Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1989: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 4781 ....U.S. Government Printing Office, 1988 |
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Page 8
... ability to respond to aggression against our interests , we also avoid specifying the nature of our response . This is the essence of the doctrine of " flexible response " that serves as the foundation of U.S. and NATO strategy . Since ...
... ability to respond to aggression against our interests , we also avoid specifying the nature of our response . This is the essence of the doctrine of " flexible response " that serves as the foundation of U.S. and NATO strategy . Since ...
Page 26
... ability to intercept_targets within the atmosphere and space has been demonstrated . There have been significant advances in several directed energy and sensor technologies as well as in system architecture and operating concepts . Six ...
... ability to intercept_targets within the atmosphere and space has been demonstrated . There have been significant advances in several directed energy and sensor technologies as well as in system architecture and operating concepts . Six ...
Page 101
... ability of Reserve components generally to accept additional or expanded missions . The original FY 1988/89 budget request sought a total of 40,500 additional personnel for the Reserve components . Since 1980 , the total strength of the ...
... ability of Reserve components generally to accept additional or expanded missions . The original FY 1988/89 budget request sought a total of 40,500 additional personnel for the Reserve components . Since 1980 , the total strength of the ...
Page 108
... ability of U.S. forces to deter war . If the improvement of U.S. forces does not continue because of reduced defense spending , the Soviets will achieve even greater advantages . The risk will therefore increase of the U.S. not being ...
... ability of U.S. forces to deter war . If the improvement of U.S. forces does not continue because of reduced defense spending , the Soviets will achieve even greater advantages . The risk will therefore increase of the U.S. not being ...
Page 114
... ability to operate continuously at the cutting edge of national security policy at any level of conflict . Indeed , for our Navy and Marine Corps , a " decade of neglect " has been reversed . But , just as a nation must use care in ...
... ability to operate continuously at the cutting edge of national security policy at any level of conflict . Indeed , for our Navy and Marine Corps , a " decade of neglect " has been reversed . But , just as a nation must use care in ...
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Common terms and phrases
active component active duty active forces additional Air Force Reserve Air National Guard aircraft AirLand Battle airlift ANSWER appropriation areas armor Army National Guard Army Reserve Army's ARNG aviation battalion budget request capability Chairman civilian command Congress continue cost Department of Defense deployed deployment deterrence end strength equipment facilities fighter Fiscal Year 1989 fleet force structure Full-Time Support funding FY 1989 budget growth Guard and Reserve helicopters improved increase Individual Ready Reserve INF Treaty logistics MAGTF manpower Marine Corps Reserve military million missile mission mobilization modernization NATO Naval Reserve Navy officers operation and maintenance OPTEMPO percent Pershing II personnel priority procurement projected QUESTION recruiting reductions requirements Reserve Component Reserve Force Reserve units Reservists scheduled Selected Reserve Senator JOHNSTON Senator STEVENS ships SINCGARS soldiers Soviet squadrons strategic tactical tank threat Total Force vehicles VUONO warfighting wartime weapons