well as the opportunities offered in forging
new security doctrines and alliances.
This book, first published in 1993, examines the security concerns
of the Central European countries in the immediate aftermath of the
Cold War. The collapse of the Soviet Union brought considerable
uncertainty and instability to its satellite states, now free from
Moscow's influence. This collection of essays by leading Central
European experts analyses the problems and difficulties faced by
these countries, as well as the opportunities offered in forging
new security doctrines and alliances.
|
|