DEFENSE MONITOR INDEX
(Chronological)
Updated: January 7, 1998
Volume, Number: Year, Month, Title
XXVII, 3, 98 Military Domination or Constructive Leadership?
XXVII, 2, 98 NATO Expansion: Full Speed Ahead-But To Where?
XXVII, 1, 98 The World at War
XXVI, 7, 97 (DECEMBER) NATO Expansion and Russia: Views of Admiral Shanahan and Crowe
XXVI, 6, 97 (OCTOBER) Getting the Military Out of Humanitarian Relief
XXVI, 5, 97 (AUGUST) CDI and The Quadrennial Defense Review
XXVI, 4, 97 (JULY) The Invisible Soldiers: Child Combatants
XXVI, 3, 97 (JUNE) 1998 Military Spending: Behind the Numbers: How the Pentagon is Spending Your Money
XXVI, 2, 97 (MARCH) The Quadrennial Defense Review: A Sense of Deja Vu
XXVI, 1, 97 (FEBRUARY) Transforming NATO By Including Russia
XXV, 7, 96 (DECEMBER) Security In Focus--An Overview
XXV, 6: 96 (OCTOBER) Nuclear Leakage: A Threat Without a Military Solution
XXV, 5: 96 (JULY) Landmines: The Real Weapons of Mass Destruction
XXV, 4: 96 (APRIL/MAY) The 1997 Military Budget: A Ticking Time Bomb
XXV, 3: 96 (MARCH) The New Military Budget: Unlimited Ambition, Limited Money
XXV, 2: 96 (FEBRUARY) Why We Overfeed the Sacred Cow
XXV, 1: 96 (JANUARY) The United Nations at Fifty: A Force for the Future
XXIV, 9: 95 (NOVEMBER/DECEMBER) NATO Expansion: Flirting With Disaster
XXIV, 8: 95 (SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER) The Nuclear Nineties: Broken Promises, Misplaced Priorities; Progress at International Nuclear Talks; Environmental Legacy of the Bomb; Director's Letter
XXIV, 7: 95 (AUGUST) Balanced Budget, Unbalanced Priorities?
XXIV, 6: 95 (JULY) Is More Money Needed for New Weapons?
XXIV, 5: 95 (JUNE) Ready for What? The Phantom Readiness Crisis; Real National Needs and the Military Budget; Ending the Arms Race With Ourselves; Saving Money By Relying on the Reserves; Director's Letter
XXIV, 4: 95 Threats to American Goals and Interests: When is Military Response Necessary?
XXIV, 3: 95 A Post-Cold War Military Force
XXIV, 2: 95 What Next for NATO?
XXIV, 1: 95 Far Flung Frontiers of Security: The Clinton Administration's Two-War Strategy
XXIII, 9: 94 The Military and the Environment
XXIII, 8: 94 Implementing A Conventional Arms Transfer Restraint Policy
XXIII, 7: 94 A U.S. Conventional Arms Transfer Policy
XXIII, 6: 94 Reduce Military Spending: Create More Jobs
XXIII, 5: 94 1995 Military Spending: The Real Story
XXIII, 4: 94 The Media and Images of War: Perception Versus Reality
XXIII, 3: 94 Policing World Trouble Spots: United States or United Nations?
XXIII, 2: 94 Nuclear Threat at Home: The Cold War's Lethal Leftovers
XXIII, 1: 94 Ending the Cold War: Cuba, North Korea, and Vietnam
XXII, 10: 93 Does the United States Need Nuclear Weapons?
XXII, 9: 93 International Arms Sales: Race to Disaster
XXII, 8: 93 The Military and American Society: A Clash of Values
XXII, 7: 93 America's Military Role in the New World Order: Have Guns, Will Travel
XXII, 6: 93 Defending America's Economic Interests
XXII, 5: 93 Nuclear Explosive Tests: Eight Reasons Not to Resume Testing
XXII, 4: 93 President Clinton's First Military Budget
XXII, 3: 93 Cutting Unnecessary Military Spending: Going Further and Faster
XXII, 2: 93 President Clinton and the Military
XXII, 1: 93 Nuclear Weapons After the Cold War: Too Many, Too Costly, Too Dangerous
XXI, 6: 92 World at War - 1992: Fewer Wars - No Danger to United States
XXI, 5: 92 Arming Dictators
XXI, 4: 92 Defending America: CDI Options for Military Spending
XXI, 3: 92 Stopping the Spread of Nuclear Weapons: Still Time to Act
XXI, 2: 92 Armed Force and Imported Resources
XXI, 1: 92 The Pentagon's War on Drugs: The Ultimate Bad Trip
XX, 6: 91 U.S. Military Agenda for 1992 and Beyond
XX, 5: 91 Sounding Taps for Star Wars and the Stealth Bomber
XX, 4: 91 We Arm the World: U.S. is Number One Weapons Dealer
XX, 3: 91 An End to All Nuclear Explosions: The Long-Overdue Test Ban
XX, 2: 91 A New Military Budget for a New World
XX, 1: 91 The U.S. as the World's Policeman? Ten Reasons to Find a Different Role
XIX, 9: 90 The Stealth Bomber: Just Say No
XIX, 8: 90 U.S. Invasion of Iraq: Appraising the Option
XIX, 7: 90 Preparations for Nuclear War: Still More Than $1 Billion a Week
XIX, 6: 90 After the Cold War in Asia: Time for U.S. Troops in Japan to Come Home
XIX, 5: 90 U.S. Bases in the Philippines: Unneeded at Any Price
XIX, 4: 90 U.S. Armed Forces in Europe: From Burden Sharing to Burden Shedding
XIX, 3: 90 A New Navy for a New World
XIX, 2: 90 Missions Accomplished in Korea: Bringing U.S. Troops Home
XIX, 1: 90 Space Warfare: A New Cold War Battleground
XVIII, 8: 89 The U.S. Military After the Cold War
XVIII, 7: 89 Wasteful Weapons
XVIII, 6: 89 Defending the Environment? The Record of the U.S. Military
XVIII, 5: 89 The Rail-Garrison MX and Midgetman Missiles: Two Wrongs Don't Make a Right
XVIII, 4: 89 Nuclear Bomb Factories: The Danger Within
XVIII, 3: 89 U.S. Chemical Weapons Production: Poisoning the Atmosphere
XVIII, 2: 89 The Global Network of United States Military Bases
XVIII, 1: 89 The First Steps: Halt Nuclear Weapons Testing
XVII, 5: 88 Sept. U.S. Soviet Military Facts
XVII, 4: 88 Aug. What Should We Defend? A New Military Strategy for the United States
XVII, 3: 88 June NATO and Warsaw Pact Forces: Conventional War in Europe
XVII, 2: 88 Apr. After the INF Treaty: U.S. Nuclear Buildup in Europe
XVII, 1: 88 Jan. Star Wars Reality: The Emperor Has No Clothes
XVI, 7: 87 Dec. Two Trillion Dollars in Seven Years
XVI, 6: 87 Nov. First Strike Weapons at Sea: The Trident II and the Sea-Launched Cruise Missile
XVI, 5: 87 July U.S. Invasion of Nicaragua: Appraising the Option
XVI, 4: 87 May The Pentagon Prepares For Nuclear War: The 1988 Budget
XVI, 3: 87 Mar. No Business Like War Business
XVI, 2: 87 Feb. Soviet Compliance with Arms Agreements: The Positive Record
XVI, 1: 87 Jan. The Unravelling of Nuclear Arms Treaties: Another Step Toward Nuclear War
XV, 7: 86 Dec. Accidental Nuclear War: A Rising Risk?
XV, 6: 86 Oct. The Common Defense: A New Role for Congress
XV, 5: 86 Sept. Soviet Geopolitical Momentum: Myth or Menace?
(Trends of Soviet Influence Around the World From 1945 to 1986)
XV, 4: 86 Aug. U.S. Bases in Philippines: Assets or Liabilities?
XV, 3: 86 May Militarism in America
XV, 2: 86 Apr. Star Wars: Vision and Reality
XV, 1: 86 Feb. Waste in Weapons Procurement: Prospects for Reform
XIV, 10: 85 Dec. Monitoring the Soviet Military: Arms Control, Verification and Treaty Compliance
XIV, 9: 85 Nov. Resource Wars: The Myth of American Mineral Vulnerability
XIV, 8: 85 Aug. The Nuclear Testing Moratorium: Nothing to Lose, Everything to Gain
XIV, 7: 85 Sept. The Soviet Navy: Still Second Best
XIV, 6: 85 July U.S. - Soviet Nuclear Arms: 1985
XIV, 5: 85 June Simultaneous Test Ban: A Primer on Nuclear Explosions
XIV, 4: 85 May The Pentagon Spending Juggernaut: Will Congress Put On the Brakes?
XIV, 3: 85 May Who Could Start A Nuclear War?
XIV, 2: 85 Apr. America's Secret Soldiers: The Buildup of U.S. Special Operations Forces
XIV, 1: 85 Mar. Military Research and the Economy: Burden or Benefit?
XIII, 8: 85 Jan. National Women's Conference to Prevent Nuclear War
85 Jan. (Nuclear War Prevention Kit - 1985 Edition)
XIII, 7: 84 Dec. Wargames
XIII, 6: 84 Oct. U.S. - Soviet Military Facts (update of XI, 6: 82)
XIII, 5: 84 Aug. 6 August 1985: The Day to End All Nuclear Weapons Explosions
XIII, 4: 84 July Taking Stock: The U.S. Military Buildup
XIII, 3: 84 Into the Fray: Facts on the U.S. Military in Central America
XIII, 2: 84 U.S.-Soviet Relations: To the Summit and Beyond
XIII, 1: 84 The Defense of Japan: Should the Rising Sun Rise Again
XII, 8: 83 The Nuclear Arms Race: Bad for Business
XII, 7: 83 More Bang, More Bucks: $450 Billion for Nuclear War
XII, 6: 83 Heading Off Disaster: The Need to Combine the INF and START Talks
XII, 5: 83 Militarizing the Last Frontier: The Space Weapons Race
XII, 4: 83 The Cruise Missile Era: Opening Pandora's Box
XII, 3: 83 America's Nuclear Ferment: Opportunities for Change
XII, 2: 83 The Need for a Level Military Budget
XII, 1: 83 A World at War-1983
XI, 8: 82 Stopping Nuclear Weapons Explosions: The Vital Next Step
XI, 7: 82 Nuclear Freeze: A Necessary First Step
XI, 6: 82 U.S.-Soviet Military Facts
XI, 5: 82 President Reagan's Civil Defense Program
XI, 4: 82 U.S. Initiatives for the U.N. Special Session on Disarmament: Nuclear Testing Moratorium and No-First-Use Policy
XI, 3: 82 U.S. Weapons Exports Headed for Record Level
XI, 2: 82 OMB and the Pentagon: Adversaries or Collaborators?
XI, 1: 82 Soviet Military Power: Questions and Answers
X, 8: 81 Preparing for Nuclear War: President Reagan's Program
X, 7: 81 Nuclear War in Europe: Causes, Combat, Consequences And How to Avoid It
X, 6: 81 MX, The Weapons Nobody Wants
X, 5: 81 U.S. Nuclear Weapons Accidents: Danger in our Midst
X, 4: 81 The U.S. Military in Saudi Arabia: Investing in Stability or Disaster?
X, 3: 81 Military Budget Up $80 Billion in Two Years
X, 2: 81 Can a Limited Nuclear War Be Won?
X, 1: 81 Military Nuclear Wastes: The Hidden Burden of the Nuclear Arms Race
IX, 10: 80 Old Fears, New Weapons: Brewing a Chemical Arms Race
IX, 9: 80 Military Race in Space
IX, 8: 80 Pentagon Rebuts Charges of U.S. Military Weakness
(updated as IX, 8a: 80)
IX, 7: 80 Military Overspending: A Real Present Danger
IX, 6: 80 The Race to Nuclear War: Three Statements
IX, 5: 80 June American Strength, Soviet Weakness
IX, 4: 80 May On the Brink of the Final Abyss (Statement by Lord Mountbatten)
IX, 3: 80 Apr. The New Military Budget: Throwing Money at Problems
IX, 2: 80 Mar. NATO, Nuclear Weapons and the Death of Detente
IX, 1: 80 Jan. Soviet Geopolitical Momentum: Myth or Menace?
VIII, 11: 79 Dec. The Oil Crisis: Is There a Military Option?
VIII, 10: 79 Nov. A World At War: Small Wars and Superpower Military Intervention
VIII, 9: 79 Oct. MX: The Missile We Don't Need
VIII, 8: 79 July SALT II: One Small Step for Mankind
VIII, 7: 79 June Measuring the Military Burden: Fact and Fiction
VIII, 6: 79 May The High Cost of Confusion: The New Military Budget
VIII, 5: 79 Apr. The U.S. Navy Shipbuilding Program
VIII, 4: 79 Mar. The Obsolete ICBM
VIII, 3: 79 Mar. Nuclear War: Causes, Combat, Consequences
VIII, 2: 79 Feb. Special Issue: "War Without Winners" film
VIII, 1: 79 Jan. Soviet Weapons Exports: Russian Roulette in the Third World
VII, 10: 78 Dec. Prosperity in a Demilitarized U.S. Economy: A Program for Conversion
VII, 9: 78 Nov. U.S. Ground Forces: Inappropriate Objectives, Unacceptable Cost
VII, 8: 78 Sept/Oct Hard Running: The U.S. Has Not Dropped Out of the Nuclear Arms Race
VII, 7: 78 Aug. United Nations Special Session on Disarmament
VII, 6: 78 July Admiral La Rocque's Speech to the United Nations
VII, 5: 78 June NATO and the Neutron Bomb
VII, 4: 78 May Carter's Military Budget: More than Meets the Eye Behind the Bare Dollars
VII, 3: 78 Mar. The Arms Race: Is Paranoia Necessary for Security?
VII, 2: 78 Feb. U.S. Weapons Exports: Can We Cut the Arms Connection?
VII, 1: 78 Jan. The U.S. & Panama: Two Nations Separated by a Canal
VI, 7: 77 Sept/Oct Jobs & the Pentagon: Is Military Spending Good for the Economy?
VI, 6: 77 Aug. The $100 Million Mobile Missile: The MX and the Future of U.S. Strategic Forces
VI, 5: 77 July SALT: A Race Against the Arms Race
VI, 4: 77 May Soviet Fears & Objectives: The Need for Clarification
VI, 3: 77 Mar-Apr The Military Budget & Zero-Base Planning
VI, 2: 77 Feb. The Soviet Threat: Is There a Present Danger?
VI, 1: 77 Jan. U.S. Arms and Technology for China?
V, 9: 76 Dec. Defense Budget 1977-78
V, 8: 76 Oct. Military Procurement
V, 7: 76 Sept. The Cruise Missiles: A Weapon in Search of a Mission
V, 6: 76 Aug. The Panama Canal: Old Myths & New Realities
V, 5: 76 July The New Nuclear Strategy: Battle of the Dead?
V, 4: 76 June The Artificial Crisis of American Security (Part 2)
V, 3: 76 May The Artificial Crisis of American Security (Part 1)
V, 2: 76 Feb. The Spanish Connection: A Wider Commitment in the Making
V, 1: 76 Jan. Korea & U.S. Policy in Asia
IV, 10: 75 Dec. Military Confrontation in Europe: Will the MBFR Talks Work?
IV, 9: 75 Nov. Japan Under U.S. Pressure
IV, 8: 75 Oct. Four U.S. Tactical Air Forces
IV, 7: 75 Sept. The Lessons of Vietnam: Toward a Post-Vietnam Foreign Policy
IV, 6: 75 Aug. U.S. Military Commitments "Too Far, Too Wide, Too Thin"
IV, 5: 75 July The Militarization of Outer Space
IV, 4: 75 June The B-1 Bomber: Is it Worth $92 Billion?
IV, 3: 75 May U.S. Arms to the Persian Gulf: $10 Billion Since 1973
IV, 2: 75 Feb. 30,000 U.S. Nuclear Weapons
IV, 1: 75 Jan. Guidelines for the New Defense Budget
III, 10: 74 Dec. Detente & Military Power
III, 9: 74 Oct. The Militarization of U.S. Foreign Policy
III, 8: 74 Sept. The Naval Arms Race
III, 7: 74 Aug. Arms Restraint: Too Weak a Voice
III, 6: 74 May This Year's Military Budget: Are There Soft Spots?
III, 5: 74 May U.S. Military Assistance & Sales (U.S. is #1)
III, 4: 74 May U.S. Strategic MomentumIII, 3: 74 Apr. The Indian Ocean: A Naval Arms Race
III, 2: 74 Mar. U.S. Forces in the Pacific & Indian Ocean
III, 1: 74 Jan. Military Spending Causes Higher Prices
II, 5: 73 Dec. U.S. Forces for Europe: Need for a Phased Reduction
II, 4: 73 The Redundant Trident
II, 3: 73 The Sinkable Airfield: Pros & Cons of Attack Carrier CVN-70
II, 2: 73 May Will $91 Billion For New Weapons System Be Wasted?
II, 1: 73 Jan. The B-1 - Does U.S. Need It?
I, 4: 72 Sept. Military Assistance: Arsenal for Democracy
I, 3: 72 July SALT & Afterward
I, 2: 72 June ULMS: Too Much Too Soon
I, 1: 72 May The Soviet Naval Threat: Reality & Illusion