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The Soviet Union remains a superpower with global security
interests and ambitions. The doctrines, practices, and capabilities
of its still formidable armed forces are shaping world politics
just at the same time that the future of the country that created
them is in doubt. This book, first published in 1991, analyses the
unprecedented changes, as well as the troubling continuities, that
characterized Soviet military thinking during the early 1990s. The
authors - a group of leading analysts in the US national security
community - confront the range of Soviet military strengths,
including intercontinental nuclear power, conventional ground, and
naval forces and special operations. They address questions of
Soviet weapons research and development, military planning and
policy making, and the role of civilian critics on Soviet military
objectives. Other chapters explore the Red Army's erosion in
Eastern Europe as well as the lessons of Afghanistan.
The Soviet Union remains a superpower with global security
interests and ambitions. The doctrines, practices, and capabilities
of its still formidable armed forces are shaping world politics
just at the same time that the future of the country that created
them is in doubt. This book, first published in 1991, analyses the
unprecedented changes, as well as the troubling continuities, that
characterized Soviet military thinking during the early 1990s. The
authors - a group of leading analysts in the US national security
community - confront the range of Soviet military strengths,
including intercontinental nuclear power, conventional ground, and
naval forces and special operations. They address questions of
Soviet weapons research and development, military planning and
policy making, and the role of civilian critics on Soviet military
objectives. Other chapters explore the Red Army's erosion in
Eastern Europe as well as the lessons of Afghanistan.
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