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WAR STRATEGY - US (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   125388


Evolution of the U.S. nuclear war plan: continuity and changes in the new century / Yue, Liu   Journal Article
Yue, Liu Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract On February 1, 2009 the US strategic command revised the latest edition of OPLAN 0810-08, to a newly revised plan named OPLAN 8010-08 change. this plan originates from the former nuclear war plan of the US government targeted at the two socialist countries, the Soviet Union and China, which had the formal name of SIOP.
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2
ID:   128136


Obama's cyria fiasco / Steingerg, Jeffrey   Journal Article
Steingerg, Jeffrey Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract On November 26, 2011 Glenn Grenwald wrote an article in Salon magazine, a widely read American online publication, about a vast neoconservative plan to re-engineer the entire Middle East and North Africa region, in the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw pact in the early 1990s.
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3
ID:   126766


Rise of Gulf war paradigm 2.0 / Brown, Philip A; Smith, M.L.R   Journal Article
Brown, Philip A Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The adage that "it is always easier to fight the last war" is one that readily can be applied to the United States and its armed forces for not predicting the scale and type of operations encountered in the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. This article argues that the lack of preparation in the post-invasion phases arose from an institutional attachment to a preferred paradigm of warfare, as exemplified by the Persian Gulf War of 1991. This paradigm, though, has been substantially resurrected and re-configured to suit the fighting preferences of the American armed forces in its protracted encounters in Iraq and Afghanistan. Far from re-orienting its organization and mindset to meet the challenges of so-called counterinsurgency campaigns, as much current advocacy maintains, the military has reverted to the form of warfare it knows best.
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