With the opening of the Berlin Wall and the emergence of democracy in Eastern Europe, there are widespread pressures-- including the domestic deficit-- for major conventional force reductions in Europe. Using a dynamic model of warfare he has developed, Joshua M. Epstein analyzes the current balance and demonstrates that NATO's security would progressively improve with the implementation of the Warsaw Treaty Organization's unilateral reductions, the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) agreement, and a CFE II agreement under ...
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With the opening of the Berlin Wall and the emergence of democracy in Eastern Europe, there are widespread pressures-- including the domestic deficit-- for major conventional force reductions in Europe. Using a dynamic model of warfare he has developed, Joshua M. Epstein analyzes the current balance and demonstrates that NATO's security would progressively improve with the implementation of the Warsaw Treaty Organization's unilateral reductions, the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) agreement, and a CFE II agreement under which NATO and the WTO would reduce forces to equal levels 50 percent below the levels specified in CFE I. Epstein argues that the improvement under such a CFE II agreement would be sufficient to permit the United States to make further, unilateral, reductions without endangering NATO's security.
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Add this copy of Conventional Force Reductions: a Dynamic Assessment to cart. $38.18, very good condition, Sold by BookDepart rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Shepherdstown, WV, UNITED STATES, published 1990 by The Brookings Institution.
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UsedVeryGood. Hardcover; light fading, light shelf wear to exterior; previous owner's st amping on front end page and back of title page; in very good condition wit h clean text and tight binding. Dust jacket shows light scuffing and shelf wear.