| Threats in the Age of Obama |  | Creator: Michael Tanji Publisher: Nimble Books Category: Book
Buy New: $20.51 as of 2/9/2010 07:52 EST details
Seller: Amazon.com Rating: reviews Sales Rank: 919,982
Media: Paperback Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 6.9 x 0.6
ISBN: 1934840807 Dewey Decimal Number: 327 EAN: 9781934840801 ASIN: 1934840807
Publication Date: January 20, 2009 Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description If you are on a mission to change the way government works, particularly in the national security arena, this is one a place where some independent and intellectually diverse thinking is to be found. In these essays, we offer our view of some of the more pressing threats the Obama administration will have to deal with in these early days of the 21st century. The essays in this volume are contributed by Daniel H. Abbott, Christopher Albon, Matt Armstrong, Matthew Burton, Molly Cernicek, Christopher Corpora, Shane Deichman, Adam Elkus, Matt Devost, Bob Gourley, Art Hutchinson, Tom Karako, Carolyn Leddy, Samuel Liles, Adrian Martin, Gunnar Peterson, Cheryl Rofer, Mark Safranski, Steve Schippert, Tim Stevens, and Shlok Vaidya.
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| Customer Reviews: An Impressive Array Of Talent Yields A Strong Work Of Ideas March 19, 2009 E. Beaver (Yokosuka, Japan) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is an outstanding collection of cutting-edge, conventional-wisdom challenging works by a talented roster of contributors. Unlike much of the chatter out there in the USG/Ivory Tower bubble where partisan, think-tank, academic and NGO ideological advocacy takes precedence over inconvenient truths and expansive vision, many of these contributors (with significant experience in the policy arenas from a variety of perspectives) are renowned independent bloggers and writers who engage in regular give and take with their readers and colleagues, which helps to inform and strengthen the analysis they offer in 22 pieces.
Wondering what the economic crisis could mean to America's democracy and military? Considering what a Grand Strategy for America with a long view would encompass? Perplexed as to what forms terrorism and insurgency could take in the near future after Mumbai and Lebanon? Do you find the prospect of "global engagement" promising but have yet to read an impressive proposal for it? Having difficulty navigating already antiquated ideas about security in the Conficker era?
The contributors take on these subjects and many more with an impressive eye for originality and detail that should leave you more knowledgeable about what's been happening out in the world and what our leaders and innovators should do about it while most of us have been so focused on the economy, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan.
Highly Recommended Assessments of the Threats Facing the US and the World March 16, 2009 Benerson Little 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
An excellent review of the threats facing both the US and the world, from a broad range of perspectives, with emphasis on their evolving nature. Chapters range from Matt Armstrong's insightful evaluation of public diplomacy--in particular, of "global engagement"--as a vital part of national security, in "Arming for the Second War of Ideas," to Daniel H. Abbott's surely controversial thesis of true democracy as a threat to the US military-industrial complex, and thus to itself, in "An Outbreak of Democracy." Whether or not one agrees with all of the many assessments and arguments presented in it, the book is a must-read for anyone with an active hand in world affairs at any level, and for that matter, for anyone with an interest in the both the near-term and long-term future of our world in general.
Excellent read for those wishing to understand the international security environment in the Age of Obama January 26, 2009 M. Devost (Washington, DC) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
This excellent compilation brings together some of the top international security experts to address the range of threats and security issues that the Obama administration will confront over the next four years.
Any concerned citizen that seeks to better understand these issues would do well to read this book which places even the most complex issues in an easily digestible form.
Here is a list of topics and contributors from the Table of Contents:
The Threat Landscape, Michael Tanji
The Tangled Relationship Between Organized Crime,
Terrorism and Proliferation, Christopher A. Corpora, Ph.D
The Terrorism Meme--Looking Beyond the Current Threat,
Matthew G. Devost
Crazy as a Fox, Adrian Martin
Infectious Diseases, Foreign Militaries, and US National
Security, Christopher Albon
Pakistan as a Nuclear Risk, Steve Schippert
Nuclear Nonproliferation in the 21st Century, Cheryl Rofer
and Molly Cernicek
Into the Complex Terrain, Tim Stevens
Simulated "Black Swans": National Security, Perception
Operations, and the Expansion of the Infosphere,
Adam Elkus
An Outbreak of Peace and Democracy, Daniel H. Abbott
Ideas and Strategies for a More Secure Future, Michael Tanji
Preparing One's Mind to See, Art Hutchinson
The Issues of Non-State Actors and the Nation State,
Samuel P. Liles
The Future of Missile Defense Policy, Tom Karako
Toward a Contemporary Deterrence Strategy, Carolyn Leddy
An Information Age Strategy for Government Information
Technology, Mathew Burton
The Future of Cyberspace Security: The Law of the Rodeo,
Bob Gourley
Security Evolution, Gunnar Peterson
Arming for the Second War of Ideas, Matt Armstrong
Blurring the Lines Between War and Peace, Shane Deichman
Reconfiguring the National Security Architecture, Shlok Vaidya
A Grand Strategy for a Networked Civilization, Mark Safranski
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