Arctic Leverage: Canadian Sovereignty and Security
By (Author) Nathanl F. Caldwell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th August 1990
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
355.033071
Hardback
144
Sovereignty has been a major and obsessive ingredient in Canadian defense policy. Arctic Leverage: Canadian Sovereignty and Security explores its historical development. How have territorial sovereignty concerns affected Canadian defense policy and its defense relationship with the United States With the Arctic Archipelago, Canada possesses a geostrategic buffer between two superpowers, and claiming jurisdiction over its waters, has run afoul of U.S. policy that designates the Northwest Passage as a strait vital to the interest of the United States. French Caldwell examines Canada's objectives: were the nuclear attack submarine program and three ocean concept intended to increase Canada's voice in collective security beyond its contribution A valuable study for defense policy experts and strategic policy makers, this volume explores the fascinating role strategic real estate (the Arctic) plays in defense relationships. Arctic Leverage is the first thorough study of the interrelationship of Canada and the United States with respect to the Arctic. Taking an historical perspective Caldwell covers: the establishment of sovereignty in the Arctic Archipelago; motivation for and establishment of the U.S./Canadian defense relationship; the role of territorial sovereignty in defense policy; the strategic significance of the three ocean concept; sovereignty and security implications of announcing and then writing off the nuclear submarine program; and the 1987 White Paper after Canada's 1989-90 budget cuts.
This short, uncomplicated little volume will introduce the reader to the goals and problems that Canadians have been struggling with during their attempts to formulate a defense policy for their country. It especially examines this subject from the viewpoint of how Canadian defense policy has fostered national sovereignty and how the Canadian Arctic region has played a part in shaping such policy....-The Friday Review of Defense Literature
"This short, uncomplicated little volume will introduce the reader to the goals and problems that Canadians have been struggling with during their attempts to formulate a defense policy for their country. It especially examines this subject from the viewpoint of how Canadian defense policy has fostered national sovereignty and how the Canadian Arctic region has played a part in shaping such policy...."-The Friday Review of Defense Literature
NATHANIEL FRENCH CALDWELL, JR. is Executive Officer of the blue crew of the ballistic missile submarine USS Will Rogers (SSBN 659). He has written several articles in his field of strategic and international studies.