| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities - Background and Issues for Congress |
23-Nov-2009 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | In the debate over future U.S. defense spending, including deliberations taking place in the current Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), a key issue is how much emphasis to place on programs for countering improved Chinese military forces in coming years. Observers disagree on the issue, with some arguing that such programs should receive significant emphasis, others arguing that they should receive relatively little, and still others taking an intermediate position. The ... |
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| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities - Background and Issues for Congress |
21-Oct-2009 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | In the debate over future U.S. defense spending, including deliberations taking place in the current Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), a key issue is how much emphasis to place on programs for countering improved Chinese military forces in coming years. Observers disagree on the issue, with some arguing that such programs should receive significant emphasis, others arguing that they should receive relatively little, and still others taking an intermediate position. The ... |
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| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities-Background and Issues for Congress |
23-Sep-2009 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | In the debate over future U.S. defense spending, including deliberations taking place in the current Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), a key issue is how much emphasis to place on programs for countering improved Chinese military forces in coming years. Observers disagree on the issue, with some arguing that such programs should receive significant emphasis, others arguing that they should receive relatively little, and still others taking an intermediate position. The ... |
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| Tri-Level Optimization of Critical Infrastructure Resilience |
Sep-2009 |
70 pages |
| Authors:
John P Babick; NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA DEPT OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH
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 | We introduce a new way to perform network analysis on critical infrastructure that is superior to Risk Analysis and Management for Critical Asset Protection (RAMCAP), currently used by the Department of Homeland Security. We introduce the idea of a Design-Attack-Defend (DAD) model that determines the optimal defense plan for a critical infrastructure network within a specified budget constraint. Design-Attack-Defend first determines worst-case attacks and then determines where to defend or ... |
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| Passive Fingerprinting Of Computer Network Reconnaissance Tools |
Sep-2009 |
88 pages |
| Authors:
Alexander J Beecroft; NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA
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 | This thesis examines the feasibility of passively fingerprinting network reconnaissance tools. Detecting reconnaissance is a key early indication and warning of an adversary's impending attack or intelligence gathering effort against a network. Current network defense tools provide little capability to detect, and much less specifically identify, network reconnaissance. This thesis introduces a methodology for identifying a network reconnaissance tool?s unique fingerprint. The methodology confirmed the utility of previous research on ... |
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| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities-Background and Issues for Congress |
17-Jul-2009 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | In the debate over future U.S. defense spending, including deliberations taking place in the current Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), a key issue is how much emphasis to place on programs for countering improved Chinese military forces in coming years. Observers disagree on the issue, with some arguing that such programs should receive significant emphasis, others arguing that they should receive relatively little, and still others taking an intermediate position. The ... |
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| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities - Background and Issues for Congress |
29-May-2009 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | In the debate over future U.S. defense spending, including deliberations taking place in the current Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), a key issue is how much emphasis to place on programs for countering improved Chinese military forces in coming years. Observers disagree on the issue, with some arguing that such programs should receive significant emphasis, others arguing that they should receive relatively little, and still others taking an intermediate position. The ... |
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| Competitive Advantage, Uncertainty, and Weapons Procurement: Striking Balance for the Future |
02-May-2009 |
40 pages |
| Authors:
Patrick H Mason; NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIV WASHINGTON DC
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 | Secretary Gates has established balance as the defining principle of our National Defense Strategy. Accomplishing balance in an era full of surprise and uncertainty with discontinuities and disruptive forces is immensely challenging. The ongoing overhaul of our strategic planning and acquisition processes is focused on creating the right balance of investments, all leading to a sustained competitive advantage. This paper presents an analysis of how effective this overhaul has been ... |
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| Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency: Strategic Plan |
May-2009 |
58 pages |
| Authors:
DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA
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 | This document describes the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) strategy, as required by Section 2352, Title 10 of the United States Code. It provides a top-level view of DARPA's activities for Congress, the research community, and various elements of the Department of Defense (DoD). This strategic plan describes DARPA?s mission, business processes, research thrusts and objectives, and research projects to achieve the objectives. |
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| Alternatives for Modernizing U.S. Fighter Forces |
May-2009 |
73 pages |
| Authors:
CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE (U S CONGRESS) WASHINGTON DC
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 | The United States Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps maintain an inventory of approximately 3,500 fixed-wing fighter and attack aircraft that provide unsurpassed air-to-air and air-to-ground combat capabilities. Most of those aircraft were purchased at high annual rates during the 1980s, however, and are expected to reach the end of their service life at similarly high rates over the next decade. To counteract those impending retirements and simultaneously modernize their ... |
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| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities - Background and Issues for Congress |
24-Apr-2009 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | In the debate over future U.S. defense spending, including deliberations taking place in the current Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), a key issue is how much emphasis to place on programs for countering improved Chinese military forces in coming years. Observers disagree on the issue, with some arguing that such programs should receive significant emphasis, others arguing that they should receive relatively little, and still others taking an intermediate position. The ... |
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| Forest Brothers, 1945: The Culmination of the Lithuanian Partisan Movement |
11-Mar-2009 |
44 pages |
| Authors:
Vylius M Leskys; MARINE CORPS COMMAND AND STAFF COLL QUANTICO VA
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 | Although the resistance effort maintained its strength ideologically, the Lithuanian partisan movement never recovered from the culminating point in 1945 because of a shortfall in resources, a lack of external support, and the inability of resistance leadership to adapt rapidly enough against a comprehensive Soviet assimilation campaign. While many authors argue that the high point in the Lithuanian partisan war occurred between 1946 and 1947, the totality of evidence points ... |
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| Arms Control and Nonproliferation: A Catalog of Treaties and Agreements |
10-Feb-2009 |
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| Authors:
Mary Beth Nikitin; Amy F Woolf; Paul K Kerr; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | Arms control and nonproliferation efforts are two of the tools that have occasionally been used to implement U.S. national security strategy. Although some believe these tools do little to restrain the behavior of U.S. adversaries, while doing too much to restrain U.S. military forces and operations, many other analysts see them as an effective means to promote transparency, ease military planning, limit forces, and protect against uncertainty and surprise. Arms ... |
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| RAND's Portfolio Analysis Tool (PAT): Theory, Methods, and Reference Manual |
Jan-2009 |
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| Authors:
Paul Dreyer; Paul K Davis; RAND NATIONAL DEFENSE RESEARCH INST SANTA MONICA CA
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 | Strategic planning often seeks to balance investments across numerous objectives. Defense planners, for example, have objectives relating to force capabilities for future traditional and irregular warfare and for operations other than war. The objectives apply separately for different geographical regions and time periods. Acquisition planners have objectives of providing future weapon-system capabilities in each of many mission areas--again for different operational circumstances and time periods. Trainers have objectives such as ... |
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| Nuclear Weapons in U.S. National Security Policy: Past, Present, and Prospects |
30-Dec-2008 |
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| Authors:
Amy F Woolf; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | The Bush Administration has outlined a strategy of tailored deterrence to define the role that nuclear weapons play in U.S. national security policy. There has been little discussion of this concept, either in Congress or in the public at large. This leaves unanswered questions about how this strategy differs from U.S. nuclear strategy during the Cold War and how it might advise decisions about the size and structure of the ... |
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| CrossTalk: The Journal of Defense Software Engineering. Volume 21, Number 12 |
Dec-2008 |
33 pages |
| Authors:
Sandy Schwalb; Walt Lipke; George Jackelen; Quentin W Fleming; Joel M Koppelman; Karen McRitchie; Kasey Thompson; Joseph P Avery; Rick Spiewak; SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT CENTER HILL AFB UT
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 | Data drives decisions. This statement may sound too simplistic, but the truth remains that humans need, crave, and desire data. Data is used in nearly every choice we make, from the most mundane decisions such as where to dine to the selection of a fabric softener. Data inundation and analysis paralysis are real dangers due to the ease of access and abundance of information. Additionally, the mobility of personal computing ... |
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| Medical Diplomacy in the United States Army: A Concept Whose Time Has Come |
13 JUN 2008 |
107 pages |
| Authors:
Mary V. Krueger; ARMY COMMAND AND GENERAL STAFF COLL FORT LEAVENWORTH KS
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 | Prior to the attacks of September 11th the United States Military founded defense plans on a threat-based model, with the nation being prepared to conquer adversaries with the most advanced combat power. The 2001 attacks and subsequent Global War on Terrorism have led to a new geopolitical reality, where military planners must increase US combat effectiveness in a new way by denying refuge to the terrorists who wish to defeat ... |
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| Systems Architecture Approach to Towing and Salvage Ship Recapitalization |
01-Jun-2008 |
87 pages |
| Authors:
George T Southworth; NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA
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 | Four salvage ships and four ocean-going towing ships are maintained and operated by the Military Sealift Command (MSC) for the U.S. Navy. In 2019, the first T-ATF ships will reach the end of their 40-year life expectancy. The program manager for these vessels has a set of top-level performance characteristics that are deemed as desirable requirements for a new ship class, encapsulating both legacy ship class capabilities. The DoD has ... |
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| Defending U.S. National Interests in the Persian Gulf: Going Light |
MAR 2008 |
67 pages |
| Authors:
Michael A. Gretz; NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA
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 | Is it possible to defend U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf through the use of primarily Special Operations Forces (SOF) and light forces? How might implementing this type of force structure affect the perception of U.S. involvement in the region and its ability to project power on a scale commensurate with its interests? This thesis examines two ways that the United States might be able to secure its interests in ... |
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| Injury and Illness Casualty Distributions Among U.S. Army and Marine Corps Personnel During Operation Iraqi Freedom |
Mar-2008 |
9 pages |
| Authors:
Amber L Wade; James M Zouris; Cheryl P Magno; NAVAL HEALTH RESEARCH CENTER SAN DIEGO CA
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 | The objective of this study was to evaluate the distributions of U.S. Marine Corps and Army wounded In action (WIA) and disease and nonbattle injury (DNBI) casualties during Operation Iraqi Freedom Major Combat Phase (OIF-1) and Support and Stability Phase (OIF-2). A retrospective review of hospitalization data was conducted. Chi-square tests were used to assess the Primary International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD-9), diagnostic category distributions by phase of ... |
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| Defense Business Transformation. Sustaining Progress Requires Continuity of Leadership and an Integrated Approach |
07 FEB 2008 |
44 pages |
| Authors:
GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE WASHINGTON DC
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 | The Department of Defense (DOD) has stewardship over an unprecedented amount of taxpayer money--with about $546 billion in discretionary budget authority provided thus far in fiscal year 2008, and total reported obligations of about $492 billion to support ongoing operations and activities related to the Global War on Terrorism from September 11, 2001, through September 2007. Meanwhile, DOD is solely responsible for 8 high-risk areas identified by GAO and shares ... |
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| Meeting America's Security Challenges Beyond Iraq. A Conference Report |
01-Jan-2008 |
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| Authors:
Sarah Harting; RAND CORP SANTA MONICA CA
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 | On December 4, 2007, the RAND Corporation and the Center for Naval Analyses (CNA) cohosted a conference entitled, "Meeting America's Security Challenges Beyond Iraq." The conference included approximately 70 senior analysts from selected think tanks and academic institutions, high-ranking officers from the military services, selected government officials, and several journalists. The purpose of this conference was to provide leading analysts and practitioners of U.S. security policy and strategy with an ... |
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| Evaluating Novel Threats to the Homeland. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and Cruise Missiles |
2008 |
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| Authors:
Brian A. Jackson; David R. Frelinger; Michael J. Lostumbo; Robert W. Button; RAND NATIONAL DEFENSE RESEARCH INST SANTA MONICA CA
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 | How to invest homeland security resources wisely in the United States can appear to be an intractable problem because the large, open American society seems to be vulnerable to so many threats in every corner of the country. This monograph is intended to present a defense-planning approach to bound the problem and thereby aid policy and resource decisions about one type of potential threat to the homeland: cruise missiles and ... |
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| The Nation's Guardians: America's 21st Century Air Force |
29 DEC 2007 |
12 pages |
| Authors:
T. M. Moseley; DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE WASHINGTON DC
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 | This White Paper charts US Air Force strategy for the next two decades and defines the Air Force's indispensable role in promoting and defending the national interest. In framing the strategic imperatives that face the United States and its Air Force, the paper lays out the urgent actions required to cope with today's and tomorrow's challenges. Accordingly, this White Paper is a definitive statement of Air Force intent to maintain ... |
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| Determining Communication Shortfalls for Homeland Defense |
DEC 2007 |
75 pages |
| Authors:
Kevin P. Wilson; NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA
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 | Communications is a critical enabling capability that is interwoven into every facet of every military operation. Assessing what communication capability is most valuable to the operation is a vital planning process that currently resides in several processes that produce differing outcomes within the DoD. This thesis examines these planning processes, particularly the capability-based approach, assessing which process is optimum for determining communication shortfalls. An in depth comparison of the Joint ... |
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| Regional Threats and Security Strategy: The Troubling Case of Today's Middle East |
NOV 2007 |
57 pages |
| Authors:
James A. Russell; ARMY WAR COLL STRATEGIC STUDIES INST CARLISLE BARRACKS PA
|
 | Like the Arab-Israeli Six-Day War of 1967, the U.S. invasion of Iraq is fundamentally reordering regional politics and security in ways that will be felt for a generation, if not longer. The Pandora's Box opened by the United States in Iraq adds a new level of unwelcome complexity to an already strained regional fabric. Threats to regional security stem from global, interstate, and intrastate sources. The complicated, multidimensional, and interrelated ... |
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| China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities - Background and Issues for Congress |
18 OCT 2007 |
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| Authors:
Ronald O'Rourke; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | Concern has grown in Congress and elsewhere about China s military modernization. The topic is an increasing factor in discussions over future required U.S. Navy capabilities. The issue for Congress addressed in this report is: How should China's military modernization be factored into decisions about U.S. Navy programs? Several elements of China s military modernization have potential implications for future required U.S. Navy capabilities. These include theater-range ballistic missiles (TBMs), ... |
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| DoD Regional and Cultural Capabilities: The Way Ahead. The Regional and Cultural Expertise Summit: Building a Framework to Meet National Defense Challenges |
01-Oct-2007 |
15 pages |
| Authors:
OFFICE OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE (PERSONNEL AND READINESS) WASHINGTON DC
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 | The DoD Regional and Cultural Capabilities: the Way Ahead is the outcome of an unprecedented gathering of senior leaders from the Department of Defense to focus on mission demands for regional and cultural capabilities and develop a framework for synchronizing policies, plans, and programs to meet these demands. The Summit provided a forum for an enterprise-wide dialogue on the need to raise the bar on the Department's ability to better ... |
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| The Reserve Policies of Nations: A Comparative Analysis |
SEP 2007 |
188 pages |
| Authors:
Richard Weitz; ARMY WAR COLL STRATEGIC STUDIES INST CARLISLE BARRACKS PA
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 | While the American defense community has naturally been preoccupied with the extensive transformation of the U.S. reserve components in recent years, equally critical developments in the reserve policies of the world's other major military powers have received less attention. The inevitability of continued American engagement with these countries means that their changing policies are highly relevant to the United States. American defense planners should therefore keep abreast of ongoing alterations ... |
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| Arms Control and Nonproliferation: A Catalog of Treaties and Agreements |
09 AUG 2007 |
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| Authors:
Amy F. Woolf; Steve Bowman; Sharon Squassoni; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | Arms control and nonproliferation efforts are two of the tools that have occasionally been used to implement U.S. national security strategy. Although some believe these tools do little to restrain the behavior of U.S. adversaries, while doing too much to restrain U.S. military forces and operations, many other analysts see them as an effective means to promote transparency, ease military planning, limit forces, and protect against uncertainty and surprise. Arms ... |
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| Strategy to Enhance International Supply Chain Security |
01 JUL 2007 |
130 pages |
| Authors:
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY WASHINGTON DC
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 | This strategy was developed in response to the SAFE Port Act (PL 109-347, 120 Stat. at 1901, 1903, October 13, 2006) which require the development of a strategic plan to enhance the security of the international supply chain, including protocols for the expeditious resumption of the flow of trade following a transportation disruption or transportation security incident. The Strategy to Enhance International Supply Chain Security exists within a framework of ... |
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| Department of Defense Research & Engineering Strategic Plan, 2007 |
11 JUN 2007 |
33 pages |
| Authors:
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF DEFENSE RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING WASHINGTON DC
|
 | This strategic plan guides investment and management priorities for the collective Department of Defense (DoD) Research and Engineering (R&E) program. While each Service and Agency with an R&E program has specific responsibilities to plan, program, and execute programs to meet their specific Component's needs, this strategy develops a broader context that fosters coordination of Service and Agency efforts to provide complete and integrated DoD capabilities. Each of the Services and ... |
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| Report on Improving Interagency Support for United States 21st Century National Security |
JUN 2007 |
32 pages |
| Authors:
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON DC
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 | This report will examine current efforts underway across the United States Government to develop needed capabilities and capacities. Reports that bear on similar issues include the report to Congress submitted pursuant to section 120E of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 and a report provided by the Department of Defense (DOD) to the House Armed Services Committee on implementation of DOD Directive 3000.05. |
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| Operational Replanning with User Defined Operational Picture: Warfighting Experiment and Operational Assessment Plan |
JUN 2007 |
39 pages |
| Authors:
Paul J. Hiniker; DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY FALLS CHURCH VA
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 | In adapting C2 to the 21st century we plan to conduct a controlled Human-in-the-Loop (HITL) experiment with new Network Centric Warfare (NCW) technology which will be introduced to sixteen experienced warfighters in the form of a collaborative User Defined Operational Picture (UDOP) with Blue Force Readiness and intelligence database access enabled by an IP wide area network as a possible improvement over their use of current baseline technology in the ... |
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| NATO Logistics Handbook |
19-Apr-2007 |
220 pages |
| Authors:
NATO BRUSSELS (BELGIUM)
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 | This Handbook, published under the auspices of the Senior NATO Logisticians' Conference (SNLC), is intended as a simple guide to logistics in NATO. It does not attempt to examine current issues or provide answers to the problems that logisticians will face, but it rather aims at introducing them to some of the basic principles, policies, concepts and organisations with which they will work. This is the first update of the ... |
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| U.S. Forces in Afghanistan |
27 MAR 2007 |
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| Authors:
Joanne O'Bryant; Michael Waterhouse; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON DC CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
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 | As interest in troop level deployments continue, recently, President Bush announced in a February 15, 2007 speech, the administration's plans for an increase in U.S. forces in Afghanistan, including a planned gradual increase of 3,200 U.S. troops on the ground in the coming several months. The total troop deployment in this region is expected to reach 70,000 by 2008. Varying media estimates of military forces in Afghanistan have raised concerns ... |
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| Are Our Current Department of Defense (DOD) Strategies Forward-Looking? |
13 MAR 2007 |
21 pages |
| Authors:
Bobby L. Lipscomb; ARMY WAR COLL CARLISLE BARRACKS PA
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 | The Department of Defense (DOD) will continue to face many challenges in this volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous world. We live in a rapidly changing world where terrorists and other non-state actors threaten our values and our way of life. One of the most important challenges facing DOD is developing a long-term strategy to keep pace with these world changes. These world changes include increased population growth and urbanization, rapid ... |
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| Future Directions for Microsystems Technology (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
07-Mar-2007 |
38 pages |
| Authors:
John C Zolper; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Challenges in Imaging, Sensors, and Signal Processing (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
07-Mar-2007 |
15 pages |
| Authors:
Raymond Balcerak; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Future of Power Efficient Processing (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
07-Mar-2007 |
13 pages |
| Authors:
Michael Fritze; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Powering the Integrated Microsystem (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
07-Mar-2007 |
18 pages |
| Authors:
John D Evans; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Microsystems Technology Symposium: Enabling Future Capability (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
07-Mar-2007 |
11 pages |
| Authors:
DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Semiconductor Laser Wish List (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
07-Mar-2007 |
22 pages |
| Authors:
Henryk Temkin; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Photonics in Processing (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
06-Mar-2007 |
10 pages |
| Authors:
Jagdeep Shah; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| Microsystems, Scaling, and Integration (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
06-Mar-2007 |
22 pages |
| Authors:
Amit Lal; DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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| New Dimensions in Microarchitecture Harnessing 3D Integration Technologies (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
06-Mar-2007 |
13 pages |
| Authors:
Kerry Bernstein; IBM THOMAS J WATSON RESEARCH CENTER YORKTOWN HEIGHTS NY
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| Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
06-Mar-2007 |
23 pages |
| Authors:
Rodney Brooks; MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LAB
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| Adaptive Photonic Phase Locked Elements: An Overview (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
06-Mar-2007 |
16 pages |
| Authors:
Terry A Dorschner; RAYTHEON CO EL SEGUNDO CA NETWORK CENTRIC SYSTEMS
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| Adaptive Focal Plane Array: A Compact Spectral Imaging Sensor (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
05-Mar-2007 |
18 pages |
| Authors:
William Gunning; TELEDYNE SCIENTIFIC AND IMAGING LLC CAMARILLO CA
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| Bridging the Gap (BRIEFING CHARTS) |
05-Mar-2007 |
45 pages |
| Authors:
DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY ARLINGTON VA MICROSYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY OFFICE
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