Foregone Conclusions: U.S. Weapons Acquisition in the Post-Cold War Transition

Foregone Conclusions: U.S. Weapons Acquisition in the Post-Cold War Transition

by James H. Lebovic
Foregone Conclusions: U.S. Weapons Acquisition in the Post-Cold War Transition

Foregone Conclusions: U.S. Weapons Acquisition in the Post-Cold War Transition

by James H. Lebovic

eBook

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Overview

With the end of the Cold War and the erosion of the Soviet threat, the United States is reevaluating its defense policy and its acquisition of weapons. James Lebovic shows that, although current military missions are adapted to post-Cold War realities, the self-defeating bias of bureaucrats and military services toward Cold War weaponry is still prevalent. He examines the impact of this bias on the armed services as they assess threat, generate requirements, develop and change weapon concepts, set production rates, and engage in testing. The author asserts that bias compromises service interests and broader military objectives and he offers general policy recommendations to put U.S. weapons acquisition on a more effective track.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780429723803
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 04/08/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
Lexile: 1590L (what's this?)
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Lebovic, James H.

Table of Contents

U.S. Weapons Acquisition in the Post-Cold War Transition -- Perspectives on Acquisition Deficiencies -- Threat Assessment: How the Services Define Objectives -- Weapon Requirements: Whether the Services Fully Consider Objectives -- Organizational Learning: How the Services Change Objectives -- Trade-offs, Timing, and Testing: Weapon Performance in Development and Production -- Contractors, Civilians, and Congress: The Acquisition Context -- Foregoing Premature Conclusions: Opening the Acquisition Process
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