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Author Hicks, Kathleen H.

Title Defense Outlook 2018 / Authors Kathleen H. Hicks, Mark F. Cancian, Alice Hunt, Friend Todd Harrison, Rebecca K.C. Hersman, Andrew P. Hunter, Seth G. Jones, Thomas Karako, John Schaus, Ian Williams, Seamus P. Daniels, Ariel Fanger
Published Washington, DC : Center for Strategic & International Studies, April 2018

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Description 1 online resource (40 pages) : illustrations
Contents Introduction -- Defense Outlook 2018 -- Making Sense of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 and What It Means for Defense -- Military Force Structure: Trade-Offs, Trade-Offs, Trade-Offs -- A Strategic Approach to Defense Investment -- Nuclear Posture Review: The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same -- The Forthcoming Missile Defense Review -- The Return of Political Warfare -- The Limits of Good Strategy: The United States in the Asia-Pacific in 2018 -- U.S. National Security and Defense Goals in Africa: A Curious Disconnect -- Don't Let the Budget Deal Kill Defense Reform
Summary This volume presents CSIS experts' assessment of the Trump administration's strategy documents and FY 2019 budgets for defense.This assessment can be done now because, as the Trump administration moved into its second year in office, it has laid out its vision for national security. In December 2017, the president signed the National Security Strategy (NSS), the capstone document for national security. The secretary of defense then released the National Defense Strategy (NDS), which contains his vision for the department. The secretary has also published one targeted strategy document--the Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), which describes plans for nuclear capabilities--and will soon publish a second--the Missile Defense Review (MDR), which will do the same for missile defense. To implement these plans, the White House released its FY 2019 budget request, and the Congress has begun hearings to consider the new strategy and implementing budget.The strategies and associated budgets contain much continuity with those of the Obama administration but also move in new directions. The strategy, for example, emphasizes great power competition with China and Russia. It outlines a more ambitious national security effort that requires a substantial increase in resources devoted to defense. The proposed FY 2019 base budget, indeed, contains a large increase 52 billion dollars above what the Obama administration had forecast and 85 billion dollars above the caps of the Budget Control Act.Back in January, CSIS national security experts provided their views about the emerging strategy in a podcast, "Examining the New National Defense Strategy."With the administration's strategy and budget documents now published, CSIS experts have been able to analyze the concepts and policies they contain, along with the trade-offs they made and the challenges that they face. The 10 analyses in this volume--originally published on the Defense360 website collectively provide readers with a broad overview of "Defense Outlook 2018."These analyses begin with a strategy overview, then look at budgets, forces, and acquisition. The remaining six analyses examine specialty topics from nuclear weapons to regional strategies
Notes "A Report of the CSIS International Security Program's Defense Outlook Series"--Title page
"Defense 360°"--Title page
Vendor-supplied metadata
Subject National security -- United States.
Military policy.
National security.
SUBJECT United States -- Military policy. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140379
Subject United States.
Form Electronic book
Author Harrison, Friend Todd
Cancian, Mark F
Hunt, Alice.
Hersman, Rebecca K. C.
Hunter, Andrew P.
Jones, Seth G., 1972-
Karako, Thomas.
Schaus, John.
Williams, Ian
Daniels, Seamus P
Fanger, Ariel
Center for Strategic and International Studies (Washington, D.C.), publisher.