American foreign policy since 1947 cannot be understood apart from the U.S. security assistance program. Beginning with Truman, every president has considered security assistance programs important means for furthering U.S. national interests. Security assistance has been used to support a wide variety of policies, including the Truman Doctrine and containment, the underwriting of the Camp David Accords, and the channeling of aid to the newly democratic countries of Central and Eastern Europe.
American foreign policy since 1947 cannot be understood apart from the U.S. security...
American foreign policy since 1947 cannot be understood apart from the U.S. security assistance program. Beginning with Truman, every president has...
The intelligence community's flawed assessment of Iraq's weapons systems--and the Bush administration's decision to go to war in part based on those assessments--illustrates the political and policy challenges of combating the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. In this comprehensive assessment, defense policy specialists Jason Ellis and Geoffrey Kiefer find disturbing trends in both the collection and analysis of intelligence and in its use in the development and implementation of security policy.
Analyzing a broad range of recent case studies--Pakistan's development of...
The intelligence community's flawed assessment of Iraq's weapons systems--and the Bush administration's decision to go to war in part based on thos...
American foreign policy cannot be understood apart from the US security assistance programme. Beginning with Truman, every president has considered security assistance programmes important means of furthering US national interests. This book is a treatment of the programmes from 1947 to 1996.
American foreign policy cannot be understood apart from the US security assistance programme. Beginning with Truman, every president has considered se...
The quest to limit nuclear weapons was a notable feature of the U.S.-Soviet relationship during the Cold War. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, in what history may come to judge as the Clinton administration's greatest foreign-policy achievement, an agreement was reached with key former Soviet republics to eliminate their nuclear weapons. Ellis provides a timely and authoritative analysis of the Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) program, which removed nuclear arsenals equivalent to the combined stockpiles of Britain, France, and China, and ultimately made a significant...
The quest to limit nuclear weapons was a notable feature of the U.S.-Soviet relationship during the Cold War. Following the collapse of the Soviet ...