Monographie
NATO and the challenges of austerity / F. Stephen Larrabee, Stuart E. Johnson, John Gordon IV,... [et al.]
Type de contenu
- Texte
Type de médiation
- sans médiation
Titre(s)
- NATO and the challenges of austerity / F. Stephen Larrabee, Stuart E. Johnson, John Gordon IV,... [et al.]
Editeur, producteur
- Santa Monica (Calif.) : Rand, cop. 2012
Description matérielle
- 1 vol. (XXIII-115 p.) : graph. ; 23 cm
Collection
- Monograph Rand Corporation
ISBN
- 978-0-8330-6847-7
- 0-8330-6847-4
EAN
- 9780833068477 br.
Classification décimale Dewey
- 355.031
Note(s)
- "Prepared for the Office of the Secretary of Defense"
Note sur la description bibliographique
- Consultable à l'adresse
Note sur les bibliographies et les index
- Bibliogr. p. 109-115. Notes bibliogr.
Note sur le contenu
- Introduction: The defense spending gap; Purpose and organization of the study The impact of defense cuts on key NATO allies: United Kingdom; France; Germany; Italy; Spain; Netherlands; Poland; Future prospects NATO Europe's capability for defense and power projection in the coming decade: Defense of NATO territory; Missions in NATO's immediate neighborhood; High-intensity power-projection missions in more distant regions; Long-range operations with small "conventional" forces; Long-range SOF operations; Conclusion The broader strategic context: The limits of smart defense; Pooling and sharing; The impact of the Euro crisis; The European defense industrial sector; The Libyan Intervention: lessons and implications; Shifting U.S. defense priorities Implications and recommendations for U.S. policy: Transatlantic defense challenges in an era of austerity; Sustaining the alliance over the long run
Résumé ou extrait
- La 4e de couv. indique : "In the coming decade, NATO faces growing fiscal austerity and declining defense budgets. This study analyzes the impact of planned defense budget cuts on the capabilities of seven European members of NATO -- the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Poland -- that together represent more than 80 percent of NATO Europe's defense spending. The result of the anticipated cuts and future financial constraints is that the capacity of the major European powers to project military power will be highly constrained: The air, land, and sea forces of key U.S. European allies are rapidly reaching the point at which they can perform only one moderate-sized operation at a time and will be hard-pressed to meet the rotation requirements of a protracted, small-scale irregular warfare mission. Power projection and sustainment of significant forces outside Europe's immediate neighborhood will be particularly difficult. The authors discuss these challenges in a strategic context, including the operational and planning weaknesses exposed by NATO's intervention in Libya in 2011, and make recommendations for U.S. policy with regard to NATO."
Sujet - Collectivité
Sujet - Nom commun
Lien copié.
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