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Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 355.033073
EAN num: 9780275974275
ISBN number: 0275974278
Label: Praeger Publishing houses
Manufacturer: Praeger Publishing houses
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 456
Printing Date: November 30, 2001
Publishing house: Praeger Publishing houses
Sale Popularity Level: 356826
Studio: Praeger Publishing houses
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Product Description:
There is a wide spectrum of potential threats to the U.S. homeland that do not involve overt attacks by states using long-range missiles or conventional military forces. Such threats include covert attacks by state actors, state use of proxies, independent terrorist and extremist attacks by foreign groups or individuals, and independent terrorist and extremist attacks by residents of the United States. These threats are currently limited in scope and frequency, but are emerging as potentially significant issues for future U.S. security. In this comprehensive work, Cordesman argues that new threats require new thinking, and offers a range of recommendations, from expanding the understanding of what constitutes a threat and bolstering Homeland defense measures, to bettering resource allocation and improving intelligence gathering and analysis. No pattern of actual attacks on U.S. territory has yet emerged that provides a clear basis for predicting how serious any given form of attack might be in the future, what means of attack might be used, or how lethal new forms of attack might be. As a result, there is a major ongoing debate over the seriousness of the threat and how the U.S. government should react. This work is an invaluable contribution to that debate.
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Rated by buyers
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A wonderful book built on paranoia and lies. I am even scared to write opinion I have because I fear my statements will make me a target by those who might believe this kind newspeak. I am sure the jews were guilty of asymetrical warfare in WWII. Just like the Cambodians waged asymetrical war against the Khomer Rouge in Laos, when they were executed by the millions.
At Tinnamen Square, Chinese students committed asymetrical warfare against the Chinese government - and they still are by staying Chinese prisons.
Through fear, we are robbed of our freedoms that are essential to the American way. Extreme "Law Enforcement" has stolen our rights.
Not long ago I witnessed a slogan on the tee-shirt of a Kansas City, MO SWAT Team memeber.
It pictured a large foot, kicking through a doorway.
"Coming to a door near you soon" ~ was the wording.
Is there any question WHO or WHAT are terrorist?
Law Enforcement! Backed by our government. lead by our leaders.
Illegal aliens along the Mexican border are AFRAID to endeavor to enter - they area affraid the US Military will caputre them and TORTURE them, just like at Gitmo.
Tolerance for anyone different than ourselves is a thing of the past.
When will the religous police begin to arrest people for listening to Rap music? I don't like Rap music, but I would fight to the death the right for someone to listen too it.
Rated by buyers
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Anthony H. Cordesman's Terrorism, Asymmetric Warfare, and Weapons of Mass Destruction: Defending the U.S. Homeland is a text I assign as the centerpiece for a Law Enforcement Intelligence course. This very comprehensive work covers the main elements for an actionable policy against threats both foreign and domestic.
Possibly the most significant aspects of the volume are the merging of the historically polar fields of military and civilian security forces, and erasing the line between national security and foreign defense policy.
Cordesman focuses less on winning the war, and more on sustaining the peace. This is accomplished by first, encouraging a government policy that the military take a lower profile, requiring the police to shoulder a greater portion of the responsibility for peacekeeping.
Second, there is a much greater emphasis on special operations, which focus on the primary objective, i.e., to achieve containment and in particular limiting the appeal of the extremists to their likely sympathizers, even if total elimination may be unachievable.
Additionally, the book identifies consistent, and prescient factors, which strongly influence the likelihood of sucess in a counterinsurgency campaign. These include, but are not limited to the following:
· Geopolitical conditions, such as whether there are bordering states sympathetic to the guerrillas in order to give them a haven and a supply base.
· Multiple fronts, which the government must concern itself. The availability of highly trained military and police are necessary to combat small, highly mobile or embedded guerrillas. The more entrenched, and therefore, the more legitimized the insurgency becomes, the more difficult it becomes to undermine their activities, funding, recruitment and support from the population.
· Ethnic and religious homogeneity of the indigenous population. The population must be won over to support the government.
· The importance of intelligence in a counterinsurgency war cannot be over-emphasized; and this includes a deep understanding and appreciation of the time and effort required to develop and cultivate sources. There is and never will be, a substitute for HUMINT.
Defending the U.S. Homeland depicts a pragmatic policy comprised of a mailed fist, properly coordinated with a velvet glove, heart-and-minds campaign. Undoubtedly, guarding against future transnational crime and terrorist threats, indicate a need for greater communication and flexibility in both U.S. intelligence operations and policy.
Rated by buyers
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If you were to teach a graduate seminar in 'homeland defense,' you could make a strong case for using this book as your teaching text. It's an extremely comprehensive look at the topic, with sections on everything from risk analysis to the roles of various state and federal agencies. It also scores high on Buzzword Bingo -- featuring not only the title phrases 'weapons of mass destruction,' 'asymmetric,' and 'homeland' (who ever used that term prior to September 11?) but other current insider jargon like jointness, CBRN, proxies, and learning curve. Civil and military aspects of the 'homeland defense' question are all thoroughly covered.
If there is a deficiency, it's in discussing the larger context in which attacks are likely to occur. Cordesman posits a world in which threats exist, and the decision-maker has to prepare for, detect, counter, and respond to them. What's missing is an analysis of why threats exist in the very first place -- in the plaintive wail of the headline writers, 'Why do they hate us?' Might not finding ways to get 'Them' to hate us less be an element of 'homeland defense' as well? Assessing HOW we're at risk without also figuring out WHY strikes me as akin to trying to fix a leaky bathtub without very first turning off the faucet.
But within the narrower focus of Cordesman's book, he does a very thorough job. I can imagine this title showing up on a lot of desks in Washington, D.C., and that's probably a good thing.
Rated by buyers
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Originally I bought this book looking for information concerning National Missile Defense. It did not hit the mark, but it IS an excellent source of information on international threats to the US. I recommend it to all in the new Homeland Defense Administration and all the National Guard Civil Support Teams. Mr. Cordesman covers risk assessments, threat assessment and prioritization, types of anticipated attacks and how to respond, Federal efforts (by department and agency) to establish homeland defense, lessons learned, and final recommendations.
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