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Columbia International Affairs Online

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Studiengruppe Alternative Sicherheitspolitik

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Resource Compilations

Neoliberal & Neoconservative Security Policy
Views, criticism, alternatives.
Updated: 02 February 2008.

Confronting Iran
Critical perspectives on the current crisis, its origins, and implications.
Updated: 10 May 2008.

India-U.S. Strategic Relationship
Articles, testimony, and documents.
Updated: 20 October 2008.

Iraq War Withdrawal & Exit Plans
Options and analysis by experts and US political leaders.
Updated: 20 October 2008.

Insurgent Iraq
Articles and reports on the nature and organization of the Iraqi insurgency.
Updated: 07 February 2008.



Online Publications

US Defense Policy
Regional Security
Iraq & Afghanistan
Terrorism
Military & Strategic Studies
Alternative Security & Defense
Chronological

Order Publications

Defense Policy Library

Defense Strategy Review
US defense strategy and military planning: reports, articles, debates, documents.

Archived Defense Policy Libraries

War Report
Iraq and Afghanistan war news and analysis from around the web.

Chinese Military Power
China's military policy, strategy, and armed forces: articles, reports, commentary.

Revloution in Military Affairs
"Revolution in Military Affairs" and US military transformation: articles and reports.

Terrorism, Counter-Terrorism, and Homeland Security
Reports and articles on terrorism, counter-terrorism, and homeland security.

Occupation Distress
The effect of recent wars on US armed forces and military readiness.


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The Project on Defense Alternatives
The Commonwealth Institute
P.O.Box 398105
Inman Square Post Office
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Phone 617/547-4474
Fax 617/868-1267
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Copyright © The Commonwealth Institute. All Rights Reserved.

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Currently Featured


Military Intervention and Common Sense: Focus on Land Forces (Paperback and Kindle editions) (Mobipocket edition) by Lutz Unterseher with preface by Charles Knight and a chapter by Carl Conetta. Ryckschau, Berlin, June 2009. This book focuses on the most challenging set of tasks for today's military interventions: those required for the stabilization of countries seriously affected by civil war or insurgency. Primarily this is a mission for the ground forces and appropriate forces must be designed to be more robust than traditional peacekeepers and less aggressively violent than traditional war fighters.


Forceful Engagement: Rethinking the Role of Military Power in US Global Policy (full text .pdf with graphics) (full text .html, no graphics) (exec. summary .html), December 2008. The US has been using its armed forces beyond the limit of their utility. The result is not just diminishing returns, but negative ones.

Re-Envisioning Defense: An Agenda for US Policy Debate & Transition (full text .pdf with graphics) (full text .html, no graphics) (exec. summary .html), updated December 2008. Summarizes problem areas in recent US defense policy as well as several broad topics of debate that touch on them all.

Charts: Terrorism Fatalities Before & After 9/11 Fatalities Due to Terrorism 2004-07 Global Views of the US World Opinion and US Military Power Military Personnel Overseas Percent Active Component Military Overseas US Defense Spending
World Military Spending Federal Debt as % of GDP 1940-2007

Quickly, Carefully, and Generously: The Necessary Steps for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq (full text .html) (printable full text .pdf) (executive summary .pdf), by the Task Force for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq, June 2008. Twenty-five initiatives to reduce violence and regional instability as the US leaves Iraq. Preface by US Rep. James P. McGovern (MA). A Commonwealth Institute publication.


Symposium: The Role of Force & the Armed Forces in US Foreign Policy -- What have we learned?, Security Policy Working Group, 10 April 2008.


Cul de Sac: 9/11 and the Paradox of American Power (full text .html) (printable full text .pdf), PDA Research Monograph #13, 05 February 2008. Post-Cold War US security policy evinces a disturbing paradox: it has been delivering less and less security at ever increasing cost. The reasons reside not in the differences between the Bush and Clinton administration, but in their points of similarity.

A Prisoner to Primacy (full text .html) (printable full text .pdf), PDA Briefing Memo #43, 05 February 2008. The United States is entering a period of policy transition, but there is a dearth of new thinking regarding security policy. The debate remains paralyzed by 9/11 and mesmerized by military primacy. Progress depends on rethinking the role of force.

Toward a Sustainable US Defense Posture: An Option to save $60+ Billion Over the Next Five Years (full text .html) (printable full text .pdf), PDA Briefing Memo #42, 02 August 2007. Fiscal realities and public opinion may compel a cut in US defense spending. The memo outlines an option to save $60+ billion over the next five years by reducing fighter aircraft and aircraft carrier fleets.

Dissuading China and Fighting the 'Long War', World Policy Journal. The 2006 US Defense Review advanced two new strategic vectors for the US armed forces - one targets a putative "global Islamic insurgency"; the other puts America on a collison course with China.

War & Consequences:  Global Terrorism has Increased Since 9/11 Attacks (full text .html) (printable full text .pdf), PDA Briefing Memo #38, 25 September 2006. Data on the relationship between the Iraq war and terrorism.

Pyrrhus on the Potomac: How America's post-9/11 wars have undermined US national security (full text .html) (printable full text .pdf) by Carl Conetta, PDA Briefing Report #18, 05 September 2006. Al Qaeda has been disrupted, but US wars have stimulated new threats, while weakening the nation's defenses.