By Joseph O. Chapa, Strategy Bridge: “The strategic demands of a great power war with a peer-adversary—the high-end conflict—will inevitably push decision-makers to the pale of that which is ethically permissible.”
via Hoover Daily Report
Great power rivalries are replacing the post-Cold War global order, with some nations rising while others are declining, according to Hoover Institution military historians.
// Reihan Salam The debate doesn't just have consequences for U.S. foreign policy—it will define the next decades of domestic affairs as well.
By Andrew Maher, The Strategist (ASPI): “The increasing cost of high-tech capabilities, coupled with today’s risk-averse polity, means our most effective platforms are less likely to be employed in a high-threat environment.”
via Hoover Daily Report
The United States should use a strategy of power, alliances, and triangulation to best navigate the emerging world of “great power” rivalries, Hoover scholar Victor Davis Hanson says.