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This book, first published in 1986, analyses a number of emerging,
enduring and neglected issues that affected European security and
the stability of the Atlantic Alliance at the end of the Cold War.
It provides a comprehensive review of the major political, social
and economic issues that shaped the course of European security. It
offers a thorough assessment of such critical questions as European
views of the US Strategic Defense Initiative, the contribution of
new technologies and tactics to NATO's conventional defence
capabilities, and domestic factors that influenced security policy.
It also provides original analysis of a number of issues, such as
economic dimensions of security, the quest for a European defence
identity, and protection of Western interests outside the NATO
area. It provides a review of the nuclear question and of the
German security debate in the aftermath of the initial US INF
missile deployments.
This book, first published in 1986, analyses a number of emerging,
enduring and neglected issues that affected European security and
the stability of the Atlantic Alliance at the end of the Cold War.
It provides a comprehensive review of the major political, social
and economic issues that shaped the course of European security. It
offers a thorough assessment of such critical questions as European
views of the US Strategic Defense Initiative, the contribution of
new technologies and tactics to NATO's conventional defence
capabilities, and domestic factors that influenced security policy.
It also provides original analysis of a number of issues, such as
economic dimensions of security, the quest for a European defence
identity, and protection of Western interests outside the NATO
area. It provides a review of the nuclear question and of the
German security debate in the aftermath of the initial US INF
missile deployments.
A review of the full range of recent official and non-official
schemes for improving NATO's conventional posture, from
exploitation of emerging technologies to non-provocative defences,
in the light of prevailing military, political, economic and
demographic trends.
The global war on terrorism has provided a new context for
relations between the United States and China. As the September
2002 National Security Strategy of the United States of America
makes clear, cooperation with China on a range of economic,
political, security, and military issues increasingly serves U.S.
interests. At the same time, this relationship retains elements of
competition and the potential for confrontation, compounded by a
legacy of periodic crises and mutual wariness. Achieving a national
consensus on an appropriate balance in U.S.-China relations,
especially in military-to-military affairs, remains a central
challenge for those who analyze, formulate, and implement America's
China policies.
Since 2001, the United States has endured a tumultuous period, one
dominated by the 9/11 attacks and all that has followed: the war on
terrorism, the Afghan and Iraqi campaigns, looming confrontations
with known or suspected proliferators of weapons of mass
destruction, and episodic explosions of mass violence in
chronically unstable regions. In this second half of the decade,
these and related strategic challenges will test the skill,
tenacity, and imagination of the current and the next U.S.
administration and the American public. How well these challenges
are managed then, or mastered, will greatly influence whether
future historians look back upon this decade as a dangerous passage
toward a more peaceful, globally connected order or as a descending
path into an ever more fragmented, violent world.This volume
explores seven looming, as yet unmastered strategic challenges
facing the United States. Each chapter tackles one of the following
challenges: tackling global terrorism, stopping WMD proliferation,
undertaking defense transformation, protecting the homeland,
strengthening relations with allies and partners, engaging other
major powers, and defusing conflicts in unstable regions. Each
chapter takes a similar approach: defining the problem at hand
(i.e., a short discussion of relevant trends); explicating current
U.S. efforts to master the challenge (i.e., U.S. objectives,
methods, degree of success or setbacks); and analyzing looming
choices that U.S. policymakers will face in the next decade and, as
appropriate, the consequences of alternative courses of action.
"Strategic Challenges" capitalizes on the great regional and
topical expertise of the INSS professional research staffto present
an authoritative overview of the global strategic environment
facing the United States.
The global war on terrorism has provided a new context for
relations between the United States and China. As the September
2002 National Security Strategy of the United States of America
makes clear, cooperation with China on a range of economic,
political, security, and military issues increasingly serves U. S.
interests. At the same time, this relationship retains elements of
competition and the potential for confrontation, compounded by a
legacy of periodic crises and mutual wariness. Achieving a national
consensus on an appropriate balance in U.S.-China relations,
especially in military-to-military affairs, remains a central
challenge for those who analyze, formulate, and implement America's
China policies. The distinguished contributors to this volume offer
fresh and sometimes divergent assessments of major trends in
Chinese society, national security policy, and military affairs as
the "fourth generation" of national leaders settles into the seats
of power. The essays examine leadership shifts under way in the
People's Liberation Army and how the Chinese armed forces are
coping with dramatic changes in economic and social life, the
Chinese Communist Party's search for relevance, developments in the
global security environment, and the revolution in military
affairs. Also explored are trends in civil-military relations,
growing Chinese nationalism, evolving PLA military capabilities,
Beijing's approach to key regional and global issues, the prospects
for U.S.-China relations and military-to-military cooperation, and
the implications of these developments for U. S. defense planning.
The People's Liberation Army and China in Transition provides
insights into critical issues that willimpact China, the
Asia-Pacific region, and world, and advances balanced assessments
of U. S. policy options. I trust readers will find that it makes a
valuable contribution to the ongoing national debate. Paul G.
Gaffney II Vice Admiral, USN President
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