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National security

National security, or national defence (national defense in American English), is the security and defence of a sovereign state, including its citizens, economy, and institutions, which is regarded as a duty of government. Originally conceived as protection against military attack, national security is widely understood to include also non-military dimensions, such as the security from terrorism, minimization of crime, economic security, energy security, environmental security, food security, and cyber-security. Similarly, national security risks include, in addition to the actions of other nation states, action by violent non-state actors, by narcotic cartels, organized crime, by multinational corporations, and also the effects of natural disasters.

President of the United States Ronald Reagan in a briefing with US National Security Council staff on the Libya bombing on 15 April 1986
Security measures are taken to protect the Palace of Westminster in London, UK. The heavy blocks of concrete are designed to prevent a car bomb or other device being rammed into the building.

Governments rely on a range of measures, including political, economic, and military power, as well as diplomacy, to safeguard the security of a nation state. They may also act to build the conditions of security regionally and internationally by reducing transnational causes of insecurity, such as climate change, economic inequality, political exclusion, and nuclear proliferation.

Definitions edit

The concept of national security remains ambiguous, having evolved from simpler definitions which emphasised freedom from military threat and from political coercion.[1]: 1–6 [2]: 52–54  Among the many definitions proposed to date are the following, which show how the concept has evolved to encompass non-military concerns:

  • "A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war, and is able, if challenged, to maintain them by war." (Walter Lippmann, 1943).[3]: 5 
  • "The distinctive meaning of national security means freedom from foreign dictation." (Harold Lasswell, 1950)[3]: 79 
  • "National security objectively means the absence of threats to acquired values and subjectively, the absence of fear that such values will be attacked." (Arnold Wolfers, 1960)[4]
  • "National security then is the ability to preserve the nation's physical integrity and territory; to maintain its economic relations with the rest of the world on reasonable terms; to preserve its nature, institution, and governance from disruption from outside; and to control its borders." (Harold Brown, U.S. Secretary of Defense, 1977–1981)[5]
  • "National security... is best described as a capacity to control those domestic and foreign conditions that the public opinion of a given community believes necessary to enjoy its own self-determination or autonomy, prosperity, and wellbeing." (Charles Maier, 1990)[6]
  • "National security is an appropriate and aggressive blend of political resilience and maturity, human resources, economic structure and capacity, technological competence, industrial base and availability of natural resources and finally the military might." (National Defence College of India, 1996)[7]
  • "[National security is the] measurable state of the capability of a nation to overcome the multi-dimensional threats to the apparent well-being of its people and its survival as a nation-state at any given time, by balancing all instruments of state policy through governance... and is extendable to global security by variables external to it." (Prabhakaran Paleri, 2008)[2]: 52–54 

Dimensions edit

Potential causes of national insecurity include actions by other states (e.g. military or cyber attack), violent non-state actors (e.g. terrorist attack), organised criminal groups such as narcotic cartels, and also the effects of natural disasters (e.g. flooding, earthquakes).[3]: v, 1–8 [8][9] Systemic drivers of insecurity, which may be transnational, include climate change, economic inequality and marginalisation, political exclusion, and nuclear proliferation.[8]: 3 [9]

In view of the wide range of risks, the security of a nation state has several dimensions, including economic security, energy security, physical security, environmental security, food security, border security, and cyber security. These dimensions correlate closely with elements of national power.

Increasingly, governments organise their security policies into a national security strategy (NSS);[10] as of 2017, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States are among the states to have done so.[11][12][13][14] Some states also appoint a National Security Council and/or a National Security Advisor which is an executive government agency, it feeds the head of the state on topics concerning national security and strategic interest. The national security council/advisor strategies long term, short term, contingency national security plans. India holds one such system in current, which was established on 19 November 1998.

Although states differ in their approach, various forms of coercive power predominate, particularly Military Capabilities.[8] The scope of these capabilities has developed. Traditionally, military capabilities were mainly land- or sea-based, and in smaller countries, they still are. Elsewhere, the domains of potential warfare now include the air, space, cyberspace, and psychological operations.[15] Military capabilities designed for these domains may be used for national security, or equally for offensive purposes, for example to conquer and annex territory and resources.

Physical edit

In practice, national security is associated primarily with managing physical threats and with the military capabilities used for doing so.[11][13][14] That is, national security is often understood as the capacity of a nation to mobilise military forces to guarantee its borders and to deter or successfully defend against physical threats including military aggression and attacks by non-state actors, such as terrorism. Most states, such as South Africa and Sweden,[16][12] configure their military forces mainly for territorial defence; others, such as France, Russia, the UK and the US,[17][18][13][14] invest in higher-cost expeditionary capabilities, which allow their armed forces to project power and sustain military operations abroad.

Infrastructural edit

 
The SUPO headquarters in Punavuori, Helsinki

Infrastructure security is the security provided to protect infrastructure, especially critical infrastructure, such as airports, highways,[19] rail transport, hospitals, bridges, transport hubs, network communications, media, the electricity grid, dams, power plants, seaports, oil refineries, and water systems. Infrastructure security seeks to limit vulnerability of these structures and systems to sabotage, terrorism, and contamination.[20]

Many countries have established government agencies to directly manage the security of critical infrastructure, usually, through the Ministry of Interior/Home Affairs, dedicated security agencies to protect facilities such as United States Federal Protective Service, and also dedicated transport police such as the British Transport Police. There are also commercial transportation security units such as the Amtrak Police in the United States. Critical infrastructure is vital for the essential functioning of a country. Incidental or deliberate damage can have a serious impact on the economy and essential services. Some of the threats to infrastructure include:

Virtual edit

Computer security, also known as cybersecurity or IT security, refers to the security of computing devices such as computers and smartphones, as well as computer networks such as private and public networks, and the Internet. It concerns the protection of hardware, software, data, people, and also the procedures by which systems are accessed, and the field has growing importance due to the increasing reliance on computer systems in most societies.[21] Since unauthorized access to critical civil and military infrastructure is now considered a major threat, cyberspace is now recognised as a domain of warfare. One such example is the use of Stuxnet by the US and Israel against the Iranian nuclear programme[15]

Political edit

Barry Buzan, Ole Wæver, Jaap de Wilde and others have argued that national security depends on political security: the stability of the social order.[22] Others, such as Paul Rogers, have added that the equitability of the international order is equally vital.[9] Hence, political security depends on the rule of international law (including the laws of war), the effectiveness of international political institutions, as well as diplomacy and negotiation between nations and other security actors.[22] It also depends on, among other factors, effective political inclusion of disaffected groups and the human security of the citizenry.[9][8][23]

Economic edit

Economic security, in the context of international relations, is the ability of a nation state to maintain and develop the national economy, without which other dimensions of national security cannot be managed. Economic capability largely determines the defence capability of a nation, and thus a sound economic security directly influences the national security of a nation. That is why we see countries with sound economy, happen to have sound security setup too, such as The United States, China, India among others. In larger countries, strategies for economic security expect to access resources and markets in other countries and to protect their own markets at home. Developing countries may be less secure than economically advanced states due to high rates of unemployment and underpaid work.[citation needed]

Environmental edit

Environmental security, also known as ecological security, refers to the integrity of ecosystems and the biosphere, particularly in relation to their capacity to sustain a diversity of life-forms (including human life). The security of ecosystems has attracted greater attention as the impact of ecological damage by humans has grown.[24] The degradation of ecosystems, including topsoil erosion, deforestation, biodiversity loss, and climate change, affect economic security and can precipitate mass migration, leading to increased pressure on resources elsewhere. Ecological security is also important since most of the countries in the world are developing and dependent on agriculture and agriculture gets affected largely due to climate change. This effect affects the economy of the nation, which in turn affects national security.

The scope and nature of environmental threats to national security and strategies to engage them are a subject of debate.[3]: 29–33  Romm (1993) classifies the major impacts of ecological changes on national security as:[3]: 15 

 
Climate change is affecting global agriculture and food security.
 
Refugees fleeing war and insecurity in Iraq and Syria arrive at Lesbos Island, supported by Spanish volunteers, 2015.

Energy and natural resources edit

Resources include water, sources of energy, land, and minerals. Availability of adequate natural resources is important for a nation to develop its industry and economic power. For example, in the Persian Gulf War of 1991, Iraq captured Kuwait partly in order to secure access to its oil wells, and one reason for the US counter-invasion was the value of the same wells to its own economy.[citation needed] Water resources are subject to disputes between many nations, including India and Pakistan, and in the Middle East.

The interrelations between security, energy, natural resources, and their sustainability is increasingly acknowledged in national security strategies and resource security is now included among the UN Sustainable Development Goals.[12][11][27][14][28] In the US, for example, the military has installed solar photovoltaic microgrids on their bases in case of power outage.[29][30]

Issues edit

Consistency of approach edit

The dimensions of national security outlined above are frequently in tension with one another. For example:

  • The high cost of maintaining large military forces can place a burden on the economic security of a nation And annual defence spending as per cent of GDP varies significantly by country.[31] Conversely, economic constraints can limit the scale of expenditure on military capabilities.
  • Unilateral security action by states can undermine political security at an international level if it erodes the rule of law and undermines the authority of international institutions. The invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the annexation of Crimea in 2014 have been cited as examples.[32][33]
  • The pursuit of economic security in competition with other nation states can undermine the ecological security of all when the impact includes widespread topsoil erosion, biodiversity loss, and climate change.[34] Conversely, expenditure on mitigating or adapting to ecological change places a burden on the national economy.

If tensions such as these are mismanaged, national security policies and actions may be ineffective or counterproductive.

Versus transnational security edit

Increasingly, national security strategies have begun to recognise that nations cannot provide for their own security without also developing the security of their regional and international context.[14][27][11][12] For example, Sweden's national security strategy of 2017 declared:

"Wider security measures must also now encompass protection against epidemics and infectious diseases, combating terrorism and organised crime, ensuring safe transport and reliable food supplies, protecting against energy supply interruptions, countering devastating climate change, initiatives for peace and global development, and much more."[12]

 
A US F-14 over a burning oil well in Kuwait during the Persian Gulf War, 1991

The extent to which this matters, and how it should be done, is the subject of debate. Some argue that the principal beneficiary of national security policy should be the nation state itself, which should centre its strategy on protective and coercive capabilities in order to safeguard itself in a hostile environment (and potentially to project that power into its environment, and dominate it to the point of strategic supremacy).[35][36][37] Others argue that security depends principally on building the conditions in which equitable relationships between nations can develop, partly by reducing antagonism between actors, ensuring that fundamental needs can be met, and also that differences of interest can be negotiated effectively.[38][8][9] In the UK, for example, Malcolm Chalmers argued in 2015 that the heart of the UK's approach should be support for the Western strategic military alliance led through NATO by the United States, as "the key anchor around which international order is maintained".[39]

Civil liberties and human rights edit

Approaches to national security can have a complex impact on human rights and civil liberties. For example, the rights and liberties of citizens are affected by the use of military personnel and militarised police forces to control public behaviour; the use of surveillance, including mass surveillance in cyberspace, which has implications for privacy; military recruitment and conscription practices; and the effects of warfare on civilians and civil infrastructure. This has led to a dialectical struggle, particularly in liberal democracies, between government authority and the rights and freedoms of the general public.

 
The National Security Agency harvests personal data across the internet.

Even where the exercise of national security is subject to good governance, and the rule of law, a risk remains that the term national security may become a pretext for suppressing unfavorable political and social views. In the US, for example, the controversial USA Patriot Act of 2001, and the revelation by Edward Snowden in 2013 that the National Security Agency harvests the personal data of the general public, brought these issues to wide public attention. Among the questions raised are whether and how national security considerations at times of war should lead to the suppression of individual rights and freedoms, and whether such restrictions are necessary when a state is at peace.

By region edit

Argentina and Brazil edit

National security ideology as taught by the US Army School of the Americas to military personnel was vital in causing the military coup of 1964 in Brazil and the 1976 one in Argentina. The military dictatorships were installed on the claim by the military that Leftists were an existential threat to the national interests.[40]

China edit

China's Armed Forces are known as the People's Liberation Army (PLA). The military is the largest in the world, with 2.3 million active troops in 2005.

The Ministry of State Security was established in 1983 to ensure "the security of the state through effective measures against enemy agents, spies, and counterrevolutionary activities designed to sabotage or overthrow China's socialist system."[41]

European Union edit

For Schengen area[42] some parts of national security and external border control are enforced by Frontex[43] according to the Treaty of Lisbon. The security policy of the European Union is set by High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and assisted by European External Action Service.[44] Europol is one of the agencies of the European Union responsible for combating various forms of crime in the European Union through coordinating law enforcement agencies of the EU member states.[45]

European Union national security has been accused of insufficiently preventing foreign threats.[46]

India edit

The state of the Republic of India's national security is determined by its internal stability and geopolitical interests. While Islamic upsurge in Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir demanding secession and far left-wing terrorism in India's red corridor remain some key issues in India's internal security, terrorism from Pakistan-based militant groups has been emerging as a major concern for New Delhi.

The National Security Advisor of India heads the National Security Council of India, receives all kinds of intelligence reports, and is chief advisor to the Prime Minister of India over national and international security policy. The National Security Council has India's defence, foreign, home, finance ministers and deputy chairman of NITI Aayog as its members and is responsible for shaping strategies for India's security in all aspects.[47]

Illegal immigration to India, most of whom are Muslims from Bangladesh and Myanmar (Rohingya Muslims) are a national security risk. There is an organised influx of nearly 40,000 illegal Bangladeshi and Rohingya Muslim immigrants in Delhi who pose a national security risk, threaten the national integration, and alter the demographics. A lawyer Ashwini Upadhyay filed a Public interest litigation (PIL) in the "Supreme Court of India" (SC) to identify and deport these. Responding to this PIL, Delhi Police told the SC in July 2019 that nearly 500 illegal Bangladeshi immigrants have been deported in the preceding 28 months.[48] There are estimated 600,000 to 700,000 illegal Bangladeshi and Rohingya immigrants in National Capital Region (NCR) region specially in the districts of Gurugram, Faridabad, and Nuh (Mewat region), as well as interior villages of Bhiwani and Hisar. Most of them are Muslims who have acquired fake Hindu identity, and under questioning, they pretend to be from West Bengal. In September 2019, the Chief Minister of Haryana, Manohar Lal Khattar announced the implementation of NRC for Haryana by setting up a legal framework under the former judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, Justice HS Bhalla for updating NRC which will help in weeding out these illegal immigrants.[49]

Russia edit

In the years 1997 and 2000, Russia adopted documents titled "National Security Concept" that described Russia's global position, the country's interests, listed threats to national security, and described the means to counter those threats. In 2009, these documents were superseded by the "National Security Strategy to 2020". The key body responsible for coordinating policies related to Russia's national security is the Security Council of Russia.

According to provision 6 of the National Security Strategy to 2020, national security is "the situation in which the individual, the society and the state enjoy protection from foreign and domestic threats to the degree that ensures constitutional rights and freedoms, decent quality of life for citizens, as well as sovereignty, territorial integrity and stable development of the Russian Federation, the defence and security of the state."

Singapore edit

Total Defence is Singapore's whole-of-society national defence concept[50] based on the premise that the strongest defence of a nation is collective defence[51] – when every aspect of society stays united for the defence of the country.[52] Adopted from the national defence strategies of Sweden and Switzerland,[53] Total Defence was introduced in Singapore in 1984. Then, it was recognised that military threats to a nation can affect the psyche and social fabric of its people.[54] Therefore, the defence and progress of Singapore are dependent on all of its citizens' resolve, along with the government and armed forces.[55] Total Defence has since evolved to take into consideration threats and challenges outside of the conventional military domain.

Ukraine edit

National security of Ukraine is defined in Ukrainian law as "a set of legislative and organisational measures aimed at permanent protection of vital interests of man and citizen, society and the state, which ensure sustainable development of society, timely detection, prevention and neutralisation of real and potential threats to national interests in areas of law enforcement, fight against corruption, border activities and defence, migration policy, health care, education and science, technology and innovation policy, cultural development of the population, freedom of speech and information security, social policy and pension provision, housing and communal services, financial services market, protection of property rights, stock markets and circulation of securities, fiscal and customs policy, trade and business, banking services, investment policy, auditing, monetary and exchange rate policy, information security, licensing, industry and agriculture, transport and communications, information technology, energy and energy saving, functioning of natural monopolies, use of subsoil, land and water resources, minerals, protection of ecology and environment and other areas of public administration, in the event of emergence of negative trends towards the creation of potential or real threats to national interests."[56]

The primary body responsible for coordinating national security policy in Ukraine is the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine. It is an advisory state agency to the President of Ukraine, tasked with developing a policy of national security on domestic and international matters. All sessions of the council take place in the Presidential Administration Building. The council was created by the provision of Supreme Council of Ukraine #1658-12 on October 11, 1991. It was defined as the highest state body of collegiate governing on matters of defence and security of Ukraine with the following goals:

  • Protecting sovereignty
  • Constitutional order
  • Territorial integrity and inviolability of the republic
  • Developing strategies and continuous improvement of policy in the sphere of defence and state security
  • Comprehensive scientific assessment of the military threat nature
  • Determining position toward modern warfare
  • Effective control over the execution of the tasks of the state and its institutions keeping defence capabilities of Ukraine at the level of defence sufficiency

United Kingdom edit

The primary body responsible for coordinating national security policy in the UK is the National Security Council (United Kingdom) which helps produce and enact the UK's National Security Strategy. It was created in May 2010 by the new coalition government of the Conservative Party (UK) and Liberal Democrats. The National Security Council is a committee of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom and was created as part of a wider reform of the national security apparatus. This reform also included the creation of a National Security Adviser and a National Security Secretariat to support the National Security Council.[57]

United States edit

National Security Act of 1947 edit

The concept of national security became an official guiding principle of foreign policy in the United States when the National Security Act of 1947 was signed on July 26, 1947, by U.S. President Harry S. Truman.[3]: 3  As amended in 1949, this Act:

Notably, the Act did not define national security, which was conceivably advantageous, as its ambiguity made it a powerful phrase to invoke against diverse threats to interests of the state, such as domestic concerns.[3]: 3–5 

The notion that national security encompasses more than just military security was present, though understated, from the beginning. The Act established the National Security Council so as to "advise the President on the integration of domestic, military and foreign policies relating to national security".[2]: 52 

The act establishes, within the National Security Council, the Committee on Foreign Intelligence, whose duty is to conduct an annual review "identifying the intelligence required to address the national security interests of the United States as specified by the President" (emphasis added).[59]

In Gen. Maxwell Taylor's 1974 essay "The Legitimate Claims of National Security", Taylor states:[60]

The national valuables in this broad sense include current assets and national interests, as well as the sources of strength upon which our future as a nation depends. Some valuables are tangible and earthy; others are spiritual or intellectual. They range widely from political assets such as the Bill of Rights, our political institutions, and international friendships to many economic assets which radiate worldwide from a highly productive domestic economy supported by rich natural resources. It is the urgent need to protect valuables such as these which legitimizes and makes essential the role of national security.

National security state edit

To address the institutionalisation of new bureaucracies and government practices in the post–World War II period in the U.S., the culture of semi-permanent military mobilisation joined the National Security Council (NSC), the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the Department of Defense (DoD), and the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) for the practical application of the concept of the national security state:[61][62][63]

During and after World War II, U.S. leaders expanded the concept of national security, and used its terminology for the first time to explain America's relationship to the world. For most of U.S. history, the continental United States was secure. But, by 1945, it had become rapidly vulnerable with the advent of long-range bombers, atom bombs, and ballistic missiles. A general perception grew that future mobilization would be insufficient and that preparation must be constant. For the first time, American leaders dealt with the essential paradox of national security faced by the Roman Empire and subsequent great powers: Si vis pacem, para bellum — “If you want peace, prepare for war.”[64]

— David Jablonsky

Obama administration edit

The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff defines national security of the United States in the following manner :[65]

A collective term encompassing both national defense and foreign relations of the United States. Specifically, the condition provided by: a. a military or defense advantage over any foreign nation or group of nations; b. a favorable foreign relations position; or c. a defense posture capable of successfully resisting hostile or destructive action from within or without, overt or covert.

In 2010, the White House included an all-encompassing world-view in a national security strategy which identified "security" as one of the country's "four enduring national interests" that were "inexorably intertwined":[66]

"To achieve the world we seek, the United States must apply our strategic approach in pursuit of four enduring national interests:

  • Security:  The security of the United States, its citizens, and U.S. allies and partners.
  • Prosperity:  A strong, innovative, and growing U.S. economy in an open international economic system that promotes opportunity and prosperity.
  • Values: Respect for universal values at home and around the world.
  • International Order:  An international order advanced by U.S. leadership that promotes peace, security, and opportunity through stronger cooperation to meet global challenges.

Each of these interests is inextricably linked to the others: no single interest can be pursued in isolation, but at the same time, positive action in one area will help advance all four."

— National Security Strategy, Executive Office of the President of the United States (May 2010)

Empowerment of women edit

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that, "The countries that threaten regional and global peace are the very places where women and girls are deprived of dignity and opportunity".[67] She has noted that countries, where women are oppressed, are places where the "rule of law and democracy are struggling to take root",[67] and that, when women's rights as equals in society are upheld, the society as a whole changes and improves, which in turn enhances stability in that society, which in turn contributes to global society.[67]

Cyber edit

The Bush administration in January 2008 initiated the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative (CNCI). It introduced a differentiated approach, such as identifying existing and emerging cybersecurity threats, finding and plugging existing cyber vulnerabilities and apprehending those trying to access federal information systems.[68]

President Obama said the "cyber threat is one of the most serious economic and national security challenges we face as a nation" and that "America's economic prosperity in the 21st century will depend on cybersecurity".[69]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c Paleri, Prabhakaran (2008). National Security: Imperatives And Challenges. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. p. 521. ISBN 978-0-07-065686-4. Retrieved 23 September 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Romm, Joseph J. (1993). Defining national security: the nonmilitary aspects. Pew Project on America's Task in a Changed World (Pew Project Series). Council on Foreign Relations. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-87609-135-7. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
  4. ^ Quoted in Paleri (2008) ibid. Pg 52.
  5. ^ Brown, Harold (1983) Thinking about national security: defense and foreign policy in a dangerous world. As quoted in Watson, Cynthia Ann (2008). U.S. national security: a reference handbook. Contemporary world issues (2 (revised) ed.). ABC-CLIO. pp. 281. ISBN 978-1-59884-041-4. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  6. ^ Maier, Charles S. Peace and security for the 1990s. Unpublished paper for the MacArthur Fellowship Program, Social Science Research Council, 12 Jun 1990. As quoted in Romm 1993, p.5
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  43. ^ See Regulation (EU) 2016/1624 recital 11 ("...the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union should therefore be expanded. To reflect those changes, it should be renamed the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, which will continue to be commonly referred to as Frontex. It should remain the same legal person, with full continuity in all its activities and procedures....") and article 6 ("The European Border and Coast Guard Agency shall be the new name for the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Members States of the European Union established by Regulation (EC) No 2007/2004. Its activities shall be based on this Regulation....")
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Further reading edit

  • Brzezinski, Zbigniew. Power and Principle: Memoirs of the National Security Adviser, 1977–1981. New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1983.
  • Cordesman, Anthony H. Saudi Arabia: National Security in a Troubled Region. Santa Barbara, Calif: Praeger Security International, 2009.
  • Devanny, Joe, and Josh Harris, The National Security Council: national security at the centre of government. London: Institute for Government/King's College London, 2014.
  • Jordan, Amos A., William J. Taylor, Michael J. Mazarr, and Suzanne C. Nielsen. American National Security. Baltimore, Md: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.
  • MccGwire, Michael. Perestroika and Soviet National Security. Washington D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 1991. ISBN 978-0815755531
  • Mueller, Karl P. Striking First: Preemptive and Preventive Attack in U.S. National Security Policy. Santa Monica, CA: RAND Project Air Force, 2006.
  • National Research Council (U.S.). Beyond "Fortress America": National Security Controls on Science and Technology in a Globalized World. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press, 2009.
  • Neal, Andrew. Security in a Small Nation: Scotland, Democracy, Politics. Open Book Publishers, 2017. ISBN 9781783742707
  • Rothkopf, David J. Running the World: The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power. New York: PublicAffairs, 2005.
  • Tal, Israel. National Security: The Israeli Experience. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 2000.
  • Tan, Andrew. Malaysia's security perspectives. Canberra : Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, 2002.

External links edit

national, security, national, defense, redirects, here, other, uses, national, defense, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, national, defence, national, defense, american, english, security, defence, sovereign, state, including, citizens, economy, ins. National defense redirects here For other uses see National defense disambiguation For other uses see National security disambiguation National security or national defence national defense in American English is the security and defence of a sovereign state including its citizens economy and institutions which is regarded as a duty of government Originally conceived as protection against military attack national security is widely understood to include also non military dimensions such as the security from terrorism minimization of crime economic security energy security environmental security food security and cyber security Similarly national security risks include in addition to the actions of other nation states action by violent non state actors by narcotic cartels organized crime by multinational corporations and also the effects of natural disasters President of the United States Ronald Reagan in a briefing with US National Security Council staff on the Libya bombing on 15 April 1986 Security measures are taken to protect the Palace of Westminster in London UK The heavy blocks of concrete are designed to prevent a car bomb or other device being rammed into the building Governments rely on a range of measures including political economic and military power as well as diplomacy to safeguard the security of a nation state They may also act to build the conditions of security regionally and internationally by reducing transnational causes of insecurity such as climate change economic inequality political exclusion and nuclear proliferation Contents 1 Definitions 2 Dimensions 2 1 Physical 2 2 Infrastructural 2 3 Virtual 2 4 Political 2 5 Economic 2 6 Environmental 2 7 Energy and natural resources 3 Issues 3 1 Consistency of approach 3 2 Versus transnational security 3 3 Civil liberties and human rights 4 By region 4 1 Argentina and Brazil 4 2 China 4 3 European Union 4 4 India 4 5 Russia 4 6 Singapore 4 7 Ukraine 4 8 United Kingdom 4 9 United States 4 9 1 National Security Act of 1947 4 9 2 National security state 4 9 3 Obama administration 4 9 4 Empowerment of women 4 9 5 Cyber 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDefinitions editThe concept of national security remains ambiguous having evolved from simpler definitions which emphasised freedom from military threat and from political coercion 1 1 6 2 52 54 Among the many definitions proposed to date are the following which show how the concept has evolved to encompass non military concerns A nation has security when it does not have to sacrifice its legitimate interests to avoid war and is able if challenged to maintain them by war Walter Lippmann 1943 3 5 The distinctive meaning of national security means freedom from foreign dictation Harold Lasswell 1950 3 79 National security objectively means the absence of threats to acquired values and subjectively the absence of fear that such values will be attacked Arnold Wolfers 1960 4 National security then is the ability to preserve the nation s physical integrity and territory to maintain its economic relations with the rest of the world on reasonable terms to preserve its nature institution and governance from disruption from outside and to control its borders Harold Brown U S Secretary of Defense 1977 1981 5 National security is best described as a capacity to control those domestic and foreign conditions that the public opinion of a given community believes necessary to enjoy its own self determination or autonomy prosperity and wellbeing Charles Maier 1990 6 National security is an appropriate and aggressive blend of political resilience and maturity human resources economic structure and capacity technological competence industrial base and availability of natural resources and finally the military might National Defence College of India 1996 7 National security is the measurable state of the capability of a nation to overcome the multi dimensional threats to the apparent well being of its people and its survival as a nation state at any given time by balancing all instruments of state policy through governance and is extendable to global security by variables external to it Prabhakaran Paleri 2008 2 52 54 Dimensions editPotential causes of national insecurity include actions by other states e g military or cyber attack violent non state actors e g terrorist attack organised criminal groups such as narcotic cartels and also the effects of natural disasters e g flooding earthquakes 3 v 1 8 8 9 Systemic drivers of insecurity which may be transnational include climate change economic inequality and marginalisation political exclusion and nuclear proliferation 8 3 9 In view of the wide range of risks the security of a nation state has several dimensions including economic security energy security physical security environmental security food security border security and cyber security These dimensions correlate closely with elements of national power Increasingly governments organise their security policies into a national security strategy NSS 10 as of 2017 Spain Sweden the United Kingdom and the United States are among the states to have done so 11 12 13 14 Some states also appoint a National Security Council and or a National Security Advisor which is an executive government agency it feeds the head of the state on topics concerning national security and strategic interest The national security council advisor strategies long term short term contingency national security plans India holds one such system in current which was established on 19 November 1998 Although states differ in their approach various forms of coercive power predominate particularly Military Capabilities 8 The scope of these capabilities has developed Traditionally military capabilities were mainly land or sea based and in smaller countries they still are Elsewhere the domains of potential warfare now include the air space cyberspace and psychological operations 15 Military capabilities designed for these domains may be used for national security or equally for offensive purposes for example to conquer and annex territory and resources See also Elements of national security and Elements of national power Physical edit Main article Military securityIn practice national security is associated primarily with managing physical threats and with the military capabilities used for doing so 11 13 14 That is national security is often understood as the capacity of a nation to mobilise military forces to guarantee its borders and to deter or successfully defend against physical threats including military aggression and attacks by non state actors such as terrorism Most states such as South Africa and Sweden 16 12 configure their military forces mainly for territorial defence others such as France Russia the UK and the US 17 18 13 14 invest in higher cost expeditionary capabilities which allow their armed forces to project power and sustain military operations abroad See also Terrorism Border guard and Military aggression Infrastructural edit Main article Critical infrastructure nbsp The SUPO headquarters in Punavuori Helsinki Infrastructure security is the security provided to protect infrastructure especially critical infrastructure such as airports highways 19 rail transport hospitals bridges transport hubs network communications media the electricity grid dams power plants seaports oil refineries and water systems Infrastructure security seeks to limit vulnerability of these structures and systems to sabotage terrorism and contamination 20 Many countries have established government agencies to directly manage the security of critical infrastructure usually through the Ministry of Interior Home Affairs dedicated security agencies to protect facilities such as United States Federal Protective Service and also dedicated transport police such as the British Transport Police There are also commercial transportation security units such as the Amtrak Police in the United States Critical infrastructure is vital for the essential functioning of a country Incidental or deliberate damage can have a serious impact on the economy and essential services Some of the threats to infrastructure include Terrorism person or groups deliberately targeting critical infrastructure for political gain In the November 2008 Mumbai attacks the Mumbai central station and hospital were deliberately targeted Sabotage person or groups such as ex employees anti government groups environmental groups Refer to Bangkok s International Airport Seized by Protestors Information warfare private person hacking for private gain or countries initiating attacks to glean information and damage a country s cyberinfrastructure Cyberattacks on Estonia and cyberattacks during the 2008 South Ossetia war are examples Natural disaster hurricane or other natural events that damage critical infrastructures such as oil pipelines water and power grids See Hurricane Ike and Economic effects of Hurricane Katrina for examples Virtual edit Main article Computer security Computer security also known as cybersecurity or IT security refers to the security of computing devices such as computers and smartphones as well as computer networks such as private and public networks and the Internet It concerns the protection of hardware software data people and also the procedures by which systems are accessed and the field has growing importance due to the increasing reliance on computer systems in most societies 21 Since unauthorized access to critical civil and military infrastructure is now considered a major threat cyberspace is now recognised as a domain of warfare One such example is the use of Stuxnet by the US and Israel against the Iranian nuclear programme 15 Political edit Main article Political security Barry Buzan Ole Waever Jaap de Wilde and others have argued that national security depends on political security the stability of the social order 22 Others such as Paul Rogers have added that the equitability of the international order is equally vital 9 Hence political security depends on the rule of international law including the laws of war the effectiveness of international political institutions as well as diplomacy and negotiation between nations and other security actors 22 It also depends on among other factors effective political inclusion of disaffected groups and the human security of the citizenry 9 8 23 Economic edit Main article Economic security Economic security in the context of international relations is the ability of a nation state to maintain and develop the national economy without which other dimensions of national security cannot be managed Economic capability largely determines the defence capability of a nation and thus a sound economic security directly influences the national security of a nation That is why we see countries with sound economy happen to have sound security setup too such as The United States China India among others In larger countries strategies for economic security expect to access resources and markets in other countries and to protect their own markets at home Developing countries may be less secure than economically advanced states due to high rates of unemployment and underpaid work citation needed Environmental edit Main article Environmental security Environmental security also known as ecological security refers to the integrity of ecosystems and the biosphere particularly in relation to their capacity to sustain a diversity of life forms including human life The security of ecosystems has attracted greater attention as the impact of ecological damage by humans has grown 24 The degradation of ecosystems including topsoil erosion deforestation biodiversity loss and climate change affect economic security and can precipitate mass migration leading to increased pressure on resources elsewhere Ecological security is also important since most of the countries in the world are developing and dependent on agriculture and agriculture gets affected largely due to climate change This effect affects the economy of the nation which in turn affects national security The scope and nature of environmental threats to national security and strategies to engage them are a subject of debate 3 29 33 Romm 1993 classifies the major impacts of ecological changes on national security as 3 15 Transnational environmental problems These include global environmental problems such as climate change due to global warming deforestation and loss of biodiversity 3 15 Local environmental or resource pressures These include resource scarcities leading to local conflict such as disputes over water scarcity in the Middle East migration into the United States caused by the failure of agriculture in Mexico 3 15 and the impact on the conflict in Syria of erosion of productive land 25 Environmental insecurity in Rwanda following a rise in population and dwindling availability of farmland may also have contributed to the genocide there 26 Environmentally threatening outcomes of warfare These include acts of war that degrade or destroy ecosystems Examples are the Roman destruction of agriculture in Carthage Saddam Hussein s burning of oil wells in the Gulf War 3 15 16 the use of Agent Orange by the UK in the Malayan Emergency and the US in the Vietnam War for defoliating forests nbsp Climate change is affecting global agriculture and food security nbsp Refugees fleeing war and insecurity in Iraq and Syria arrive at Lesbos Island supported by Spanish volunteers 2015 Energy and natural resources edit Main article Energy security Resources include water sources of energy land and minerals Availability of adequate natural resources is important for a nation to develop its industry and economic power For example in the Persian Gulf War of 1991 Iraq captured Kuwait partly in order to secure access to its oil wells and one reason for the US counter invasion was the value of the same wells to its own economy citation needed Water resources are subject to disputes between many nations including India and Pakistan and in the Middle East The interrelations between security energy natural resources and their sustainability is increasingly acknowledged in national security strategies and resource security is now included among the UN Sustainable Development Goals 12 11 27 14 28 In the US for example the military has installed solar photovoltaic microgrids on their bases in case of power outage 29 30 Issues editConsistency of approach edit The dimensions of national security outlined above are frequently in tension with one another For example The high cost of maintaining large military forces can place a burden on the economic security of a nation And annual defence spending as per cent of GDP varies significantly by country 31 Conversely economic constraints can limit the scale of expenditure on military capabilities Unilateral security action by states can undermine political security at an international level if it erodes the rule of law and undermines the authority of international institutions The invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the annexation of Crimea in 2014 have been cited as examples 32 33 The pursuit of economic security in competition with other nation states can undermine the ecological security of all when the impact includes widespread topsoil erosion biodiversity loss and climate change 34 Conversely expenditure on mitigating or adapting to ecological change places a burden on the national economy If tensions such as these are mismanaged national security policies and actions may be ineffective or counterproductive Versus transnational security editIncreasingly national security strategies have begun to recognise that nations cannot provide for their own security without also developing the security of their regional and international context 14 27 11 12 For example Sweden s national security strategy of 2017 declared Wider security measures must also now encompass protection against epidemics and infectious diseases combating terrorism and organised crime ensuring safe transport and reliable food supplies protecting against energy supply interruptions countering devastating climate change initiatives for peace and global development and much more 12 nbsp A US F 14 over a burning oil well in Kuwait during the Persian Gulf War 1991 The extent to which this matters and how it should be done is the subject of debate Some argue that the principal beneficiary of national security policy should be the nation state itself which should centre its strategy on protective and coercive capabilities in order to safeguard itself in a hostile environment and potentially to project that power into its environment and dominate it to the point of strategic supremacy 35 36 37 Others argue that security depends principally on building the conditions in which equitable relationships between nations can develop partly by reducing antagonism between actors ensuring that fundamental needs can be met and also that differences of interest can be negotiated effectively 38 8 9 In the UK for example Malcolm Chalmers argued in 2015 that the heart of the UK s approach should be support for the Western strategic military alliance led through NATO by the United States as the key anchor around which international order is maintained 39 Civil liberties and human rights edit Approaches to national security can have a complex impact on human rights and civil liberties For example the rights and liberties of citizens are affected by the use of military personnel and militarised police forces to control public behaviour the use of surveillance including mass surveillance in cyberspace which has implications for privacy military recruitment and conscription practices and the effects of warfare on civilians and civil infrastructure This has led to a dialectical struggle particularly in liberal democracies between government authority and the rights and freedoms of the general public nbsp The National Security Agency harvests personal data across the internet Even where the exercise of national security is subject to good governance and the rule of law a risk remains that the term national security may become a pretext for suppressing unfavorable political and social views In the US for example the controversial USA Patriot Act of 2001 and the revelation by Edward Snowden in 2013 that the National Security Agency harvests the personal data of the general public brought these issues to wide public attention Among the questions raised are whether and how national security considerations at times of war should lead to the suppression of individual rights and freedoms and whether such restrictions are necessary when a state is at peace See also Civil liberties Human rights and Mass surveillanceBy region editArgentina and Brazil edit National security ideology as taught by the US Army School of the Americas to military personnel was vital in causing the military coup of 1964 in Brazil and the 1976 one in Argentina The military dictatorships were installed on the claim by the military that Leftists were an existential threat to the national interests 40 China edit Main article National security of China China s Armed Forces are known as the People s Liberation Army PLA The military is the largest in the world with 2 3 million active troops in 2005 The Ministry of State Security was established in 1983 to ensure the security of the state through effective measures against enemy agents spies and counterrevolutionary activities designed to sabotage or overthrow China s socialist system 41 European Union edit Main articles Schengen area Europol and Common Foreign and Security Policy For Schengen area 42 some parts of national security and external border control are enforced by Frontex 43 according to the Treaty of Lisbon The security policy of the European Union is set by High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and assisted by European External Action Service 44 Europol is one of the agencies of the European Union responsible for combating various forms of crime in the European Union through coordinating law enforcement agencies of the EU member states 45 European Union national security has been accused of insufficiently preventing foreign threats 46 India edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2019 Main articles National Security Council India National Security Strategy India Terrorism in India and Illegal immigration to India The state of the Republic of India s national security is determined by its internal stability and geopolitical interests While Islamic upsurge in Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir demanding secession and far left wing terrorism in India s red corridor remain some key issues in India s internal security terrorism from Pakistan based militant groups has been emerging as a major concern for New Delhi The National Security Advisor of India heads the National Security Council of India receives all kinds of intelligence reports and is chief advisor to the Prime Minister of India over national and international security policy The National Security Council has India s defence foreign home finance ministers and deputy chairman of NITI Aayog as its members and is responsible for shaping strategies for India s security in all aspects 47 Illegal immigration to India most of whom are Muslims from Bangladesh and Myanmar Rohingya Muslims are a national security risk There is an organised influx of nearly 40 000 illegal Bangladeshi and Rohingya Muslim immigrants in Delhi who pose a national security risk threaten the national integration and alter the demographics A lawyer Ashwini Upadhyay filed a Public interest litigation PIL in the Supreme Court of India SC to identify and deport these Responding to this PIL Delhi Police told the SC in July 2019 that nearly 500 illegal Bangladeshi immigrants have been deported in the preceding 28 months 48 There are estimated 600 000 to 700 000 illegal Bangladeshi and Rohingya immigrants in National Capital Region NCR region specially in the districts of Gurugram Faridabad and Nuh Mewat region as well as interior villages of Bhiwani and Hisar Most of them are Muslims who have acquired fake Hindu identity and under questioning they pretend to be from West Bengal In September 2019 the Chief Minister of Haryana Manohar Lal Khattar announced the implementation of NRC for Haryana by setting up a legal framework under the former judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court Justice HS Bhalla for updating NRC which will help in weeding out these illegal immigrants 49 Russia edit In the years 1997 and 2000 Russia adopted documents titled National Security Concept that described Russia s global position the country s interests listed threats to national security and described the means to counter those threats In 2009 these documents were superseded by the National Security Strategy to 2020 The key body responsible for coordinating policies related to Russia s national security is the Security Council of Russia According to provision 6 of the National Security Strategy to 2020 national security is the situation in which the individual the society and the state enjoy protection from foreign and domestic threats to the degree that ensures constitutional rights and freedoms decent quality of life for citizens as well as sovereignty territorial integrity and stable development of the Russian Federation the defence and security of the state Singapore edit Main article Total Defence Singapore Total Defence is Singapore s whole of society national defence concept 50 based on the premise that the strongest defence of a nation is collective defence 51 when every aspect of society stays united for the defence of the country 52 Adopted from the national defence strategies of Sweden and Switzerland 53 Total Defence was introduced in Singapore in 1984 Then it was recognised that military threats to a nation can affect the psyche and social fabric of its people 54 Therefore the defence and progress of Singapore are dependent on all of its citizens resolve along with the government and armed forces 55 Total Defence has since evolved to take into consideration threats and challenges outside of the conventional military domain Ukraine edit National security of Ukraine is defined in Ukrainian law as a set of legislative and organisational measures aimed at permanent protection of vital interests of man and citizen society and the state which ensure sustainable development of society timely detection prevention and neutralisation of real and potential threats to national interests in areas of law enforcement fight against corruption border activities and defence migration policy health care education and science technology and innovation policy cultural development of the population freedom of speech and information security social policy and pension provision housing and communal services financial services market protection of property rights stock markets and circulation of securities fiscal and customs policy trade and business banking services investment policy auditing monetary and exchange rate policy information security licensing industry and agriculture transport and communications information technology energy and energy saving functioning of natural monopolies use of subsoil land and water resources minerals protection of ecology and environment and other areas of public administration in the event of emergence of negative trends towards the creation of potential or real threats to national interests 56 The primary body responsible for coordinating national security policy in Ukraine is the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine It is an advisory state agency to the President of Ukraine tasked with developing a policy of national security on domestic and international matters All sessions of the council take place in the Presidential Administration Building The council was created by the provision of Supreme Council of Ukraine 1658 12 on October 11 1991 It was defined as the highest state body of collegiate governing on matters of defence and security of Ukraine with the following goals Protecting sovereignty Constitutional order Territorial integrity and inviolability of the republic Developing strategies and continuous improvement of policy in the sphere of defence and state security Comprehensive scientific assessment of the military threat nature Determining position toward modern warfare Effective control over the execution of the tasks of the state and its institutions keeping defence capabilities of Ukraine at the level of defence sufficiency United Kingdom edit The primary body responsible for coordinating national security policy in the UK is the National Security Council United Kingdom which helps produce and enact the UK s National Security Strategy It was created in May 2010 by the new coalition government of the Conservative Party UK and Liberal Democrats The National Security Council is a committee of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom and was created as part of a wider reform of the national security apparatus This reform also included the creation of a National Security Adviser and a National Security Secretariat to support the National Security Council 57 United States edit Main article National security of the United States National Security Act of 1947 edit Main articles National Security Act of 1947 and United States National Security Council The concept of national security became an official guiding principle of foreign policy in the United States when the National Security Act of 1947 was signed on July 26 1947 by U S President Harry S Truman 3 3 As amended in 1949 this Act created important components of American national security such as the precursor to the Department of Defense subordinated the military branches to the new cabinet level position of Secretary of Defense established the National Security Council and the Central Intelligence Agency 58 Notably the Act did not define national security which was conceivably advantageous as its ambiguity made it a powerful phrase to invoke against diverse threats to interests of the state such as domestic concerns 3 3 5 The notion that national security encompasses more than just military security was present though understated from the beginning The Act established the National Security Council so as to advise the President on the integration of domestic military and foreign policies relating to national security 2 52 The act establishes within the National Security Council the Committee on Foreign Intelligence whose duty is to conduct an annual review identifying the intelligence required to address the national security interests of the United States as specified by the President emphasis added 59 In Gen Maxwell Taylor s 1974 essay The Legitimate Claims of National Security Taylor states 60 The national valuables in this broad sense include current assets and national interests as well as the sources of strength upon which our future as a nation depends Some valuables are tangible and earthy others are spiritual or intellectual They range widely from political assets such as the Bill of Rights our political institutions and international friendships to many economic assets which radiate worldwide from a highly productive domestic economy supported by rich natural resources It is the urgent need to protect valuables such as these which legitimizes and makes essential the role of national security National security state edit To address the institutionalisation of new bureaucracies and government practices in the post World War II period in the U S the culture of semi permanent military mobilisation joined the National Security Council NSC the Central Intelligence Agency CIA the Department of Defense DoD and the Joint Chiefs of Staff JCS for the practical application of the concept of the national security state 61 62 63 During and after World War II U S leaders expanded the concept of national security and used its terminology for the first time to explain America s relationship to the world For most of U S history the continental United States was secure But by 1945 it had become rapidly vulnerable with the advent of long range bombers atom bombs and ballistic missiles A general perception grew that future mobilization would be insufficient and that preparation must be constant For the first time American leaders dealt with the essential paradox of national security faced by the Roman Empire and subsequent great powers Si vis pacem para bellum If you want peace prepare for war 64 David Jablonsky Obama administration edit The U S Joint Chiefs of Staff defines national security of the United States in the following manner 65 A collective term encompassing both national defense and foreign relations of the United States Specifically the condition provided by a a military or defense advantage over any foreign nation or group of nations b a favorable foreign relations position or c a defense posture capable of successfully resisting hostile or destructive action from within or without overt or covert In 2010 the White House included an all encompassing world view in a national security strategy which identified security as one of the country s four enduring national interests that were inexorably intertwined 66 To achieve the world we seek the United States must apply our strategic approach in pursuit of four enduring national interests Security The security of the United States its citizens and U S allies and partners Prosperity A strong innovative and growing U S economy in an open international economic system that promotes opportunity and prosperity Values Respect for universal values at home and around the world International Order An international order advanced by U S leadership that promotes peace security and opportunity through stronger cooperation to meet global challenges Each of these interests is inextricably linked to the others no single interest can be pursued in isolation but at the same time positive action in one area will help advance all four National Security Strategy Executive Office of the President of the United States May 2010 Empowerment of women edit Main article Hillary Doctrine U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that The countries that threaten regional and global peace are the very places where women and girls are deprived of dignity and opportunity 67 She has noted that countries where women are oppressed are places where the rule of law and democracy are struggling to take root 67 and that when women s rights as equals in society are upheld the society as a whole changes and improves which in turn enhances stability in that society which in turn contributes to global society 67 Cyber edit The Bush administration in January 2008 initiated the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative CNCI It introduced a differentiated approach such as identifying existing and emerging cybersecurity threats finding and plugging existing cyber vulnerabilities and apprehending those trying to access federal information systems 68 President Obama said the cyber threat is one of the most serious economic and national security challenges we face as a nation and that America s economic prosperity in the 21st century will depend on cybersecurity 69 See also editDeep state Fourth branch of government Homeland security Human security International security Military industrial complex Security National interest National economic securityReferences edit Romm Joseph J 1993 Defining national security the nonmilitary aspects Pew Project on America s Task in a Changed World Pew Project Series Council on Foreign Relations p 122 ISBN 978 0 87609 135 7 Retrieved 22 September 2010 a b c Paleri Prabhakaran 2008 National Security Imperatives And Challenges New Delhi Tata McGraw Hill p 521 ISBN 978 0 07 065686 4 Retrieved 23 September 2010 a b c d e f g h i j Romm Joseph J 1993 Defining national security the nonmilitary aspects Pew Project on America s Task in a Changed World Pew Project Series Council on Foreign Relations p 122 ISBN 978 0 87609 135 7 Retrieved 22 September 2010 Quoted in Paleri 2008 ibid Pg 52 Brown Harold 1983 Thinking about national security defense and foreign policy in a dangerous world As quoted in Watson Cynthia Ann 2008 U S national security a reference handbook Contemporary world issues 2 revised ed ABC CLIO pp 281 ISBN 978 1 59884 041 4 Retrieved 24 September 2010 Maier Charles S Peace and security for the 1990s Unpublished paper for the MacArthur Fellowship Program Social Science Research Council 12 Jun 1990 As quoted in Romm 1993 p 5 Definition from Proceedings of Seminar on A Maritime Strategy for India 1996 National Defence College Tees January Marg New Delhi India quoted in Paleri 2008 ibid a b c d e Ammerdown Group 2016 Rethinking Security A discussion paper PDF rethinkingsecurity org uk Retrieved 2017 12 17 a b c d e Rogers P 2010 Losing control global security in the twenty first century 3rd ed London Pluto Press ISBN 9780745329376 OCLC 658007519 National Security Strategy Office of the Security of Defense a b c d Spanish Government 2013 The National Security Strategy Sharing a common project PDF Retrieved 2017 12 17 a b c d e Sweden Prime Minister s Office 2017 National Security Strategy PDF Retrieved 2017 12 18 a b c UK Cabinet Office 2015 National Security Strategy and Strategic Defence and Security Review 2015 Retrieved 2017 12 17 a b c d e US White House 2015 National Security Strategy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 06 Retrieved 2017 12 17 a b War in the fifth domain The Economist Retrieved 2017 12 18 South Africa Department of Defence 2015 South African Defence Review 2015 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 06 09 Retrieved 2017 12 18 France 2017 Strategic Review of Defence and National Security PDF Retrieved 2017 12 18 Olika O 2016 Unpacking Russia s New National Security Strategy www csis org Retrieved 2017 12 18 Highways For Travelers Transportation Security Administration Archived from the original on 15 September 2012 TSA Who We Are Archived from the original on 2008 12 16 Retrieved 2008 12 07 Reliance spells end of road for ICT amateurs May 07 2013 The Australian a b Security a new framework for analysis Lynne Rienner Publishers 1998 p 239 ISBN 978 1 55587 784 2 United Nations UN Trust Fund for Human Security www un org Retrieved 2017 12 17 United Nations General Assembly 2010 Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 20 December 2010 www un org Retrieved 2017 12 17 Gleick Peter H 2014 03 03 Water Drought Climate Change and Conflict in Syria Weather Climate and Society 6 3 331 340 doi 10 1175 wcas d 13 00059 1 ISSN 1948 8327 S2CID 153715885 Diamond Jared Malthus in Africa Rwanda s Genocide Retrieved 26 September 2010 a b UK Cabinet Office 2008 The national security strategy of the United Kingdom security in an interdependent world Retrieved 2017 12 18 Farah Paolo Davide 2015 Sustainable Energy Investments and National Security Arbitration and Negotiation Issues Journal of World Energy Law and Business 8 6 Prehoda et al 2017 U S Strategic Solar Photovoltaic Powered Microgrid Deployment for Enhanced National Security Renewable amp Sustainable Energy Reviews 78 167 175 doi 10 1016 j rser 2017 04 094 U S Army and Lockheed Martin Commission Microgrid at Fort Bliss 2013 http www lockheedmartin com us news press releases 2013 may mfc 051613 us armyand LM html World Bank 2017 Military expenditure of central government expenditure 2015 data worldbank org Retrieved 2017 12 18 Wars in peace British military operations since 1991 Johnson Adrian Historian Chalmers Malcolm 1956 Clarke Michael 1950 Codner Michael Fry Robert Robert Alan 1951 Omand David London UK 2014 ISBN 9780855161934 OCLC 880550682 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Section United Nations News Service 2014 03 27 UN News Backing Ukraine s territorial integrity UN Assembly declares Crimea referendum invalid UN News Service Section Retrieved 2017 12 18 Jackson T 2009 Prosperity without growth economics for a finite planet London Earthscan ISBN 9781849713238 OCLC 320800523 US Department of Defense 2000 Joint Vision 2020 Emphasizes Full spectrum Dominance archive defense gov Archived from the original on 2017 09 30 Retrieved 2017 12 17 House of Commons Defence Committee 2015 Re thinking defence to meet new threats publications parliament uk Retrieved 2017 12 17 General Sir Nicholas Houghton 2015 Building a British military fit for future challenges rather than past conflicts www gov uk Retrieved 2017 12 17 FCNL 2015 Peace Through Shared Security Retrieved 2017 12 17 Chalmers M 2015 05 05 A Force for Order Strategic Underpinnings of the Next NSS and SDSR RUSI Archived from the original on 2018 03 10 Retrieved 2017 12 18 Emir Sader The coup in Brazil and the doctrine of National Security Portuguese http cartamaior com br Blog Blog do Emir O golpe no Brasil e a doutrina de seguranca nacional 2 27107 Archived 2020 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of State Security Intelligence Resource Program Federation of American Scientists Article 2 63 to 68 of the Lisbon Treaty OJ C 306 17 December 2007 p 57 See Regulation EU 2016 1624 recital 11 the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union should therefore be expanded To reflect those changes it should be renamed the European Border and Coast Guard Agency which will continue to be commonly referred to as Frontex It should remain the same legal person with full continuity in all its activities and procedures and article 6 The European Border and Coast Guard Agency shall be the new name for the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Members States of the European Union established by Regulation EC No 2007 2004 Its activities shall be based on this Regulation Gateway to the European Union European External Axis Service accessed 16 February 2011 Council Decision of 6 April 2009 establishing the European Police Office Europol 2009 371 JHA Official Journal of the European Union L 121 15 May 2009 Retrieved 20 September 2017 via EUR Lex Russians Keep Turning Up Dead All Over the World The Wall Street Journal 2024 20 years of NSC What India s Expanded Security Architecture Looks Like Nitin A Gokhale 16 April 2019 Archived from the original on 21 April 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2019 Nearly 500 illegal Bangladesh nationals detained deported Delhi police to SC Times of India 31 July 2019 Rohingyas Bangladeshi refugees 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November 2014 The National Security Council national security at the centre of government Institute for Government amp King s College London Retrieved 6 November 2014 Davis Robert T 2010 Robert T Davis ed U S Foreign Policy and National Security Chronology and Index for the 20th Century Praeger Security International Series Illustrated ed ABC CLIO pp xiii xiv ISBN 978 0 313 38385 4 Retrieved 25 September 2010 50 U S C 402 Taylor Gen Maxwell 1974 The Legitimate Claims of National Security Foreign Affairs 52 Essay of 1974 Council on Foreign Relations Inc 577 594 doi 10 2307 20038070 JSTOR 20038070 Retrieved 25 September 2010 Yergin Daniel Shattered Peace The Origins of the Cold War and the National Security State Boston Houghton Mifflin 1977 Stuart Douglas T Creating the National Security State A History of the Law That Transformed America Princeton N J Princeton University Press 2008 ISBN 9781400823772 Ripsman Norrin M and T V Paul Globalization and the National Security State Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 David Jablonsky The State of the National Security State Carlisle Barracks PA Strategic Studies Institute 2002 PDF Archived 2013 05 22 at the Wayback Machine US NATO Military Terminology Group 2010 JP 1 02 Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms 2001 As amended through 31 July 2010 PDF Pentagon Washington Joint Chiefs of Staff US Department of Defense p 361 Archived from the original PDF on 24 August 2014 Retrieved 19 September 2010 Obama Barack National Security Strategy May 2010 Archived 2017 01 20 at the Wayback Machine Office of the President of the United States White House p 17 Accessed 23 September 2010 a b c Lemmon Gayle Tzemach 2013 The Hillary Doctrine Women s Rights Are a National Security Issue the Atlantic Rollins John and Anna C Henning Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative Legal Authorities and Policy Considerations Washington D C Congressional Research Service 2009 White House Cybersecurity whitehouse gov via National Archives Further reading editLibrary resources about National security Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Brzezinski Zbigniew Power and Principle Memoirs of the National Security Adviser 1977 1981 New York Farrar Straus Giroux 1983 Cordesman Anthony H Saudi Arabia National Security in a Troubled Region Santa Barbara Calif Praeger Security International 2009 Devanny Joe and Josh Harris The National Security Council national security at the centre of government London Institute for Government King s College London 2014 Jordan Amos A William J Taylor Michael J Mazarr and Suzanne C Nielsen American National Security Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press 1999 MccGwire Michael Perestroika and Soviet National Security Washington D C Brookings Institution Press 1991 ISBN 978 0815755531 Mueller Karl P Striking First Preemptive and Preventive Attack in U S National Security Policy Santa Monica CA RAND Project Air Force 2006 National Research Council U S Beyond Fortress America National Security Controls on Science and Technology in a Globalized World Washington D C National Academies Press 2009 Neal Andrew Security in a Small Nation Scotland Democracy Politics Open Book Publishers 2017 ISBN 9781783742707 Rothkopf David J Running the World The Inside Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American Power New York PublicAffairs 2005 Tal Israel National Security The Israeli Experience Westport Conn Praeger 2000 Tan Andrew Malaysia s security perspectives Canberra Strategic and Defence Studies Centre Australian National University 2002 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to National security nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to National security National Security Internet Archive NSIA at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National security amp oldid 1220437028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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