Planning war with a nuclear China US military strategy and mainland strikes
Mainland strikes and US military strategy -- The theoretical backdrop -- Sanctuary and the Korean War -- Operation rolling thunder and the Vietnam War -- Peering into the future part -- Peering into the future part II -- Policy recommendations
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amherst, New York
Cambria Press
2023
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Schriftenreihe: | Rapid communications in conflict and security series
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Zusammenfassung: | Mainland strikes and US military strategy -- The theoretical backdrop -- Sanctuary and the Korean War -- Operation rolling thunder and the Vietnam War -- Peering into the future part -- Peering into the future part II -- Policy recommendations "Beginning in 2010, a public debate emerged about the role of so-called mainland strikes in any US military strategy toward China. Mainland strikes refer to wartime attacks on military targets located on the Chinese mainland with non-nuclear (conventional) weapons. This debate arose as American military strategists began to confront the implications of growing Chinese military power. Potential strategies were often defined, at least partially, by their relationship to and views toward mainland strikes. Some strategies assumed that an American president, and their advisers, would be willing to authorize or recommend mainland strikes in a future war with China. This course of action emphasized the procurement of a military force optimized to carry out these mainland strikes. Other strategies assumed an extreme unwillingness to recommend mainland strikes. These strategies called for building and training a military force capable of operational tasks other than mainland strikes. This book investigates the soundness of these two contradictory assumptions about mainland strikes so that strategists and American military planners can better understand the course of a future US-China war"-- |
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Beschreibung: | 248 Seiten 8 Illustrationen und Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9781621966777 978-1-62196-677-7 9781621966784 978-1-62196-678-4 |