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Advanced Metrology: Freeform Surfaces provides the perfect guide
for engineering designers and manufacturers interested in exploring
the benefits of this technology. The inclusion of industrial case
studies and examples will help readers to implement these
techniques which are being developed across different industries as
they offer improvements to the functional performance of products
and reduce weight and cost.
It has been said, some would agree by wiser men than I, that in
order for evil to flourish, all that is needed is for good men to
do nothing.
Global-Reach Regime Replacement, alternately referred to as GR3, is
a proposed method to forcibly remove a threatening regime from
power, replace it with a new government, and conduct appropriate
levels of stability and reconstruction operations in the aftermath.
As the name implies, GR3 is designed for prompt action with global
operational reach. The monograph examines the hypothesis that the
Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan (JSCP) should assign
responsibility for GR3 to United States Strategic Command
(USSTRATCOM).
Global-Reach Regime Replacement, alternately referred to as GR3, is
a proposed method to forcibly remove a threatening regime from
power, replace it with a new government, and conduct appropriate
levels of stability and reconstruction operations in the aftermath.
As the name implies, GR3 is designed for prompt action with global
operational reach. The monograph examines the hypothesis that the
Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan (JSCP) should assign
responsibility for GR3 to United States Strategic Command
(USSTRATCOM). Within the context of the contemporary operating
environment, the GR3 concept is evaluated against the criteria of
feasibility, acceptability, and suitability. GR3 fully satisfies
each of the criteria. No investment is required other than the time
required to develop a standing GR3 plan. Additionally, GR3 provides
comparative advantages over military methods that require the
build-up of conventional forces before the commencement of
operations. In the last twenty years, the United States has
employed military means to force regime change in Panama, Haiti,
Afghanistan, and Iraq. Drawing upon analysis of these operations,
the resulting primary recommendation is that the JSCP should task
USSTRATCOM to develop GR3 into a supporting plan ready for
implementation by the geographic combatant commanders. No plan for
GR3 currently exists. Yet in an environment of uncertainty where
threats from far-flung regimes may quickly surface, it is a
capability invaluable to the security of the United States. The
flexibility and agility of GR3 provide a method for swift action
against regimes that threaten the vital interests of the United
States. Additionally, it also brings the capability to expand
legitimate governance should regime replacement become necessary.
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