The Politics of Strategic Aircraft Modernization

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Bloomsbury Academic, 1995 M11 20 - 234 páginas
This study examines three major bomber aircraft acquisition programs: the B-36, the B-52, and the B-2. The central question for each of these programs is whether they were chosen to fit national strategic objectives or to meet the more narrow political and economic needs of the so-called military-industrial complex. The book concludes that U.S. Air Force senior leadership acquired better bombers than did civilian defense leaders. The extensive use of original documents in this book reveals that Air Force generals were less concerned about defending their own interests than previous research has implied.

Acerca del autor (1995)

DAVID S. SORENSON is Professor of National Security Studies at the Air War College. He has published research on American civil-military relations, defense economics, defense technology, ballistic missile defense, and U.S. Middle East policy.

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