Global Public Policy Institute
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Other GPPi books
Thorsten Benner, Stephan Mergenthaler, Philipp Rotmann (2011)
The New World of UN Peace Operations: Learning to Build Peace?
Oxford University PressJulia Steets (2010)
Accountability in Public Policy Partnerships
Palgrave Macmillan (UK) / Macmillan (US)Jan Martin Witte, Andreas Goldthau (2010)
Global Energy Governance: The New Rules of the Game
Brookings Institution PressJulia Steets, Daniel S. Hamilton, eds. (2009)
Humanitarian Assistance: Improving US-European Cooperation
Global Public Policy Institute and the Center for Transatlantic Relations at Johns Hopkins UniversityDomestic Trends in the United States, China and Iran
Implications for US Navy Strategic Planning
By Andreas Goldthau, John Gordon, Robert W. Button, Karla J. Cunningham, Toy I. Reid, Irv Blickstein, Peter A. Wilson
RAND Corporation (2008)
To order this book, please visit the RAND website.
The US Navy faces uncertainty about the degree to which it will have to prepare for a high-end future conflict against a powerful, well-armed opponent versus the so-called long war against rogue nations and terrorist organizations. The answer depends to a large extent on the evolution of US relations with China and Iran and the future of the United States itself. To help the Navy understand how critical near-, mid-, and far-term trends in the United States, China and Iran might influence US security decisions in general and the Navy's allocation of resources in particular, RAND examined emerging nonmilitary trends in each of the three countries. The authors investigated current and projected domestic developments in the areas of demographics, economics, energy consumption, the environment and education. They also examined each country's relations with its so-called near abroad to determine how much of a challenge each of the three nations (plus Japan and Russia) will experience in their own immediate “neighborhoods.”
The authors conclude that the Navy will have to balance its investment decisions around the following major findings:
- There will be less tolerance for costly, “big-ticket” defense projects in the United States; the Navy's “blue-green” mix will be affected.
- China will remain the Navy's greatest potential challenge, but Iran will continue to defy the United States in the Middle East.
- Further cooperation with key allies in the Pacific and the Greater Middle East will be required, as will an enduring defense commitment in the Middle East.
To order this book, please visit the RAND website.
