Skip to main content (Press Enter).
Toggle navigation
US Army War College - Strategic Studies Institute
US Army War College - Strategic Studies Institute
Search Army War College - SSI:
Search
Search
Search Army War College - SSI:
Search
Home
Who We Are
Faculty & Staff
Contact Us
Opportunities
Visiting Professors
Events
List of Events
CLSC
About CLSC
CLSC Dialogues
PLA Conferences
Research
Insights
External Articles
CLSC Newsletter
Regional Issues
European Security
South & Latin America
Research & Commentary
Annual Estimate
SSI Worldwide
INDOPACOM
Study of Internal Conflict
SOIC Study Methodology
SOIC Conflict Studies
Integrated Research Project Topics (IRPs)
Archived Content
Remembering 9/11, 20 Years Later
Special Commentary COVID-19
SSI Media
Podcasts
Decisive Point Podcast
Conversations on Strategy
CLSC Dialogues
SSI Live Podcast
Lectures and Panels
Recent Publications
USAWC Press
Parameters
Decisive Point Podcast
Conversations on Strategy Podcast
Parameters Bookshelf
Articles & Editorials
Publications Site
Publishing Guide
Press Tips
CLSC Dialogues
Home
:
SSI Media
:
Recent Publications
1
...
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Results:
Tag:
security
Jordanian National Security and the Future of Middle East Stability
January 1, 2008
— Author: Dr W Andrew Terrill The United States and Jordan have maintained a valuable mutually-supportive relationship for decades as a result of shared interests in a moderate, prosperous, and stable Middle East. In this monograph, the author highlights Jordan’s ongoing value as a U.S. ally and considers ways that the U.S.-Jordanian alliance might...
MORE
The Interagency and Counterinsurgency Warfare: Aligning and Integrating Military and Civilian Roles in Stability, Security, Transition, and Reconstruction Operations
December 1, 2007
— Author: Mr Jay W Boggs, Dr Joseph R Cerami For decades since the formation of the defense establishment under the 1947 National Security Act, all U.S. cabinet departments, national security agencies, and military services involved in providing for the common defense have struggled to overcome differences in policy and strategy formulation,...
MORE
East Asian Security: Two Views
November 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Gilbert Rozman, Dr Chu Shulong A new framework for Northeast Asian security must cope with the legacy of six decades of frequent changes in the region’s great power relations. In order to realize the goals of the Joint Agreement in the Six-Party Talks, multilateralism is becoming more important. U.S. leadership faces challenges from: the...
MORE
Russian Security Strategy under Putin: U.S. and Russian Perspectives
November 1, 2007
— Author: Dr R Craig Nation, Mr Dmitri Trenin The authors illustrate the degree to which great power rivalry in Eurasia has become a major security issue and source of growing Russo-American tensions. Dr. R. Craig Nation lays out some of the fundamental macro-strategic issues of this rivalry and U.S. goals in Eurasia, as well as the consequences...
MORE
Regional Threats and Security Strategy: The Troubling Case of Today’s Middle East
November 1, 2007
— Author: Mr James A Russell The United States needs to undertake a strategic regional net assessment that examines the following issues as it seeks to construct a regional security strategy to protect its interests and mitigate wider threats to international security. That net assessment should include reviewing the role of security guarantees in...
MORE
The United States and ASEAN-China Relations: All Quiet on the Southeast Asian Front
October 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Ian Storey While the overall security situation in Southeast Asia is something of a mixed bag, with grounds for both optimism and pessimism, one of the most encouraging trends in recent years has been the development of ASEAN’s relations with major external powers. Relations between China and ASEAN in particular have demonstrated a...
MORE
ASEAN and Its Security Offspring: Facing New Challenges
September 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Sheldon W Simon Southeast Asian states within ASEAN agree that security relations with the great powers are best achieved by enmeshing the latter in ASEAN procedures. The primary goal of ASEAN is that China, Japan, the United States, and India commit to maintaining Southeast Asia's autonomy, integrity, and prosperity. ASEAN is less...
MORE
Egypt: Security, Political, and Islamist Challenges
September 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Sherifa D Zuhur This monograph approaches three issues in contemporary Egypt: failures of governance and political development, the continued strength of Islamism, and counterterrorism. The Egyptian government forged a truce with its most troublesome Islamist militants in 1999. However, violence emerged again from new sources of Islamist...
MORE
American Grand Strategy for Latin America in the Age of Resentment
September 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Gabriel Marcella A healthy Latin America is of critical value to the United States as a global power. It is besieged by a powerful force of resentment engendered by a combination of weak states, social exclusion, criminal violence, and corruption. In the context of attack by radical populism against democratic values, the United States...
MORE
The Emerging Pattern of Geopolitics
September 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Peter W Rodman Without ignoring the two wars that are currently taking place in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Strategic Studies Institute (SSI) sought to reframe the debate over security within a global context. Thus Mr. Rodman’s address sets contemporary security challenges to the United States within a framework of both an Islamist...
MORE
Negotiation in the New Strategic Environment: Lessons from Iraq
August 1, 2007
— Author: Mr David M Tressler In stability, security, transition, and reconstruction (SSTR) operations like the U.S. mission in Iraq, negotiation is a common activity. The success or failure of the thousands of negotiations taking place daily between U.S. military officers and local civilian and military leaders in Iraq affects tactical and...
MORE
Security Requirements for Post-Transition Cuba
August 1, 2007
— Author: Dr Alex Crowther Change is inevitable in Cuba. Both Fidel Castro and his brother Raul are aging. Their passing will trigger either a succession or a transition. Eventually Cuba will change. With that change, the security requirements of Cuba will change as well. This monograph provides an analysis of security requirements that the new Cuba...
MORE
1
...
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15