National security

Custodial Detention Index (CDI) was based on massive list of US residents compiled by FBI during 1939- 1941, in the frame of a program called variously "Custodial Detention" and/or "Alien Enemy Control". ...more on Wikipedia about "Custodial Detention Index"

International security consists of the measures taken by nations and international bodies, such as the United Nations, to ensure mutual survival and safety. These measures include military action and diplomatic agreements such as treaties and conventions. International and national security are invariably linked. ...more on Wikipedia about "International security"

Jeremy Shapiro is a prominent academic and is director of research at the "Center on the United States and Europe" at the Brookings Institution. His expertise is in the fields of Civil-military relations, Europe, France, military operations, national security and transatlantic diplomacy. ...more on Wikipedia about "Jeremy Shapiro"

A military or military force ( n., from Latin militarius, miles "soldier") has seen many different incarnations throughout time. Early armies may have been just men with sharpened sticks and rocks, through time they have included advancements such as men mounted on horses, men wielding swords and other metallic weapons, the bow and arrow, siege weapons, to the advance of the musket which form the roots of the armed forces of most nations we know today. In modern times people use vehicles and guns. ...more on Wikipedia about "Military"

National security refers to the public policy of ensuring the survival and safety of the nation-state through the use of economic and military power and the exercise of diplomacy, in both peace and war. ...more on Wikipedia about "National security"

Concerning national security, Japan is in the unusual position of being a major world economic and political power, with an aggressive military tradition, resisting the development of strong armed forces. A military proscription is included as Article 9 of the 1947 constitution stating, "The Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes." That article, along with the rest of the "Peace Constitution," retains strong government and citizen support and is interpreted as permitting the Self-Defense Forces (SDF), but prohibiting those forces from possessing nuclear weapons or other offensive arms or being deployed outside of Japan. ...more on Wikipedia about "National security of Japan"

A plan is a proposed or intended method of getting from one set of circumstances to another. They are often used to move from the present situation, towards the achievement of one or more objectives or goals. ...more on Wikipedia about "Plan" shortopedia for you!

Thomas Donnelly is a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI). Donnelly is a writer, an analyst of military affairs and defense, national security and foreign policy and the author of AEI's National Security Outlook. He has been a Director at the Lockheed Martin Corporation on strategic communications and initiatives since 2002. He was Deputy Executive Director of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) from 1999 to 2002. ...more on Wikipedia about "Thomas Donnelly"

Unrestricted Warfare is the English title of a book on military strategy written in 1999 by two Colonels in the People's Liberation Army, Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui. It is a work regarding military strategy. Its primary concern is how a nation such as China can defeat a technologically superior opponent (such as the United States) through a variety of means. Rather than focusing on direct military confrontation, this book instead examines a variety of other means. Such means include using International Law (see Lawfare) and a variety of economic means to place one's opponent in a bad position and circumvent the need for direct military action. ...more on Wikipedia about "Unrestricted Warfare"

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