Building an Arsenal - by Amit Gupta (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- In the new world disorder, U.S. forces and military doctrine are being reconfigured to deal with the threat posed by regional powers.
- About the Author: AMIT GUPTA is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Stonehill College
- 232 Pages
- History, Military
Description
About the Book
In the new world disorder, U.S. forces and military doctrine are being reconfigured to deal with the threat posed by regional powers. This change in military doctrine has resulted from the perceived intentions of various regional powers to build advanced conventional weapons and weapons of mass destruction. Gupta argues that such a strategy is a response to the announced or supposed intentions of regional powers rather than to their actual capabilities. He follows the pathologies of the Cold War where the Soviet Union's military intentions were countered without taking into account its actual military capability. The result was an escalating arms race. In the post-Cold War context, continuing such Cold War pathologies not only sustains high defense spending but also leads to losing opportunities for co-opting regional powers into institutional mechanisms for creating a more peaceful and stable international system. In order to study the gap between intentions and capabilities, Gupta carries out an in-depth analysis of the weapons acquisition process in India, Israel, and Brazil. He then uses his analyses of regional power military capability to examine the sort of role that this class of countries can play in the emerging international system.
Book Synopsis
In the new world disorder, U.S. forces and military doctrine are being reconfigured to deal with the threat posed by regional powers. This change in military doctrine has resulted from the perceived intentions of various regional powers to build advanced conventional weapons and weapons of mass destruction. Gupta argues that such a strategy is a response to the announced or supposed intentions of regional powers rather than to their actual capabilities. He follows the pathologies of the Cold War where the Soviet Union's military intentions were countered without taking into account its actual military capability. The result was an escalating arms race. In the post-Cold War context, continuing such Cold War pathologies not only sustains high defense spending but also leads to losing opportunities for co-opting regional powers into institutional mechanisms for creating a more peaceful and stable international system. In order to study the gap between intentions and capabilities, Gupta carries out an in-depth analysis of the weapons acquisition process in India, Israel, and Brazil. He then uses his analyses of regional power military capability to examine the sort of role that this class of countries can play in the emerging international system.Review Quotes
?Can Third World nations develop an independent arms production capability? This insightful volume answers the question using a comparative framework to examine the security policies of three regional powers: India, Israel, and Brazil....This book uniquely blends international relations theory and the comparative method, and is a useful addition to the literature on Third World security.?-Choice
"Can Third World nations develop an independent arms production capability? This insightful volume answers the question using a comparative framework to examine the security policies of three regional powers: India, Israel, and Brazil....This book uniquely blends international relations theory and the comparative method, and is a useful addition to the literature on Third World security."-Choice
About the Author
AMIT GUPTA is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Stonehill College