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US NAVAL STRATEGY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   187350


Imagining maritime conflict in the Indo-Pacific: can analogies substitute for strategy? / Wirtz, James J   Journal Article
Wirtz, James J Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Historical analogies are sometimes used to imagine the scope and nature of a potential conflict in the Indo-Pacific. Using analogies, scenarios, and “images” of future war, instead of strategy, however, can produce an inadequate assessment of future material, operational, and tactical requirements that will be encountered by the U.S. Navy in the maritime domain. Without a long-term strategy to set force development and guide operational requirements, the U.S. Navy will suffer from a “strategy deficit” when it comes to dealing with deterrence, coercion, and escalation in the Indo-Pacific. As planning guidance, the use of analogies is no substitute for strategy.
Key Words Deterrence  Taiwan  PLA Navy  Maritime Conflict  Indo-Pacific  US Naval Strategy 
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2
ID:   129135


Scandals prompt pentagon nuclear review / Collin, Tom Z   Journal Article
Collin, Tom Z Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In the wake of recent reports that some Air Force nuclear missile operators have been cheating on performance tests and failing to follow safety rules, the Defense Department announced Jan. 23 that it is launching a review of all U.S. nuclear forces, to be completed in three months. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said at a Jan. 24 press conference that he is "deeply concerned" about "the overall health and the professionalism and discipline of our strategic forces." At the Jan. 23 announcement event, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said that the review would look not just at the Air Force's intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) force, the main source of the problems, but at the "whole nuclear force," including the Air Force's long-range bombers and the Navy's strategic submarines.
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