Murray Weidenbaum discusses ways to reduce military spending in the 1990s.https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/mlw_papers/1021/thumbnail.jp
How do defense institutions adjust to reductions in budgets amid an epoch of upheaval? This process ...
In this defense strategy and budget book, Michael O\u27Hanlon argues that America\u27s large defense...
The U.S. defense industry is at a fork in the road and faces the prospect of substantial declines. T...
With the end of the Cold War looming, this essay argues that military spending has been decreasing f...
The period from 1980 to 1985 marked the largest peacetime military build-up in United States history...
The U.S. defense industry is adjusting to the end of the Cold War far more rapidly and effectively t...
View the Executive SummaryAs military conflicts come to an end, it is not uncommon for societies to ...
Although the bottom is not about to fall out of the military market, a tough period of belt tighteni...
Economist Murray Weidenbaum presents his outlook on the U.S. economy as it transitions from the long...
The impact of the end of the Cold War on United States foreign and defense policy in the 1990s is fr...
The challenge now is to prepare for non-specific and changing threats that require robust response c...
Defining National Policies: An Evermore Difficult Problem. In 1977, the economic, diplomatic and, in...
Such was the extent of the United States’ dominance in the arena of military capability over the las...
Murray Weidenbaum discusses the relationship between defense spending and the national economy
During the height of the Cold War, the United States Department of Defense had a focused acquisition...
How do defense institutions adjust to reductions in budgets amid an epoch of upheaval? This process ...
In this defense strategy and budget book, Michael O\u27Hanlon argues that America\u27s large defense...
The U.S. defense industry is at a fork in the road and faces the prospect of substantial declines. T...
With the end of the Cold War looming, this essay argues that military spending has been decreasing f...
The period from 1980 to 1985 marked the largest peacetime military build-up in United States history...
The U.S. defense industry is adjusting to the end of the Cold War far more rapidly and effectively t...
View the Executive SummaryAs military conflicts come to an end, it is not uncommon for societies to ...
Although the bottom is not about to fall out of the military market, a tough period of belt tighteni...
Economist Murray Weidenbaum presents his outlook on the U.S. economy as it transitions from the long...
The impact of the end of the Cold War on United States foreign and defense policy in the 1990s is fr...
The challenge now is to prepare for non-specific and changing threats that require robust response c...
Defining National Policies: An Evermore Difficult Problem. In 1977, the economic, diplomatic and, in...
Such was the extent of the United States’ dominance in the arena of military capability over the las...
Murray Weidenbaum discusses the relationship between defense spending and the national economy
During the height of the Cold War, the United States Department of Defense had a focused acquisition...
How do defense institutions adjust to reductions in budgets amid an epoch of upheaval? This process ...
In this defense strategy and budget book, Michael O\u27Hanlon argues that America\u27s large defense...
The U.S. defense industry is at a fork in the road and faces the prospect of substantial declines. T...