A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy
The 1980s was a period of transformation for the United States Armed Services. With Cold War relations between the two superpowers increasingly strained, the Soviet Union and the United States competed for strategic advantage both within the ranks of their militaries and at the bargaining table. At...
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1986
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ftgeorgetownuniv:oai::10822/552708 2023-05-15T16:51:41+02:00 A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy Krogh, Peter F. (Peter Frederic) Komer, Robert W. Russia Former Soviet Union 1986-11-29 28 min. MPG4 H.264 http://hdl.handle.net/10822/552708 English eng WETA-TV (Television station : Washington, D.C.) Blackwell Corporation (Washington D.C.) Georgetown University. School of Foreign Service South Carolina Educational Television Network Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archive https://mediapilot.georgetown.edu:443/sharestream2gui/getMedia.do?action=streamMedia&mediaPath=0d21b62020c9a63f012145700d8801c7&cid=0d21b62018c663370119bf04f6be0a8b APT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_552708.tar;APT-ETAG: 7ecc37d6593e1278399cbdef2e91eb14-13; APT-DATE: 2017-05-25_08:04:23 http://hdl.handle.net/10822/552708 American Interests (show 609) United States. Navy Nuclear warfare United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union Soviet Union -- Foreign relations -- United States Cold War Defense and National Security 600-ship Navy Reykjavik Summit Nuclear Disarmament United States Military Strategy 1986 ftgeorgetownuniv 2017-05-26T22:33:50Z The 1980s was a period of transformation for the United States Armed Services. With Cold War relations between the two superpowers increasingly strained, the Soviet Union and the United States competed for strategic advantage both within the ranks of their militaries and at the bargaining table. At the 1986 Reykjavik Summit in Iceland President Reagan proposed banning all ballistic missiles, briefly offering the hope of a world without nuclear weapons. The talks failed, however, and policymakers returned to the realization that deterrence formed the bedrock of American defense policy. In an attempt to strengthen the U.S. military's deterrence capability, Secretary of the Navy John Lehman implemented a strategy that would create a 600-ship Navy for the United States. Proponents of the plan maintained that Lehman's forward maritime strategy would secure America's strategic advantage over the Soviet Union, while critics argued that it was an expensive and unnecessary expansion of a field in which the United States had already achieved military superiority. In this episode Robert Komer, former Undersecretary of Defense and leading expert on American conventional military strategy, discusses the proposed 600-ship Navy and the prospects for America's nuclear deterrence. As policymakers reevaluate nuclear weapons and U.S. maritime strategy, Komer answers the questions, should the United States move to a 600-ship Navy, and would the United States be safer without nuclear weapons? Examines the prospects for a 600-ship Navy and the possibility of an American defense strategy without nuclear weapons. Other/Unknown Material Iceland Georgetown University: DigitalGeorgetown |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Georgetown University: DigitalGeorgetown |
op_collection_id |
ftgeorgetownuniv |
language |
English |
topic |
United States. Navy Nuclear warfare United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union Soviet Union -- Foreign relations -- United States Cold War Defense and National Security 600-ship Navy Reykjavik Summit Nuclear Disarmament United States Military Strategy |
spellingShingle |
United States. Navy Nuclear warfare United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union Soviet Union -- Foreign relations -- United States Cold War Defense and National Security 600-ship Navy Reykjavik Summit Nuclear Disarmament United States Military Strategy Krogh, Peter F. (Peter Frederic) A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy |
topic_facet |
United States. Navy Nuclear warfare United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union Soviet Union -- Foreign relations -- United States Cold War Defense and National Security 600-ship Navy Reykjavik Summit Nuclear Disarmament United States Military Strategy |
description |
The 1980s was a period of transformation for the United States Armed Services. With Cold War relations between the two superpowers increasingly strained, the Soviet Union and the United States competed for strategic advantage both within the ranks of their militaries and at the bargaining table. At the 1986 Reykjavik Summit in Iceland President Reagan proposed banning all ballistic missiles, briefly offering the hope of a world without nuclear weapons. The talks failed, however, and policymakers returned to the realization that deterrence formed the bedrock of American defense policy. In an attempt to strengthen the U.S. military's deterrence capability, Secretary of the Navy John Lehman implemented a strategy that would create a 600-ship Navy for the United States. Proponents of the plan maintained that Lehman's forward maritime strategy would secure America's strategic advantage over the Soviet Union, while critics argued that it was an expensive and unnecessary expansion of a field in which the United States had already achieved military superiority. In this episode Robert Komer, former Undersecretary of Defense and leading expert on American conventional military strategy, discusses the proposed 600-ship Navy and the prospects for America's nuclear deterrence. As policymakers reevaluate nuclear weapons and U.S. maritime strategy, Komer answers the questions, should the United States move to a 600-ship Navy, and would the United States be safer without nuclear weapons? Examines the prospects for a 600-ship Navy and the possibility of an American defense strategy without nuclear weapons. |
author2 |
Komer, Robert W. |
author |
Krogh, Peter F. (Peter Frederic) |
author_facet |
Krogh, Peter F. (Peter Frederic) |
author_sort |
Krogh, Peter F. (Peter Frederic) |
title |
A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy |
title_short |
A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy |
title_full |
A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy |
title_fullStr |
A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy |
title_full_unstemmed |
A conversation with Robert Komer on U.S. maritime strategy |
title_sort |
conversation with robert komer on u.s. maritime strategy |
publisher |
WETA-TV (Television station : Washington, D.C.) |
publishDate |
1986 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/552708 |
op_coverage |
Russia Former Soviet Union |
genre |
Iceland |
genre_facet |
Iceland |
op_source |
American Interests (show 609) |
op_relation |
Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archive https://mediapilot.georgetown.edu:443/sharestream2gui/getMedia.do?action=streamMedia&mediaPath=0d21b62020c9a63f012145700d8801c7&cid=0d21b62018c663370119bf04f6be0a8b APT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_552708.tar;APT-ETAG: 7ecc37d6593e1278399cbdef2e91eb14-13; APT-DATE: 2017-05-25_08:04:23 http://hdl.handle.net/10822/552708 |
_version_ |
1766041804523700224 |