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Jagdwaffe: The Spanish Civil conflict
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Extra info for Jagdwaffe The Spanish Civil War (Luftwaffe Colours Volume One Section 2)
Sample text
Desmond Ball, Politics and Force Levels (Berkeley: University of California Press, Page 13 1980), 3. 31. Hudson with Vore, "Foreign Policy Analysis Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow," 229. 32. Robert D. Putnam, "Diplomacy and Domestic Politics: Thc Logic of Two-Level Games," International Organization 42 (Summer 1988): 42760. 33. Putnam, "Diplomacy and Domestic Politics," 432. 34. S. Institute of Peace Press, 1993), 140; 2228. 35. Philip E. Tetlock and Charles B. , G. John Ikenberry, ed. (New York: HarperCollins College Publishers, 1996), 545.
25. Huntington, The Common Defense, 34; Ripley and Franklin, Congress, the Bureaucracy, and Public Policy, 27. 26. This characterization of the congressional role is in Ripley and Franklin, Congress, the Bureaucracy, and Public Policy, 27. Huntington sees Congress as having relatively little influence over strategic policy, although largely because it chooses not to intervene. This probably reflects the fact that Congress was much more willing to acquiesce in presidential dominance of foreign policy when he wrote his book; see The Common Defense, 12735.
S. force posture in Europe. S. theater nuclear weapons in Europe increased from twenty-five hundred to seventy-two hundred. S. " 27 These assumptions about the role and the limits of nuclear weaponry had several policy implications. In order to prevent the failure of the nuclear "firebreak" and the high subsequent risk of escalation, tight civilian control over all nuclear weapons decisions would be enhanced. This would be maintained "in war as well as peace . . "28 Positive control over the nuclear arsenal would be increased by the installation of "permissive action links" (PALs), electronic devices that rendered the weapons unusable without the proper authority.