Earlier this year, members of the Strategic Studies Group, which is headquartered here at the Naval War College, had the good fortune to hear firsthand of Brigadier General James M. Mead\u27s experiences commanding forces in Lebanon. We were struck by his vivid description of the constant interchange that he, as commander of Marine forces ashore, had with Ambassador Philip Habib as they frantically scrambled to define and protect our nation\u27s interests during that crisis
Media-military relations have always been rocky; the basic explanation is that the natures and goals...
Let us assume that we know pretty well what our objectives are, what the objectives of our adversary...
As part of the Naval Presence mission, victory became dependent not on the actual warfare capabiliti...
How informed are civilian leaders when they choose to commit the military instrument? How well does ...
The American policy switch from confrontation to negotiation can be characterized as a policy of con...
As I reflect on my personal career in the field of military force and national security, I wish I co...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...
Almost as significant as the defeat of Iraq in the recent Gulf war was the United Nations\u27 role i...
President Bush’s announcement of his vision for a new national security strategy for the post-Cold W...
For more than thirty years the security of Western Europe has been built upon the link with the Unit...
Huntington held that the American constitutional system inevitably draws military leaders into the p...
On these pages in the Summer 1991 edition of the Naval War College Review, I offered several thought...
Nuclear stalemate and its most recent manifestation, détente, have led the United States to adopt a ...
Since the end or World War II there has been an increased awareness of the expanded and vital role t...
During the past 44 years the U.S.-Soviet relationship has been stalemated. Our preoccupation with co...
Media-military relations have always been rocky; the basic explanation is that the natures and goals...
Let us assume that we know pretty well what our objectives are, what the objectives of our adversary...
As part of the Naval Presence mission, victory became dependent not on the actual warfare capabiliti...
How informed are civilian leaders when they choose to commit the military instrument? How well does ...
The American policy switch from confrontation to negotiation can be characterized as a policy of con...
As I reflect on my personal career in the field of military force and national security, I wish I co...
The extraordinary commitment of naval forces to the Persian Gulf since June 1987 raises a number of ...
Almost as significant as the defeat of Iraq in the recent Gulf war was the United Nations\u27 role i...
President Bush’s announcement of his vision for a new national security strategy for the post-Cold W...
For more than thirty years the security of Western Europe has been built upon the link with the Unit...
Huntington held that the American constitutional system inevitably draws military leaders into the p...
On these pages in the Summer 1991 edition of the Naval War College Review, I offered several thought...
Nuclear stalemate and its most recent manifestation, détente, have led the United States to adopt a ...
Since the end or World War II there has been an increased awareness of the expanded and vital role t...
During the past 44 years the U.S.-Soviet relationship has been stalemated. Our preoccupation with co...
Media-military relations have always been rocky; the basic explanation is that the natures and goals...
Let us assume that we know pretty well what our objectives are, what the objectives of our adversary...
As part of the Naval Presence mission, victory became dependent not on the actual warfare capabiliti...