Our task today is to shape our defense capabilities to these changing strategic circumstances. In a world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war — in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped... Clinton and Post-Cold War Defenseedited by - 1996 - 197 pagesNo preview available - About this book
| 1990 - 680 pages
...a world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war, in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...of regional contingencies and peacetime presence, we know that our forces can be smaller. Secretary [of Defense] Cheney and General Powell [Chairman... | |
| United States. President (1989-1993 : Bush) - 1990 - 1072 pages
...a world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war, in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...of regional contingencies and peacetime presence, we know that our forces can be smaller. Secretary Cheney and General Powell are hard at work determining... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Armed Services - 1991 - 566 pages
...world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war — in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...needs of regional contingencies and peacetime presence —we know that our forces can be smaller." The national security strategy is evolving from one of... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1991 - 1302 pages
...world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war — in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...needs of regional contingencies and peacetime presence — we know that our forces can be smaller ... we calculate that by 1995 our security needs can be... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Armed Services - 1991 - 570 pages
...world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war -- in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...needs of regional contingencies and peacetime presence -- we know thai our forces can be smaller." The national security strategy is evolving from one of... | |
| Michael T. Klare - 1995 - 306 pages
...officials. "In a world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war," he noted, "the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped by the needs of regional conflict and peacetime [military] presence [abroad]." In line with this new posture, with its emphasis... | |
| 1989
...world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war — in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...needs of regional contingencies and peacetime presence — we know that our forces can be smaller. Secretary (of Defense Dick) Cheney and Gen. (Colin) Powell... | |
| Sam Charles Sarkesian, Robert E. Connor - 1999 - 244 pages
...well demonstrated in the Gulf War in 1991 . In a speech at Aspen, Colorado, in August 1990, President Bush outlined a broad strategy for 'reshaping our...today's world as in the time of conflict and Cold War.12 Elaborating on the president's statement, Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney proposed four major... | |
| Donald Kagan, Frederick W. Kagan - 2000 - 498 pages
...world less driven by an immediate threat to Europe and the danger of global war — in a world where the size of our forces will increasingly be shaped...needs of regional contingencies and peacetime presence — we know that our forces can be smaller. . . . [W]e calculate that by 1995 our security needs can... | |
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