The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?

Global climate change is impacting the global security environment, most notably in the Arctic region. While many nations have been planning, preparing, and programming to exploit the opportunities presented in a receding-ice Arctic, the United States has lagged far behind in all of the substantive...

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Main Author: Smith, Reginald R.
Other Authors: NAVAL WAR COLL NEWPORT RI JOINT MILITARY OPERATIONS DEPT
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA535578
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA535578
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spelling ftdtic:ADA535578 2023-05-15T14:38:15+02:00 The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War? Smith, Reginald R. NAVAL WAR COLL NEWPORT RI JOINT MILITARY OPERATIONS DEPT 2010-10-27 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA535578 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA535578 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA535578 Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. DTIC Government and Political Science Geography *INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS *ARCTIC REGIONS *POLITICAL SCIENCE *POLITICAL ALLIANCES *SECURITY *GLOBAL CLIMATE COLD WAR STRATEGY POLICIES COASTAL REGIONS UNITED STATES NATIONS ENVIRONMENTS PARTNERSHIPS Text 2010 ftdtic 2016-02-23T05:31:17Z Global climate change is impacting the global security environment, most notably in the Arctic region. While many nations have been planning, preparing, and programming to exploit the opportunities presented in a receding-ice Arctic, the United States has lagged far behind in all of the substantive actions necessary to preserve its vital national interests in the region. Analysis of the actions of the five Arctic coastal nations sans the United States reveal significant advances in military presence, infrastructure expenditures, territorial claims, and political maneuvering as these nations jockey to consolidate and preserve their perceived sovereign rights and national interests in the region. Further analysis shows partnership is key to advancing United States' interests as budgetary and political pressures preclude unilateral action. As a result, recommendations center around building U.S. international legitimacy and credibility, exploiting a critical capability gap as a uniting issue, and capitalizing on a dearth of unifying military cooperative constructs to lead a new partnership paradigm. The United States stands at a strategic crossroads; failure to act erodes the Nation's ability to shape the Arctic policy environment. The original document contains color images. A paper submitted to the Naval War College faculty in partial satisfaction of the requirements of the Joint Military Operations Department. Text Arctic Climate change Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
op_collection_id ftdtic
language English
topic Government and Political Science
Geography
*INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
*ARCTIC REGIONS
*POLITICAL SCIENCE
*POLITICAL ALLIANCES
*SECURITY
*GLOBAL
CLIMATE
COLD WAR
STRATEGY
POLICIES
COASTAL REGIONS
UNITED STATES
NATIONS
ENVIRONMENTS
PARTNERSHIPS
spellingShingle Government and Political Science
Geography
*INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
*ARCTIC REGIONS
*POLITICAL SCIENCE
*POLITICAL ALLIANCES
*SECURITY
*GLOBAL
CLIMATE
COLD WAR
STRATEGY
POLICIES
COASTAL REGIONS
UNITED STATES
NATIONS
ENVIRONMENTS
PARTNERSHIPS
Smith, Reginald R.
The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?
topic_facet Government and Political Science
Geography
*INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
*ARCTIC REGIONS
*POLITICAL SCIENCE
*POLITICAL ALLIANCES
*SECURITY
*GLOBAL
CLIMATE
COLD WAR
STRATEGY
POLICIES
COASTAL REGIONS
UNITED STATES
NATIONS
ENVIRONMENTS
PARTNERSHIPS
description Global climate change is impacting the global security environment, most notably in the Arctic region. While many nations have been planning, preparing, and programming to exploit the opportunities presented in a receding-ice Arctic, the United States has lagged far behind in all of the substantive actions necessary to preserve its vital national interests in the region. Analysis of the actions of the five Arctic coastal nations sans the United States reveal significant advances in military presence, infrastructure expenditures, territorial claims, and political maneuvering as these nations jockey to consolidate and preserve their perceived sovereign rights and national interests in the region. Further analysis shows partnership is key to advancing United States' interests as budgetary and political pressures preclude unilateral action. As a result, recommendations center around building U.S. international legitimacy and credibility, exploiting a critical capability gap as a uniting issue, and capitalizing on a dearth of unifying military cooperative constructs to lead a new partnership paradigm. The United States stands at a strategic crossroads; failure to act erodes the Nation's ability to shape the Arctic policy environment. The original document contains color images. A paper submitted to the Naval War College faculty in partial satisfaction of the requirements of the Joint Military Operations Department.
author2 NAVAL WAR COLL NEWPORT RI JOINT MILITARY OPERATIONS DEPT
format Text
author Smith, Reginald R.
author_facet Smith, Reginald R.
author_sort Smith, Reginald R.
title The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?
title_short The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?
title_full The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?
title_fullStr The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?
title_full_unstemmed The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?
title_sort arctic: a new partnership paradigm or the next cold war?
publishDate 2010
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA535578
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA535578
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_source DTIC
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA535578
op_rights Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
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