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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page research paper that addresses 4 brief topics (each essay roughly 1 page long), which pertain to issues of national security and the transformational goals of the U.S. military. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khmilsec.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
language, essentially, the major components of this strategy were to reduce the reliance of the U.S. government on permanent alliances and international institutions; expand the right to take preemptive action
in a new doctrine of preventive war; and to enact coercive democratization as a long-term solution to Middle Eastern terrorism. With the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the failure to
find weapons of mass destruction or a connection between the government of Saddam Hussein and the events of 9/11, the Bush Administration has increasing changed its focus from all three
strategies mentioned in the 2002 document to focusing almost exclusive on the third point in the 2006 edition of the National Security Strategy, which refers to democracy and freedom frequently,
downplays preventive war, and even makes the gesture of including a chapter on globalization. This shift reflects the Bush Administrations return to a focus on diplomacy, as evidenced in recent
efforts toward North Korea and Iran, which have been much more multilateral than in President Bushs first term. Why is there a compelling need for military transformation? The transformation
of U.S. forces is required in order to ensure that the military continues to perform from a "position of overwhelming military advantage" while supporting the strategy objectives of the federal
government (TPG). The processes of transformation essentially streamline military operations, which allows U.S. forces to initiate action "from a forward position," defeating enemies quickly and decisively, while also maintaining an
active defense of U.S. territory (TPG 4). The government describes several persuasive arguments in favor of transformation, which include: the difficulties associated with simply maintaining the status quo; the asymmetry
of growing threats; the historical opportunity for change and the high stakes that are involved (TPG). As this last category indicates, the stakes are high if the U.S. does not
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