Sunday, August 24, 2008

Report on Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq

Quickly, Carefully, and Generously: The Necessary Steps for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq
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Executive Summary PDF
From the Task Force for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq, a Commonwealth Institute publication, June 2008.
Preface by U.S. Representative James P. McGovern (MA - 03). Twenty-five initiatives the US can and should take to reduce violence and regional instability as the US leaves Iraq.

Where Do We Go From Here?
New York Times 7 July 2008 lead editorial cites the Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq report above.

Like a Mirage in the Desert: Full Withdrawal May Recede into the Time Horizon
By Charles Knight. Presentation at the United States Institute of Peace panel on The Future of the U.S. Military Presence in Iraq, 25 July 2008 (as prepared). Listen to the Podcast of the panel presentations and the Q&A.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Recent Publications

Re-Envisioning Defense - An Agenda for US Policy Debate and Transition
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By Carl Conetta, 27 June 2008.
Summarizes problem areas in recent US defense policy as well as several broad topics of debate that touch on them all.

The Role of Force & the Armed Forces in post-Cold War US Foreign Policy: What have we learned? Cautionary lessons for the next administration
Security Policy Working Group symposium at Parsons: The New School for Design, NYC, 10 April 2008.
Presentations: Andrew Bacevich, "The Bush Doctrine: Origins and Demise" (Podcast); Carl Conetta, "Out from the House of War: A Litmus for New Leadership in Security Policy" (printable .pdf format)

Cul de Sac: 9/11 and the Paradox of American Power
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By Carl Conetta, PDA Research Monograph #13, 05 February 2008.
Post-Cold War US security policy evinces a disturbing paradox: it has been delivering less and less security at ever increasing cost. The reasons reside not in the differences between the Bush and Clinton administration, but in their points of similarity.

A Prisoner to Primacy
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By Carl Conetta, PDA Briefing Memo #43, 05 February 2008.
The United States is entering a period of policy transition, but there is a dearth of new thinking regarding security policy. The debate remains paralyzed by 9/11 and mesmerized by military primacy. Progress depends on rethinking the role of force.