Our New National Security Strategy: America Promises to Come Back
By (Author) James J. Tritten
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th September 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
War and defence operations
Central / national / federal government policies
355
Hardback
208
This text is an analysis of President Bush's regional defence strategy first unveiled in Aspen, Colorado, on August 2 1990. This strategy involves a mix of active, reserve and reconstitutable forces, and General Colin Powell's Base Force. If implemented, the new strategy and force structure would return significant US ground and air forces to the continental United States where most would be demobilized. In the event of a major crisis, the United States would rely on active and reserve forces for a contingency response, much as was done for Operation Desert Storm. The new national security strategy is based upon the 25 percent budget cut negotiated with Congress, a greatly depleted Russian threat, and a new international security environment that assumes two-years' warning of a European-centred global war with the former USSR. There are four major critical factors upon which the new strategy depends - the continued decline of the Russians as a threat to world stability; the ability of the intelligence community to meet new challenges; the behaviour of the allies and congress; and the ability of industry to meet new demands. The new strategy is not simply an adjustment to existing defence doctrine or strategy, but rather a fundamental revision of the way the United States has approached defence since 1945. Students and scholars interested in politico-military strategy and government policy should find this book of great interest.
Those charged with making further adjustments to a new world and its changed defense needs could profit from this glance at recent history.-Foreign Affairs
"Those charged with making further adjustments to a new world and its changed defense needs could profit from this glance at recent history."-Foreign Affairs
JAMES JOHN TRITTEN has served as the chairman of the Department of National Security Affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School and as Assistant Director, Net Assessment, in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. He is a retired Naval officer and Naval aviator who held subspecialty ratings in strategic planning, joint intelligence, and the Soviet Union. He has done research for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, the National Security Council Staff, the Defense Nuclear Agency, and the RAND Corporation.