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BEBBER, ROBERT (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   148066


Countersurge: a better understanding of China's rise and U.S. policy goals in East Asia / Bebber, Robert   Journal Article
Bebber, Robert Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Many experts raise concerns about the “rise of China” and the potential threat it presents to American interests. Indeed, the recent strategic pivot announced by U.S. leaders is designed to address these concerns. Yet what we are likely to see is not a rise of Chinese power, but a surge—a temporary situation of perhaps twenty to thirty years. Demographic, economic, and political factors will all combine to create a ceiling on Chinese power and ultimately cause it to decline. The United States needs to develop military capabilities that will prepare it for the coming strategic window, along with the economic and political initiatives that will enable it to influence events in the region.
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2
ID:   138682


Cryptology at the crossroads / Bebber, Robert   Article
Bebber, Robert Article
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Key Words Navy  China  Russia  North Korea  Global War  Cryptology 
COTS  Techno - Environment 
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3
ID:   155279


Treating information as a strategic : resource to win the “information war” / Bebber, Robert   Journal Article
Bebber, Robert Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The United States is challenged by adversaries who seek to alter fundamentally the systemic balance of power through information-based strategies. These strategies leverage both legal and illegal operations to gain influence and control over key industries and information resource domains to constrain American freedom of action. It is a larger geoeconomic and geoinformational campaign by adversaries to harvest information in support of military, diplomatic, economic, and global political goals. To respond, the U.S. government must understand that information is a strategic resource. An American response might be to erode its competitors’ economic and informational advantages, attack their dependencies on other strategic resources, and exploit their information control systems. Cyberspace operations may provide some competitive advantage, but first they must be employed effectively. This effectiveness requires overcoming debilitating intellectual constraints and adopting new operational models.
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