Thursday, September 09, 2010
National Strategy Forum
 
SPRING / SUMMER 2009
FEATURE ESSAY
Economic and Industrial Espionage: A Question of Counterintelligence of Law Enforcement? 
By Harvey Rishikof

NSF INSIDER VIEW
Rethinking U.S. National Strategy
By Richard E. Friedman

Foreign and Defense Policy in the Obama Administration
By John Allen Williams

The Moment to Decide
By Frank Schell

Protecting America's Virtual Reality
By Lauren Bean

Renewing the West By Endy Zemenides

KEY REGIONS AT A GLANCE

IRAN:
The Upcoming Presidential Elections 
Rami Yelda

CHINA:
Enhancing a Security Dialogue 
Henry Levine

SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS:
Summary of Remarks of Colonel Kirk Hymes, Director of the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate & Mr. Jeff Keuter, President of the George C. Marshall Institute; Article by the Department of Defense's Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program

Print the Full Edition of the Summer / Spring Issue 2009


 

 

For many years, the objective of the National Strategy Forum (NSF) has been to provide balanced, nonpartisan, usable information regarding US national strategy and national security. The NSF created an informal "curriculum" based on the Forum monthly lecture series, the National Strategy Forum Review (NSFR) publication, and conferences on emerging national strategy/security issues. The results have been positive -- NSF members are exceptionally well-informed.

The velocity, access, and availability of an enormous amount of information tend to overwhelm careful analysis. Particularly troublesome are some blogs, which are unedited and unscreened, and, frequently, highly partisan. Confusing, inconsistent, misleading and incomplete information interferes with rational analysis. The NSF has adapted to this new milieu.

We seek to provide NSF members with an overview of the national strategy/national security field in summary form, while carefully avoiding superficial treatment. We will continue to adhere to our long-standing principle of "framing the issues," and asking questions rather than answering them. Context will be provided by a wide array of experts in their respective fields.

The major themes that the NSF has focused on are diplomacy, economics, military force, rule of law, strategy, and terrorism. These themes will continue with different emphasis depending upon facts on the ground. It is likely that the economy will receive high priority attention. Strategy will continue to be the glue that ties these interdependent themes together.

NSF members will have a matrix of themes and issues that will assist them in becoming well-informed and well-positioned to discuss these issues with their family, friends, business associates, and civic associates.

        - Richard E. Friedman, Publisher


 

 


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About the National Strategy Forum Review

The National Strategy Forum Review is a quarterly publication of the National Strategy Forum, a Chicago not-for-profit, non-partisan US national security research and education institute.

Richard E. Friedman
,
Publisher

John Allen Williams, Editor

Lauren Bean, Managing Editor

Eric S. Morse, Research Associate

Editorial Board
John Allen Williams
Marilyn Diamond
Frank Schell
Endy Zemenides

© 2009 National Strategy Forum, Inc.

Permission granted to use the text herein, subject to appropriate attribution and notification.

 



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