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This book, the final report of the Soviet Global Strategy Project,
describes the USSR's basic approach to the many states in Asia and
the Pacific Basin, including nations stretching from Japan to
Australia.
Soviet global strategy, long established and well understood by the
Kremlin leaders, is to intimidate weak and fearful governments,
exploit indigenous difficulties, disrupt social order, and promote
communist revolutions. In this volume, European and American
scholars describe the USSR's land and sea targets on and
surrounding West Europe, where t
This book, based on information consolidated to cover the calendar
years 1978 and 1979, assesses the power of nations in the
international context as a basis for planning American defense and
foreign policy. It suggests a realistic way of thinking about the
balance of power in the 1980s.
This book, the final report of the Soviet Global Strategy Project,
describes the USSR's basic approach to the many states in Asia and
the Pacific Basin, including nations stretching from Japan to
Australia.
The Korean War in Retrospect provides a compilation of
presentations from a conference sponsored by the Center for
National Security Law and the John Bassett Moore Society at the
University of Virginia Law School to celebrate the fortieth
anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War. The conference
brought together many scholars and participants from the war. They
dealt with many of the historical matters related to the war
beginning with its origins, while also dealing with the armistice
negotiations, and the failure of the war as a practice of
deterrence. However, the major focus falls on the nature and
ramifications of the war and what can be learned from the results
in the long term in regard to the practice of war and foreign
policy.
This study is a strategic assessment of the power of nations in the
world of the 1990s and recommendations as to the U.S. strategic
role appropriate to that world. Cline has created a formula that
describes territorial size, population, economic capability, and
military power for strategic purpose and national will. He
advocates that in the international arena, the United States should
take a defensive strategy, acting overseas only in incidents of
overt aggression, and then only in concert with a core group of
approximately twenty strategic associate states. The study presents
the United States as the only remaining superpower, with the heavy
responsibility of keeping democracy alive. Co-published with the
United States Global Strategy Council.
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