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Begin New Search You searched for: Topic Defense Policy Remove constraint Topic: Defense Policy Content Type Working Paper Remove constraint Content Type: Working Paper Publishing Institution Center for Strategic and International Studies Remove constraint Publishing Institution: Center for Strategic and International Studies

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1. Space Force or Space Corps?

2. The U.S. Department of Defense’s Role in Health Security

3. China’s New 2019 Defense White Paper

4. Achilles’ Heel: Adding Resilience to NATO’s Fragile Missile Shield

5. Acquisition of Software-Defined Hardware-Based Adaptable Systems

6. Understanding DoD’s Defense-Wide Zero-Based Review

7. U.S. Military Forces in FY 2020: The Strategic and Budget Context

8. What to Look for in the FY 2020 Defense Budget Request

9. War by Proxy: Iran’s Growing Footprint in the Middle East

10. Korea, the JCPOA, and the Shifting Military Balance in the Gulf

11. Spaceports of the World

12. Masterpiece Theater: Missed Opportunities for Missile Defense in the 2020 Budget

13. Acquisition Trends, 2018: Defense Contract Spending Bounces Back

14. Shifting the Burden Responsibly: Oversight and Accountability in U.S. Security Sector Assistance

15. Distributed Defense New Operational Concepts for Integrated Air and Missile Defense

16. The Return of Political Warfare

17. Oversight and Accountability in U.S. Security Sector Assistance

18. Trump’s 2019 Missile Defense Budget: Choosing Capacity over Capability

19. Russia's New Nuclear Weapons: Whoever Dies with the Most Toys Wins?

20. National Technology and Industrial Base Integration How to Overcome Barriers and Capitalize on Cooperation

21. Contested Seas Maritime Domain Awareness in Northern Europe

22. Shield of the Pacific: Japan as a Giant Aegis Destroyer

23. The U.S., NATO, and the Defense of Europe: Underlying Trends

24. The Evolution of U.S. Defense Posture in North and West Africa

25. The U.S. Defense Budget in FY2019: Underlying Trends

26. Transition in Afghanistan: Losing the Forgotten War?

27. European Defense Trends: Briefing Update

28. Theories on Why North Korea Rejects the World

29. The Iran Nuclear Agreement and Iranian Energy Exports, the Iranian Economy, and World Energy Markets

30. Amphibious Shipping Shortfalls

31. Chinese Military Modernization and Force Development: Chinese and Outside Perspectives

32. Security Transition in Afghanistan

33. U.S. Department of Defense Contributions to Malaria Elimination in the Era of Artemisinin Resistance

34. The Emirates Center and Gulf Think Tanks: The Next Twenty years

35. Federated Defense in Asia

36. Talking Technology Best Practices in Communicating

37. NATO's Posture after the Wales Summit

38. Leveraging Global Value Chains for a Federated Approach to Defense

39. Iran, Evolving Threats, and Strategic Partnerships in the Gulf

40. Nuclear Scholars Initiative: A Collection of Papers from the 2013 Nuclear Scholars Initiative

41. Cyber Threat and Response

42. Nuclear Notes

43. Improving the US-GCC Security Partnership: Planning for the Future

44. Realizing the Vision

45. Exploring New Ways to Provide Enduring Strategic Effects for the Department of Defense

46. Defense Cuts, Sequestration, and the US Defense Budget

47. Trends in Militancy across South Asia

48. The Civil-Military Challenge to National Security Spending

49. Chinese Military Modernization and Force Development

50. Iran's Present Day Military Capabilities and Military Aspirations in the Middle East

51. Changing US Security Strategy: The Search for Stability and the "Non-War" against "Non-Terrorism"

52. Offensive Cyber Capabilities at the Operational Level

53. U.S.-India Homeland Security Cooperation: Building a Lasting Partnership via Transportation Sector Security

54. U.S. Department of Defense Contract Spending and the Supporting Industrial Base, 2000-2012

55. The Gulf Military Balance Volume II: The Missile and Nuclear Dimensions

56. Asian Defense Spending, 2000–2011

57. The FY2013 Defense Budget, Sequestration, and the Growing Strategy-Reality Gap

58. U.S.-India Defense Trade

59. Iran and the Gulf Military Balance II: The Missile and Nuclear Dimensions

60. Iran and the Gulf Military Balance - I: The Conventional and Asymmetric Dimensions

61. Chinese Military Modernization and Force Development: A Western Perspective

62. Afghanistan from 2012-2014: Is A Successful Transition Possible?

63. The FY2013 Defense Budget, the Threat of Defense Cuts and Sequestration and the Strategy-Reality Gap

64. Nuclear Notes

65. Interim Report-Planning for a Deep Defense Drawdown—Part I

66. U.S. Department of Defense Services Contract Spending and the Supporting Industrial Base, 2000-2011

67. The FY2013 Defense Budget, Deficits, Cost-Escalation, and Sequestration

68. Iraq and US Strategy in the Gulf: Shaping and Communicating US plans for the Future in a Time of Region-Wide Change and Instability

69. u.s. and iranian strategic competition: Competition in Afghanistan, Central Asia, and Pakistan

70. China's Positions and Interests in the South China Sea: A Rational Choices in its Cooperative Policies

71. When Good Metaphors Go Bad: The Metaphoric "Branding" of Cyberspace

72. DoD Workforce Cost Realism Assessment

73. U.S. and Iranian Strategic Competition: Iran's Perceptions of its Internal Developments and their Implications for Strategic Competition with the U.S. in the Gulf, Sept. 2010 – March 2011 By

74. Implementation of the Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act of 2009

75. The Paths Ahead: Missile Defense in Asia

76. American Strategic, Tactical, and Other Mistakes in Iraq: A Litany of Errors

77. The Five Best Resource Decisions in National Security

78. Canada and the Future of Continental Defense - A View from Washington

79. An Attack on Iraq: The Military, Political, and Economic Consequences: Scenario Briefing

81. The Military Balance in the Gulf: 2001-2002 Part III Weapons of Mass Destruction

82. If We Fight Iraq: Iraq and The Conventional Military Balance

83. Defending America: Redefining the Conceptual Borders of Homeland Defense

84. Saudi Military Forces Enter the 21st Century: The Saudi Air Force

85. Saudi Military Forces Enter the 21 st Century: VI. Saudi Force Plans, Military Personnel, Military Expenditures, and Arms Transfers

86. The New American Approach to Defense: The FY2003 Program Notes on Homeland Defense, Counterterrorism, Asymmetric Warfare, and Force Transformation

87. Saudi Military Forces Enter the 21st Century: IX. The Saudi Air Force

88. Proliferation in the "Axis of Evil": North Korea, Iran, and Iraq

89. Iraq's Military Capabilities: Fighting A Wounded, But Dangerous, Poisonous Snake

90. Biological War and the "Buffy Paradigm"

91. Islamic Extremism in Saudi Arabia and the Attack on Al Khobar

92. Defending America: Redefining the Conceptual Borders of Homeland Defense

93. Defending America: Redefining the Conceptual Borders of Homeland Defense