1st Edition

Thinking About National Security Strategy, Policy, and Issues

By Donald Snow Copyright 2016
    308 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    A Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2016

    Perhaps the most basic national security question that U.S. leaders and the body politic continuously face is where and under what circumstances to consider and in some cases resort to the use of armed force to ensure the country’s safety and well-being. The question is perpetual—but the answer is not. This insightful text helps students make sense of the ever-changing environment and factors that influence disagreement over national security risks and policy in the United States.

    The book takes shape through a focus on three considerations: strategy, policy, and issues. Snow explains the range of plans of action that are possible and resources available for achieving national security goals, as well as the courses of action for achieving those goals in the context of a broad range of security problems that must be dealt with. However, there is little agreement among policymakers on exactly what is the nature of the threats that the country faces. Snow helps readers frame the debate by suggesting some of the prior influences on risk-assessment, some of the current influences on national security debates, and suggestions for how future strategy and policy may be shaped.

    CONTENTS: Introduction: Where We Are Now  1. The National Security Equation: U.S. Policy in Transition  2. War….What Is It Good For?  3. Shifting Rationales: Humanitarian Intervention?  4. The American Half-Century: The Cold War Paradigm  5. Factors in the New Environment: Possibilities and Limitations  6. The Syrian Microcosm and Beyond--The IS Conundrum  7. Paradigm for a New Era 

    Biography

    Donald M. Snow is professor emeritus of political science at the University of Alabama, where he specialized in international relations, national security, and foreign policy. He has also served as visiting professor at the U.S. Air, Army, and Naval War Colleges and the U.S. Air Command and Staff College.