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Title American grand strategy after war / compiled by Ionut C. Popescu and Dallas D. Owens.

Imprint [Carlisle, PA] : Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, [2009]

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Federal Documents Online  D 101.146/15:ST 2/2    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource (4 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Series Colloquium brief
Colloquium brief.
Note Title from PDF title screen (viewed December 1, 2010).
Monograph.
Access Approved for public release.
Summary The Triangle Institute for Security Studies (TISS), the Duke University Program in American Grand Strategy, and the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College (USAWC) conducted a colloquium and recognition of TISS's 50th anniversary at the Duke University and University of North Carolina campuses on February 26-28, 2009. The colloquium, entitled "American Grand Strategy after War," examined debates over grand strategy after World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and the Cold War, and grand strategies likely to follow U.S. involvement in Iraq. A panel was devoted to each period and consisted of a summarization of a draft paper by its author and a critique by two panelists who had received the paper at an earlier date. Key insights are as follows: since World War II, each American war has been followed by a period of grand strategy reassessment; the degree to which the Nation's leaders have felt the need to revise grand strategy has depended in part upon the degree to which the preceding conflict led to adverse consequences, and in part upon the level of perceived danger in the new strategic environment; the locus for grand strategy reassessment is the U.S. President; presidents have varied in their perception of the need for reassessment and in their effectiveness in conducting and implementing reassessments; it is difficult to apply lessons gained from previous reassessments to the post-Iraq period without knowing the strategic environment of that future period; President Obama has not previously been involved in the formulation of grand strategy, making it difficult to predict either what his grand strategy will be, or the likelihood of its success; we get some hints of its content from campaign statements and subsequent policies
Subject Military doctrine -- United States -- Congresses.
United States -- Military policy -- Congresses.
Strategy -- Congresses.
History.
Foreign policy.
Lessons learned.
President(U.S.)
Postwar.
Military doctrine. (OCoLC)fst01021106
Military policy. (OCoLC)fst01021386
Strategy. (OCoLC)fst01134406
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Government and political science.
Humanities and history.
Military operations, strategy and tactics.
Cold war.
Counterterrorism.
Perception(psychology)
Communism.
Democracy.
Korean war.
Second world war.
Vietnam war.
Strategic analysis.
Leadership.
Symposia.
Nato.
Iraqi war.
Ussr.
Indexed Term ROOSEVELT FRANKLIN D
TRUMAN HARRY S
EISENHOWER DWIGHT D
FORD GERALD R
CARTER JIMMY
BUSH GEORGE H W
CLINTON WILLIAM J
BUSH GEORGE W
OBAMA BARACK
Genre/Form Congresses.
Conference papers and proceedings. (OCoLC)fst01423772
Added Author Popescu, Ionut C.
Owens, Dallas (Dallas D.)
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute.
Standard No. DTICE ADA499500
Gpo Item No. 0307-A-54 (online)
Sudoc No. D 101.146/15:ST 2/2

 
    
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