Case Studies Working Group report, volume II


Richard Weitz, Ph.D., editor.
Bok Engelsk
Annen tittel
Utgitt
The Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College
Omfang
xiv, 1009 p. ;
Opplysninger
"March 2012.". - "Strategic Studies Institute book.". - Introduction / Richard Weitz -- Pt. I. Organizing the national security apparatus. The Vice President and foreign policy : from "the most insignificant office" to Gore as Russian czar / Aaron Mannes -- The Iran-Contra affair / Alex Douville -- Pt. II. Mitigating and managing unconventional threats. Progress of "biodefense strategy for the 21st century" : a five-year evaluation / Al Mauroni -- Failures at the nexus of health and homeland security : the 2007 Andrew Speaker case / Elin Gursky and Sweta Batni -- Counterterror failure : the Fadlallah assassination attempt / Richard J. Chasdi -- Pt. III. Dealing with the new world disorder. The Asian financial crisis : managing complex threats to global economic stability / Rozlyn C. Engel -- The banality of the interagency : U.S. inaction in the Rwanda genocide / Dylan Lee Lehrke -- The crisis in U.S. public diplomacy : the demise of the U.S. Information Agency / Nicholas J. Cull and Juliana Geran Pilon -- Pt. IV. Leveraging and supporting allies. U.S. interagency efforts to combat international terrorism through foreign capacity building programs / Michael B. Kraft and Celina B. Realuyo -- U.S. decisionmaking regarding East Timor, 1999 / Richard Weitz -- The interagency, Eisenhower, and the House of Saud / Christine R. Gilbert -- Conclusion / Richard Weitz.. - "The case studies in this volume confirm the conclusions of other PNSR analyses that the performance of the U.S. national security apparatus in inconsistent. Although some cases illustrate relatively clear, integrated strategy development, unified policy implementation, and coherent tactical planning, coordination, and execution; others depict flawed, divided, contradictory, and sometimes nonexistent strategy promulgation and enactment. Similarly, the U.S. national security system can provide resources efficiently, but it also can do so inadequately and tardily. Flawed responses recur in issue areas as diverse as biodefense, public diplomacy, and military intervention. They also occur across many presidential administrations, from the onset of the Cold War to the present day. The piecemeal organizational reforms enacted to date have not fostered improved policy outcomes or decisionmaking, while capability building, especially in the civilian national security agencies, remains less than optimal."--P. viii.
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