Asiaing.com

Friday
Jan 09th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home arrow eBook Categories arrow Politics arrow Sources of Conflict in the 21st Century: Regional Futures and U.S. Strategy

Sources of Conflict in the 21st Century: Regional Futures and U.S. Strategy

Ebook - Politics
Sunday, 13 August 2006

sources.of.conflict.in.the.21st.centuryBy: Zalmay Khalilzad, Ian O. Lesser,  RAND Corporation

The problem of global, long-range defense planning has changed enormouslysince the end of the Cold War. The sources and types of conflict for which the military mustplan have become more varied and less predictable, the range of potential adversaries islarger, the range of military missions is more diverse, and the nature of security itself is changing on a global basis.

Defense analysts must begin to consider how many of today's leading adversaries will remain adversaries, if long-standing allies will change theirorientation, who will be called on to intervene and where, and if we can expect stability orchaos.

This book examines current political trends and potential sources of conflict in three critical regions--Asia, the greater Middle East, and Europe and the former Soviet Union -- through the year 2025. The authors describe possible alternative strategic worlds,including a projection of today's mixed political climate, a more benign world in which the great powers are at peace and are actively cooperative, and a world beset with economic, demographic, and political turmoil. Additional chapters discuss regional trends and theirmeaning for strategy and planning.

Originally intended to serve Air Force long-rangeplanning needs, the findings are relevant to broader ongoing debates and should be of interest to a wide foreign and security policy audience.

Book Official Site (Divided PDFs)                

 

Comments (0)add comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smaller | bigger

busy
 
< Prev   Next >

Subscribe

 Subscribe to the RSS feed. 

Email Subscription

Lots of FREE books & magazines delivered directly to your e-mail inbox!

Enter your email address: