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- Cascading risk (1)
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- National Military Strategy (1)
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- National Strategic Risk Abacus (1)
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- People's Republic of China; India; Ladakh border; PRC; Washington; Eurasia; Eurasia policy; Patrol Point 14 in the Galwan Valley; strategy; United States; political expansion; economic expansion; military expansion; Central Asia strategy; South Asia strategy; Mongolia; Hong Kong; Taiwan; Tibet; Xingjian; Beijing; China-Pakistan Economic Corridor; Daulat Beg Oldie military base; Delhi; Yunnan-Tibet Highway; China National Highway 219; G219; Darbuk-Shyok-Daulat Beg Oldie road; Nepal; Colonel Zhang Shuili (1)
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Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Other Political Science
Sino-Indian Border Disputes In An Era Of Strategic Expansions, Roman Muzalevsky
Sino-Indian Border Disputes In An Era Of Strategic Expansions, Roman Muzalevsky
The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters
The June 2020 clash between the People’s Republic of China and India in the disputed Ladakh border area resulted from the strategic expansions of both powers. Like two bubbles expanding in a contained space, these expansions were bound to collide and cause friction. This article explains how the expansions precipitated the incident and might exacerbate border disputes in the future. In pondering implications, it recommends Washington pursue a Eurasia-focused policy embracing the disputed region.
Assessing Risk At The National Strategic Level: Visualization Tools For Military Planners, Wade A. Germann, Heather S. Gregg
Assessing Risk At The National Strategic Level: Visualization Tools For Military Planners, Wade A. Germann, Heather S. Gregg
The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters
The reemergence of great power competition, conflict with near-peer competitor states below the level of armed conflict, and persisting threats from nonstate actors with transnational ambitions and global reach pose challenges for strategists planning, executing, and assessing military operations and strategy. Building on current visualization tools, two proposed models—the National Strategic Risk Abacus and the National Strategic Risk Radar Chart—address these challenges and better depict how the US military may inadvertently contribute to risk at the national strategic level.