
Contents
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Redirecting Arms Control Redirecting Arms Control
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Organizing for Strategic Planning Organizing for Strategic Planning
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Defining Objectives after the Fall of the Berlin Wall Defining Objectives after the Fall of the Berlin Wall
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Defense Planning in a Period of Uncertainty Defense Planning in a Period of Uncertainty
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A New Nuclear Posture A New Nuclear Posture
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Stability versus Change in the Soviet Empire Stability versus Change in the Soviet Empire
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Articulating the New Defense Strategy Articulating the New Defense Strategy
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3 Shaping the Future: Planning at the Pentagon, 1989–93
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Published:April 2011
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Abstract
This chapter examines the purposefulness that undergirded the evolving strategic thinking of U.S. Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, and of his colleagues and assistants. It considers the Regional Defense Strategy developed by Cheney as well as the Bush administration's arms control initiatives to compete with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. It also discusses Cheney's attempt to test Gorbachev's declared willingness to reduce conventional forces in Europe, which was the underlying cause of insecurity and the reason for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) tactical nuclear weapons. The chapter suggests that the Bush administration wanted to preserve old alliances and reassure traditional allies by promising a continuation of the United States's “forward presence.” It concludes by assessing U.S. defense planning in a period of uncertainty caused by the fall of the Berlin Wall and how the collapse of the Soviet Union affected U.S. and NATO nuclear strategies.
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