Clinton and Post-Cold War Defense
The experts raise many provocative questions and varying conclusions about the problems and prospects for the United States and for the post-Cold War era. Advanced undergraduate and graduate students and teachers should find that this hard-hitting analysis stimulates discussion, and military experts and policymakers should find this of real interest also. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 53
Don M. Snider and Andrew J. Kelly suggest that there are reasons to worry about the future legacy of Clinton's de- fense program , if not the immediate present . They note that even the BUR modernization goals remain underfunded ...
Even Russia wanted to join NATO ( sort of ) , although some suspected that it really wanted a droit de regard over NATO's future expansion . Into this confused milieu the Clinton administration sailed with rea- sonable skill , tacking ...
According to Sam C. Sarkesian , the future strategic landscape is marked by several prominent features . First , the international system is in the process of changing from a system driven by superpower relations to one driven by ...
Baker predicts an uncertain future for Clinton defense budget policy- making , caught between defense hawks and deficit hawks on Capitol Hill . Paul R. Viotti reminds us that fundamental questions about U.S. civil- military relations ...
A pos- sible future glut of base and post housing for a downsized force may result in proportionately more military personnel living on government installations instead of within local communities . According to Viotti , volunteer ...
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Contents
1 | |
Defense Budgets and the Clinton Defense Program | 15 |
Defense Planning for the PostCold War Era Bush Clinton and Beyond | 29 |
Clinton Defense Policy and Nuclear Weapons | 49 |
Working with Allies Clinton Defense Policy and the Management of Multilateralism | 71 |
Peacekeeping Peace Enforcement and Clinton Defense Policy | 87 |
Special Operations LowIntensity Conflict Unconventional Conflicts and the Clinton Defense Strategy | 103 |
Clinton Defense PolicyMaking Players Process and Policiesr | 123 |
CivilMilitary Relations After the Cold War Integrating the Armed Forces and American Society | 139 |
Clinton and US Peacekeeping | 153 |
Conclusions | 169 |
Selected Bibliography | 183 |
Index | 187 |
About the Contributors | 194 |