The American policy switch from confrontation to negotiation can be characterized as a policy of conflict avoidance. Such a policy demands that U.S. military capabilities be directed toward the deterrence of conflict not only in the strategic nuclear, but at lesser levels of conventional conflict as well
There has, in recent years, developed a striking similarity between the rationales developed by both...
President Bush’s announcement of his vision for a new national security strategy for the post-Cold W...
Earlier this year, members of the Strategic Studies Group, which is headquartered here at the Naval ...
Observers of military affairs will have noted a changed naval lexicon over the past several years. T...
As part of the Naval Presence mission, victory became dependent not on the actual warfare capabiliti...
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...
The U.S. Navy’s traditional missions are generally less relevant today than in recent decades, becau...
Having been in retreat through most of the 1970s, the advocates of a mutual assured destruction appr...
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
At this stage in international relations, new priorities have clearly emerged. They are related not ...
Much attention has been given to the role of seapower and naval forces in the conduct of war. The Na...
It is a privilege and a real pleasure to be able to speak to you this morning, but it is with some t...
Let us assume that we know pretty well what our objectives are, what the objectives of our adversary...
Most people understand that the Nixon Doctrine involves a lowering of the U.S. profile throughout th...
There has, in recent years, developed a striking similarity between the rationales developed by both...
President Bush’s announcement of his vision for a new national security strategy for the post-Cold W...
Earlier this year, members of the Strategic Studies Group, which is headquartered here at the Naval ...
Observers of military affairs will have noted a changed naval lexicon over the past several years. T...
As part of the Naval Presence mission, victory became dependent not on the actual warfare capabiliti...
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...
The U.S. Navy’s traditional missions are generally less relevant today than in recent decades, becau...
Having been in retreat through most of the 1970s, the advocates of a mutual assured destruction appr...
Maritime strategy has always been concerned with the use of the sea for a purpose. In the modern wor...
At this stage in international relations, new priorities have clearly emerged. They are related not ...
Much attention has been given to the role of seapower and naval forces in the conduct of war. The Na...
It is a privilege and a real pleasure to be able to speak to you this morning, but it is with some t...
Let us assume that we know pretty well what our objectives are, what the objectives of our adversary...
Most people understand that the Nixon Doctrine involves a lowering of the U.S. profile throughout th...
There has, in recent years, developed a striking similarity between the rationales developed by both...
President Bush’s announcement of his vision for a new national security strategy for the post-Cold W...
Earlier this year, members of the Strategic Studies Group, which is headquartered here at the Naval ...