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National Defense February 2005 Michael Peck |
Strategists Learn Non-Violent Warfare Tactics A pro-democracy group has sponsored a free video game designed to teach political activists how to plan and execute strategic non-violent warfare. |
National Defense December 2009 Grace V. Jean |
Military Video Games Could Morph Into Peace-Building Simulations The Obama administration is looking seriously at the role that games can play in achieving national priorities. |
Reason June 2003 Jesse Walker |
What Next for U.S. Foreign Policy? Power, stability, and the post-Iraq world order: interviews with three men with very different ideas about the emerging world system. |
Parameters Autumn 2006 Michael R. Melillo |
Outfitting a Big-War Military with Small-War Capabilities Unfortunately, it took the tragedy of 9/11 and the challenges posed by an adaptive enemy for the U.S. to realize it was not prepared to fight war on terms other than its own choosing. |
Parameters Spring 2005 Colin S. Gray |
How Has War Changed Since the End of the Cold War? For the West, and for the most part, 12 of the past 15 years can fairly be described as an interwar period. That brief no-name era, usually referred to neutrally as the post-Cold War period, came to an explosive end on 11 September 2001. |
National Defense December 2005 Grace Jean |
Games Are Gaining Ground, But How Far Can They Go? The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency looks toward simulation systems to teach soldiers about the tradeoffs involved in rebuilding Iraq. |
Reason October 2005 Jesse Walker |
Millions of Gandhis "Spreading freedom" has become the White House's all-purpose justification for war, but wars aren't necessarily the best way to plant the seeds of liberty. Turns out that nonviolence isn't just better for liberty and self-government. Often it's good strategy as well. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2004 John Keller |
Military Research in Crisis The United States is in the midst of a military research, development, and preparedness crisis. Few people realize it; of those who do, most underestimate its dimensions. |