Washington Rules_ America's Path to Permanent War - Andrew J. Bacevich [115]
Gilpatric, Roswell
global counterinsurgency (GCOIN)
“Global Counterinsurgency” (Roper)
global dominion
global leadership
Albright and
creed of
end of Cold War and
by example
flexible response and
Fulbright’s critique of
hard power and
Long War and
9/11 and
post-Vietnam
Vietnam and
global military intervention (activism). See also war; and specific countries, interventions, and wars
Albright as proponent of
covert action and
Cuba and
elevated by LeMay and Dulles
JFK and
1980s and
post-Cold War
questioning
RMA and
Vietnam and
global military presence
CIA and
extent of
JFK and
LBJ and Vietnam
1980s and
Obama and
Middle East and
post-Vietnam
questioning
RMA as vehicle for
Vietnam War and
global power projection
Afghanistan and
Central America and
CIA and
covert action and
Cuban Missile Crisis and
end of draft and
flexible response and
Iran and
Obama and
post-Cold War
questioning
reinvention of war and
RMA and
Vietnam and
“global strategic response”
global war on terror
good intentions
Gore, Albert
Göring, Hermann
Great Britain
Greater Middle East
Great Society
Green Berets
Greene, Graham
Grenada
Guam
Guatemala
Gulf War I (1990–91)
Hai Phong
Hamas
Harding, Warren G.
hard vs. soft power
Harper’s
Harris, “Bomber”
Harvey, William K.
Hayden, Sterling
hearts and minds
Hemingway, Ernest
Hezbollah
Hiroshima
Hitler, Adolf
Hoffman, Bruce
Holbrooke, Richard
Homeland Security Department
Hoover, J. Edgar
Hudson, Rock
Hughes-Ryan Act (1974)
Humphrey, Hubert
Hussein, Saddam
ideology
pragmatism vs.
imperialism
Information Age warfare
Institute for Policy Studies
Iran
coup of 1953
GCOIN and
hostage crisis
Iraq War and
revolution of 1979
Iran, Shah of
Iran-Iraq War
Iraq
bombing and sanctions vs.
Gulf War I and
sovereignty and
Iraqi army
Iraq War (2003–present)
goals of
lessons of
Obama and
surge and COIN and
Iron Curtain
Islamic jihadism
Islamic world
isolationism
Israel
Italy
James, William
Japan
WW II and
Jena-Auerstädt, battle of
Johnson, Harold K.
Johnson, Lyndon B.
Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS)
Just War tradition
Kagan, Frederick W.
Kagan, Kimberly
Kahn, Herman
Kennan, George
Kennedy, John F.
assassination of
CIA and
Cuban Missile Crisis and
flexible response and
nuclear force and
Vietnam and
Kennedy, Robert
Kerry, John
Khomeini, Ayatollah
Khrushchev, Nikita
Kim Jong Il
King, Martin Luther
Kissinger, Henry
Korea. See also North Korea; South Korea
Korean War
Kristol, Irving
Kubrick, Stanley
Kuwait
Laden, Osama bin
Lake, Anthony
Lansdale, Edward
Lansing, Robert
Laos
Lasch, Christopher
left
LeMay, Curtis
McNamara vs.
mockery of
levée en masse
Levinson, Barry
liberals
Libya
Life
limited war
Lodge, Henry Cabot
Long-Range Strike Force
Long War
Luce, Henry R.
MacArthur, Douglas
Mahan, Alfred Thayer
Mann, Anthony
Mann, Delbert
Mansfield, Mike
Mao Zedong
Marshall, George C.
Marshall Plan
massive retaliation
Mattis, James
May, Ernest
McCain, John
McChrystal, Stanley
McKiernan, David
McNamara, Robert
McNaughton, John
Mencken, H. L.
military advisers
military bases
“military-industrial complex”
military spending
Miloševi, Slobodan
missile(s)
“gap”
ICBMs
Monroe Doctrine
morality
Morris, Roger
Mossadegh, Mohammad
Munich Accords. See also appeasement
mutual retaliation
Nagl, John
Napoleon Bonaparte
national debt
nationalism
National Review
National Security Council
national security policy. See Washington rules; and specific countries, military and covert actions, and policymakers
National Security State
nation building
Native Americans
neoconservatives
network centric warfare
“Never Send a Man When You Can Send a Bullet” (Petraeus)
“New American Militarism, The” (Shoup)
New Frontier
New Left
New Republic
New Rome
Newsweek
New York Times
Magazine
Nixon, Richard
noncombatant casualties
North American Treaty Organization (NATO)
Northern Command
North Korea
North Vietnam
nuclear strategists
nuclear war
flexible response vs.
Hollywood