Fred Ikle/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Fred Ikle, or pages that link to Fred Ikle or to this page or whose text contains "Fred Ikle".
Parent topics
- Grand strategy [r]: The application of all national means of affecting the actions of other nations and non-national actors; specifically includes but is not restricted to military means [e]
- Negotiation (foreign policy) [r]: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
- Reagan administration national security staff [r]: (1911–2004) 40th President of the United States, Republican. [e]
- Ford administration national security staff [r]: (1913-2006) The 38th President of the United States (1974-77), the first not elected as either president or vice-president. [e]
- Nixon administration national security staff [r]: American politician (1913–1994); President of the United States 1969–1974. Known for ending the Vietnam War and for the Watergate scandal. [e]
- Arms Control and Disarmament Agency [r]: A former U.S. independent agency with responsibility for arms control, now part of the U.S. Department of State [e]
- Center for Strategic and International Studies [r]: A bipartisan U.S. think tank that does research and policy recommendations in international affairs, headquartered in Washington, D.C. [e]
- National Endowment for Democracy [r]: A U.S. based QUANGO (i.e, quasi-autonomous non-governmental organization), with a goal of democracy promotion, chartered by the Congress but primarily made up of political party, labor union, and business representatives; receives some government funding [e]
- The National Interest [r]: An online and quarterly print publication on international affairs, broadly from the perspective of neoconservatism [e]
- Every War Must End [r]: An examination of the endstates resulting from the use of military force, and how consideration of the endstate is a key part of planning, if disaster is to be avoided [e]
- Compellence [r]: A set of decisions, policies and actions intended to force an opponent to take some action, as opposed to deterring the adversary not to take a different action. [e]
- Deterrence [r]: A set of policies and actions that prevent an opponent from taking an undesired action [e]