Seeing the elephant : the U.S. role in global security

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Bibliographic Information

Seeing the elephant : the U.S. role in global security

Hans Binnendijk and Richard L. Kugler

National Defense University Press , Potomac Books, [2006]

  • : pbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

"Center for technology and national security policy" -- T.p.

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

What is the current state of the global security system, and where is it headed? What challenges and opportunities do we face, and what dangers are emerging? How will various regions of the world be affected? How can the United States best act to help shape the future while protecting its security, interests, and values? How can the United States deal with the threats of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction? An intellectual history of U.S. national security thinking since the end of the fall of the Soviet Union, Seeing the Elephant is an attempt to see the evolving international security system and America's role in it through the eyes of more than fifty perceptive authors who have analyzed key aspects of the unfolding post-Cold War drama. Its premise is that, like the blind men in the Buddhist fable who each feels a different part of an elephant, these authors and their assessments, taken together, can give us a better view of where the world is headed.

Table of Contents

  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • Chapter One: Introduction
  • Chapter Two: A Neo-Kantian World of Progress
  • Chapter Three: A Neo-Hobbesian World of Turmoil
  • Chapter Four: A New Age of Empowerment
  • Chapter Five: U.S. National Security Goals and Constraints
  • Chapter Six: U.S. Defense Strategies
  • Chapter Seven: Seeing the Elephant
  • Biographies of Authors Reviewed
  • About the Authors
  • Notes.

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