Emerging Powers: Defense and Security in the Third World
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
8th October 1986
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government policies
Political structure and processes
327.091724
Hardback
457
For those interested in a theoretical discussion of rising regional power and the future of the spread of modern weapons, this is an excellent primer.-American Journal of Neuroradiology
Published in cooperation with the Georgetown Center for Strategic and International Studies, this collection is not another theoretical contribution to small power motivation and strategic capacity, such as Sheila Harden's Small Is Dangerous or Marshall Singer's Weak States in a World of Powers. Although it offers a wealth of forecasts for potential conflicts, leadership motivations, and military capabilities in several emerging regional powers, this volume's real purpose is to remind us that although typically rooted in local causes and ... rivalries ... conflicts (in these countries) frequently injure Western interests and foster the extension of Soviet power and influence.' Although the book provides fascinating glimpses into command and control of nuclear forces in China, deployment of Soviet aircraft in India, and remilitarization in Mexico, the ideological narrowness of its framework detracts from consideration of questions salient to these nations' perceptions of their security interests. What are the likely consequences of military modernization on civilian control of the armed forces in Mexico Will US-Soviet nuclear arms control efforts placate Indian security concerns Will Chinese economic development lessen the motivation of the People's Republic of China to deploy a nuclear second-strike capacity Recommended only for highly specialized military studies collections.-Choice
"For those interested in a theoretical discussion of rising regional power and the future of the spread of modern weapons, this is an excellent primer."-American Journal of Neuroradiology
"Published in cooperation with the Georgetown Center for Strategic and International Studies, this collection is not another theoretical contribution to small power motivation and strategic capacity, such as Sheila Harden's Small Is Dangerous or Marshall Singer's Weak States in a World of Powers. Although it offers a wealth of forecasts for potential conflicts, leadership motivations, and military capabilities in several emerging regional powers, this volume's real purpose is to remind us that although typically rooted in local causes and ... rivalries ... conflicts (in these countries) frequently injure Western interests and foster the extension of Soviet power and influence.' Although the book provides fascinating glimpses into command and control of nuclear forces in China, deployment of Soviet aircraft in India, and remilitarization in Mexico, the ideological narrowness of its framework detracts from consideration of questions salient to these nations' perceptions of their security interests. What are the likely consequences of military modernization on civilian control of the armed forces in Mexico Will US-Soviet nuclear arms control efforts placate Indian security concerns Will Chinese economic development lessen the motivation of the People's Republic of China to deploy a nuclear second-strike capacity Recommended only for highly specialized military studies collections."-Choice
nes /f Rodney /i W. /r ed. dreth /f Steve /r ed.