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Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2005 John Rhea |
New terrorist challenge: North Korea It's a challenge the United States can ill afford to ignore. North Korea's WMDs are not illusory. Moreover, its missiles make Saddam Hussein's look puny by comparison. |
Geotimes October 2005 Katie Donnelly |
A Denuclearized Korean Peninsula South Korea is not alone in having a different perspective than the United States about North Korea. Even though the other countries involved in the Six Party Talks have vested interests in a denuclearized Korean peninsula, each sees the problem of North Korea in a different light with different solutions. |
AskMen.com |
US general says US ready for North Korean attack The top U.S. military commander in Korea said Tuesday that U.S. and South Korean forces are prepared for "anything North Korea can throw at us." |
Military History Colonel Harry G. Summers, Jr. |
Korean War: A Fresh Perspective More than forty-five years after shipping out to fight in Korea, the author gains new insight into what the war had been all about. |
TIME Asia June 28, 2010 Bill Powell |
Sixty Years and Counting South Korean Suh Se Jun has seen her two younger siblings just once in the past 60 years. |
BusinessWeek July 25, 2005 |
Seoul Gives The North A Power Boost South Korea, in an effort to defuse the nuclear crisis with the north, has offered Pyongyang a vast supply of badly needed electricity. |
BusinessWeek August 25, 2003 Stan Crock |
North Korea: Talking Is One Thing. Getting Somewhere Is Another Negotiations expected to begin in September involving North Korea, South Korea, China, Japan, Russia, and the U.S. are likely to be the most difficult and complex the Bush Administration has attempted so far. The Administration faces a host of dilemmas. |
BusinessWeek July 5, 2004 Crock, Ihlwan & Roberts |
Now It's Your Turn, North Korea U.S. proposal provides North Korea with security assurances from the U.S. and a resumption of heavy-fuel oil shipments from allies in return for progress by Pyongyang toward a "complete, verifiable, and irreversible" dismantling of the nuclear sites. |
AskMen.com |
A Missile Strike On Hawaii? North Korea may fire a long-range ballistic missile toward Hawaii in early July, a Japanese news report said Thursday, as Russia and China urged the regime to return to international disarmament talks on its rogue nuclear program. |
Parameters Summer 2004 William E. Rapp |
Past its Prime? The Future of the US-Japan Alliance Over the next two to three decades, Japan will liberalize and expand its security posture in broad ways long sought by the United States, but at the same time will increasingly desire to chart its own course in foreign policy. |
Parameters Autumn 2008 Michael Lind |
A Concert-Balance Strategy for a Multipolar World The United States is a superpower in search of a strategy. The neoconservative vision of unilateral US global hegemony lacks public support, but its critics have failed to propose a credible alternative capable of guiding US national security. |
Parameters Spring 2007 Andrew Scobell |
Notional North Korea Researching North Korea is not as difficult as one might think. Here is an assessment of new books about the country. |
BusinessWeek October 25, 2004 Bremner & Tashiro |
Japan: Quickly Leaving Pacifism Behind Threats of economic sanctions against North Korea, possible preemptive military strikes, and a missile defense system buildup -- welcome to the new, and surprisingly robust, Japanese national security policy. |
BusinessWeek May 30, 2005 Stan Crock |
Back To The Cold War? Rogue nations like Iran and North Korea are amassing a nuclear arsenal. What should Washington do? |
Salon.com March 15, 2001 Jake Tapper |
Did Bush bungle relations with North Korea? "He said a really stupid thing. He shouldn't say stupid things in the future." |
BusinessWeek May 16, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
Why North Korea May Start Nuclear Testing North Korea's reclusive leader, Kim Jong Il, is back in the spotlight as he plays a dangerous survival game, threatening the world yet again with his nuclear arms program. |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Crock, Ihlwan, & Roberts |
Pyongyang: Will Its Recovery Speed A Deal? Contrary to many experts' opinions, economic reforms seem to be having an effect on North Korea. |
TIME Asia September 27, 2010 Michael Elliott |
Seeing Double There are two ways to view Northeast Asia, and right now, both of them are on display. The region may be a cockpit of tension, instability, and potential catastrophe or a zone of peace and prosperity. |
BusinessWeek October 3, 2005 Stan Crock |
The "Wrong Signal" On Containing Nukes? These days, playing hardball with the United States has few downsides. |
BusinessWeek September 13, 2004 Stan Crock |
If You're Not With Us... Would Bush cultivate multilateralism if reelected? Don't bet on it. |
Salon.com January 2, 2003 Robert Scheer |
Bush's illogical foreign policy The nuclear threat from North Korea reveals the limits of the Bush administration's preemption doctrine. |
Parameters Summer 2008 Jeffrey Record |
Retiring Hitler and "Appeasement" from the National Security Debate History has proven that negotiating with terrorists and radicals won't work. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea's China Play They're partners now. But in the future, China will dominate this powerful relationship |
The Motley Fool December 19, 2011 Alex Planes |
What Happens With North Korea Now? Few outcomes have been less certain for their effects on political and business conditions. |
National Defense November 2012 Dan Parsons |
U.S. Pacific Shift Aims to Manage, Not Challenge China's Rise Defense Department leaders are set to manage a strategic "shift" or "pivot" that has been in works for a while, but will accelerate once U.S. troops leave Afghanistan in 2014. |
Parameters Winter 2003/2004 |
Book Reviews Reconstructing Eden: A Comprehensive Plan for the Post-War Political and Economic Development of Iraq... The Future of Freedom: Illiberal Democracy at Home and Abroad... Defense's Nuclear Agency, 1947-1997... Diem's Final Failure: Prelude to America's War in Vietnam... etc. |
BusinessWeek July 24, 2006 Ihlwan & Roberts |
Lifeline From China A visit to bustling Dandong shows why economic sanctions against North Korea may not work. |
Parameters Summer 2005 R. D. Hooker |
Beyond Vom Kriege: The Character and Conduct of Modern War While the methods used to wage war are constantly evolving, the nature and character of war remain deeply and unchangeably rooted in the nature of man. |
BusinessWeek May 3, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea's Roh Has A Second Chance. Now He Has To Use It Following his party's electoral win, will he deliver on promised reforms? |
BusinessWeek July 26, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
North Korea: Open For Business -- A Bit North Korea remains poor, but Kim Jong Il's reforms are bringing growth. |
Parameters Autumn 2004 Richard L. Russell |
Iran in Iraq's Shadow: Dealing with Tehran's Nuclear Weapons Bid The Iraq war is the backdrop for the evolving policy debate on Iran. Tehran might be tempted to harness the threat of nuclear weapons for leverage in the political-military struggle against the United States for power and influence in the Persian Gulf. |
BusinessWeek October 22, 2007 Roberts & Ihlwan |
North Korea's Warming Trend North Korea's sick economy may be on the mend as Chinese and South Korean businesses step up investment. |
National Defense March 2004 Harold Kennedy |
Air Force Forging Alliances in Pacific Region In the aftermath of back-to-back wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Pacific Air Forces--the air component of U.S. military units covering the Pacific and Indian Oceans--is restoring aircraft and crews, and reexamining its basic deployment strategies. |
Parameters Spring 2004 |
Book Reviews A book review of Beyond Baghdad. |
Salon.com June 26, 2000 David Horowitz |
Al Gore's missile-defense dodge The vice president cares more about reassuring the Russians than protecting Americans, and that's why George W. Bush should be president. |
Salon.com August 11, 2000 Fiona Morgan |
Mutually assured dysfunction President Clinton's nuclear missile defense plan will spur a new arms race, a report by top intelligence agencies predicts. |
Salon.com April 3, 2001 Ben Barber |
Back to the Cold War? As Bush rattles his saber -- and China rattles back -- tensions rise around the world... |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Walczak & Crock |
Colin Powell: On Iraq, Bush, and His Job Those who gloat at the idea of Bush asking other nations to help rebuild Iraq "better not gloat too soon." There will be plenty of contracts for foreign companies "to get a piece of the action." |
Popular Mechanics October 16, 2006 Simon Cooper |
North Korea: The Bigger (Non-Nuclear) Threat The consensus is that North Korea has developed anthrax, plague and botulism toxin as weapons, and has extensively researched at least six other germs including smallpox and typhoid. |
Parameters Autumn 2004 Michael O'Hanlon |
The Need to Increase the Size of the Deployable Army The possibility exists that large numbers of active-duty troops and reservists may soon leave the service rather than subjecting themselves to a life continually on the road. The seriousness of the worry cannot be easily established. |
Popular Mechanics February 2007 Simon Cooper |
North Korea's Biochemical Threat While its nuclear test spurs outrage, North Korea grows a vast biochemical weapons arsenal in secrecy. We investigate Kim Jong Il's deception, his country's human trials and the terror potential of this rogue nation's deadly harvest. |
Parameters Summer 2005 Harry S. Laver |
Preemption and the Evolution of America's Strategic Defense In practice as much as in policy, America's defense doctrine must include more sophisticated and nuanced diplomatic initiatives and humanitarian programs, efforts designed to reduce the underlying sources of terrorist motivation and recruitment. |
National Defense April 2013 Nathaniel H. Sledge Jr. |
10 Reasons to Reform U.S. National Security Policy The U.S. security enterprise must be reformed to bring foreign policy in line with national values, and to enable improved fiscal health at the federal level. |
Military History September 2005 Jim Dorschner |
Douglas MacArthur's Last Triumph Conducted against great odds, the September, 1950 amphibious landings at Inchon rehabilitated the U.S. military's tarnished post-World War II image -- and perhaps General MacArthur's, too. |
BusinessWeek June 11, 2007 Moon Ihlwan |
A Capitalist Toehold In North Korea Despite U.S. tariffs, more South Korean businesses are setting up shop in the North. |
BusinessWeek March 20, 2006 Moon Ihlwan |
Hands Across The DMZ North Korea is home to a huge, cheap, and underemployed workforce. South Korea needs a low-wage manufacturing base to compete with China. The result is outsourced work for South Korean capitalists. |
BusinessWeek August 4, 2003 Dexter Roberts |
China: A Warmer Wind Is Blowing toward the West Less than five months into his presidency, new Chinese leader Hu Jintao is bucking expectations by quickly defining a more pragmatic foreign policy course -- delighting Western policymakers. |
The Motley Fool December 20, 2011 Rebecca Lipman |
South Korean Stocks to Watch After Kim Jong-Il's Death How do you think these names will fare under Kim Jung-Un's rule? |
BusinessWeek June 3, 2009 Maria Bartiromo |
Medvedev's Strong Words for North Korea Dmitry Medvedev is coming into his own as a world leader. |
Salon.com March 13, 2002 Robert Scheer |
When in doubt, nuke 'em The Pentagon's secret plan to fight terror with nuclear weapons shows just how dangerous this administration is... |