Since the early 1980s the concept of non-offensive defence has gained considerable support in peace movements as well as among peace researchers in Western Europe. The debate has, however, become a ’for ’ and ’against ’ argument, while fundamental analytical questions have been left aside. This article deals with the nature of the premises for the implementation of defence policy alternatives based on specific technologies with assumed political and strategic effects. The distinction between offensive and defensive appears, in a historical perspective, as far more complex than assumed in the current debate. The concept of non-offensive defence presupposes that these distinctions can be handled through conscious and rational choices. Researc...
The problem addressed in this paper is not fundamentally new or exclusive for it contains a historic...
This paper presents a theoretical determination of air and anti-air operations as a symbiotic unity ...
Critics of international relations research point out that most theories of war have paid too much a...
The article argues that the most important cut in the range of possible reactions to an attack is no...
Alternative military defence can be regarded both as a concept for a general change in military stru...
Increasing levels of destructiveness inherent in nuclear weapons or even ’improved ’ conventional we...
Weaponry and concepts (that is to say, combat theory, or more specifically, doctrine regarding the p...
According to the international relations literature, the security dilemma poses a significant threat...
Contrary to the impression that the interest in strategic defence and security issues has increased ...
The two part system — NATO and WTO — is presently locked into a mutually provoke...
In this article, some opinions regarding the between military sciences (and also technologies) and t...
Abstract: Blending all available national assets to wage war is not a new concept. Integration of di...
This dissertation addresses the rarely examined issue of disqualification of weapons from the battle...
In the last two decades, the expression “asymmetric warfare” has been generally adopted with an inno...
The rapid changes in the political and technological arenas occurring today are fostering significan...
The problem addressed in this paper is not fundamentally new or exclusive for it contains a historic...
This paper presents a theoretical determination of air and anti-air operations as a symbiotic unity ...
Critics of international relations research point out that most theories of war have paid too much a...
The article argues that the most important cut in the range of possible reactions to an attack is no...
Alternative military defence can be regarded both as a concept for a general change in military stru...
Increasing levels of destructiveness inherent in nuclear weapons or even ’improved ’ conventional we...
Weaponry and concepts (that is to say, combat theory, or more specifically, doctrine regarding the p...
According to the international relations literature, the security dilemma poses a significant threat...
Contrary to the impression that the interest in strategic defence and security issues has increased ...
The two part system — NATO and WTO — is presently locked into a mutually provoke...
In this article, some opinions regarding the between military sciences (and also technologies) and t...
Abstract: Blending all available national assets to wage war is not a new concept. Integration of di...
This dissertation addresses the rarely examined issue of disqualification of weapons from the battle...
In the last two decades, the expression “asymmetric warfare” has been generally adopted with an inno...
The rapid changes in the political and technological arenas occurring today are fostering significan...
The problem addressed in this paper is not fundamentally new or exclusive for it contains a historic...
This paper presents a theoretical determination of air and anti-air operations as a symbiotic unity ...
Critics of international relations research point out that most theories of war have paid too much a...