| Robert Litwak - 1984 - 244 pages
...values. Arnold Wolfers has observed that within Lippmann's conception of national security 'a nation is secure to the extent to which it is not in danger...challenged, to maintain them by victory in such a way.'9 Thus, while rejecting the universalist orientation of the Truman Doctrine, Lippmann unabashedly... | |
| Antonio Cassese - 1986 - 554 pages
...and independence. W. Lippmann, consequently came to the definition of national security: 'a nation is secure to the extent to which it is not in danger...challenged, to maintain them by victory in such a war10'. It is a definition which has to be revised in view of the fact that in a war between the two... | |
| Joseph J. Romm - 1993 - 136 pages
...Lippmann (1943): "A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war, and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war." • National Security Council (1950s): "To preserve the United States as a free nation with our... | |
| Joel E. Cohen - 1996 - 548 pages
...definition in 1943: "A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war, and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war."27 Richard Ullmann, a political scientist at Princeton University, gave a broader definition forty... | |
| Keith Krause - 2005 - 404 pages
...the fundamental realist assumption best summed up by Walter Lippmann half a century ago: "A nation is secure to the extent to which it is not in danger...challenged, to maintain them by victory in such a war." 11 Lippmann's definition, as Arnold Wolfers pointed out, "implies that security rises and falls with... | |
| Adebayo Oyebade, Abiodun Alao - 1998 - 244 pages
...is about the possession by a state of a level of military capability sufficient enough to avert the danger of having to sacrifice core values, if it wishes...challenged, to maintain them by victory in such a war.' Arnold Wolfer further reinforces this line of thought. According to him: security, in an objective... | |
| David L. Sills, Robert King Merton - 2000 - 466 pages
...(1922) 1965:229. e A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war. US Foreign Policy 1943:51. Seymour Martin Lipset 1922US sociologist and political scientist i... | |
| Britannica - 460 pages
...following definition: "A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war." Another well-known definition holds that national security is the "ability of a nation to protect... | |
| Rajpal Budania - 2001 - 324 pages
...Lippmann noted: "A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war."2 This kind of an understanding of national security suited stable nation-states of the industrialized... | |
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