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WARSAW PACT ALLIES (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   133782


Sizing U.S. ground forces: from "2 wars" to "1 war + 2 missions" / O'Hanlon, Michael   Journal Article
O'Hanlon, Michael Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract During the Cold War, the United States varied between a "1 ½ war" and a "2 ½ war" framework for sizing its main combat forces. This framework prepared forces for one or two large wars, and then a smaller "half-war." Capacity for a major conflict in Europe, against the Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact allies, represented the enduring big war potential. This period saw simultaneous conflict against China as a second possible big war, until Nixon's Guam doctrine placed a greater burden on regional allies rather than U.S. forces to address such a specter, and until his subsequent opening to the PRC made such a war seem less likely in any event. The half-wars were seen as relatively more modest but still quite significant operations such as in Korea or Vietnam.
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