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We Still Need Conventional Arms
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# : |
16937 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1990 |
3,128 Words |
| Author
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James Blackwell James Blackwell is deputy director of political/military
studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies
in Washington, D.C. |
In 1989, the world as we knew it came unglued. It will never be the same. From Tiananmen Square to Timisoara, people took their quest for liberty and democracy to the streets against totalitarian communist regimes. In many other places, the demonstrations were less violent but no less forceful. Even in Moscow, hundreds of thousands marched against the dictatorship of the party.
It is difficult for us to discern today where the world will be tomorrow. Will Mikhail Gorbachev succeed in leading not only his own Soviet Union but perhaps, by example, the rest of the communist world through a reform process that will make those countries more peaceful and democratic? Or is reform a 10-year tactic aimed at producing a leaner, meaner Soviet Union in the twenty-first century? Either way, is the reform process going to be successful, or will it fail in the face of revolution by the people demanding a more complete and rapid conversion? Or will reactionary forces bring perestroika and glasnost to and end and reinstitute a form of aggressive totalitarian control?
Whether the future of the communist regimes is one of reform, revolution, or reaction, the United States has neither a crystal ball to see the future nor the luxury of waiting to find out how it might go. If Americans fail to establish a strategic road map to guide us through critical decisions, we will end up with a strategy by default, one that is likely to be guided more by bureaucratic and political imperatives than by a grand strategy that harmonizes resources and objectives. Our grand strategy for the next century must recognize the emerging preeminence of conventional forces for our future national
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