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U.S. Army War College >> Strategic Studies Institute >> Publications >> Arms Control and European Security
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Edited by Dr. Stephen J. Blank, COL Louis H. Jordan Jr.
The following three papers comprise one of the panels from a conference on U.S.-Russia relations that SSI co-sponsored with the Carnegie Council at Pocantico, NY, from June 1-3, 2011: Carnegie Council's Program on “U.S. Global Engagement: A Two-Year Retrospective.” The papers offer three contrasting looks at one of the major issues in today’s arms control agenda, namely the future of the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty (CFE). The three papers were written by leading experts in the field from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Russia and provide a revealing glimpse into the very different assessments that are being made by those three governments and the difficult issues involved in attempting to regenerate the process that led to the original treaty in 1990. These three chapters also implicitly contribute to a better understanding of the intractabilities facing the major players in any effort to advance not only arms control but also European stability.
Venezuela as an Exporter of 4th Generation Warfare Instability
Jihadist Cells and "IED" Capabilities in Europe: Assessing the Present and Future Threat to the West
Russia's Homegrown Insurgency: Jihad in the North Caucasus
Russia and the Current State of Arms Control
Perspectives on Russian Foreign Policy
Can Russia Reform? Economic, Political, and Military Perspectives
Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future
Arms Control and Proliferation Challenges to the Reset Policy
Russia in the Arctic
Cyber Infrastructure Protection
Europe and Russia
Homeland Security and Defense
Military Strategy and Policy
Nonproliferation