Is History Relevant? Ideas for National Security Strategy in the 1990's

Is History Relevant? Ideas for National Security Strategy in the 1990's
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 10
Release: 1990
Genre:
ISBN:

Among the unexpected byproducts of the United States' "victory" in the Cold War is a certain nostalgia for the old world order that crumbled so quickly. At least the nation knew where it stood in the post-World War II bipolar world. Today, the familiar guideposts are gone, and the national quest for new ones range as far back as the early 1900s. Is there a previous era that can tell us what to do now? While the answer to that question is "no," there are lessons and ideas from various segments of the United States' past that will stand the country in good stead as it develops a national security strategy for the 1990s. The first question to ask is as follows: What is the international environment in which this strategy will operate? The world power structure appears to be shifting to a more diffuse, multipolar configuration. The situation is still in flux, however, and at present the United States stands alone as the state with superpower status in all spheres. The USSR retains very substantial military power, but it is rapidly shedding its empire and is clearly not an economic power. Germany and Japan are struggling with the question of whether superpower status can be based on economic power along. The emergence of a unified Europe would change the equation again. If one narrows the focus to regional problems, various other states, including China, become necessary players. Despite its superpower status, the relative power of the United States globally has declined in the past 20 years. Conflict appears inevitable in the current environment, although much more likely on a regional rather than global scale. Whether it is good for the national character is arguable. Part of the reason conflict exists is that power remains the dominant factor in relations between states. But while the environment has changed, basic U.S. interests have not. Overall, the author believes the United States should follow a modified balance of power approach.

American Security Policy in the 1990s

American Security Policy in the 1990s
Author: Wyn Q. Bowen
Publisher: Dartmouth Publishing Company
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN:

This study concentrates on the shifting use of America's security policy. The volume marks the use of containment since the Cold War, the relationship betwen the two superpowers, and assesses the increasing priority given to domestic rather than international policy.

Can America Remain Committed?

Can America Remain Committed?
Author: David G. Haglund
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 278
Release: 2019-04-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 0429710623

The twelve months that spanned the period between the early springtimes of 1991 and 1992 may well turn out to constitute the most important year for American foreign and security policy in half a century. Encasing the dawning of a new and different security era, like macabre parentheses, were two columns of black smoke-that of 1991 over the newly liberated Kuwait, and that of 1992 over the embattled district of South-Central Los Angeles. Within these acrid temporal brackets unfolded a set of developments of utmost significance for American foreign and security policy and for the very meaning of the country's external commitments.