Army PERSTEMPO in the Post Cold War Era


Book Description

This document reports the results of an examination of available data on the rate at which military personnel are involved in military operations (PERSTEMPO). The research was conducted in early 1997 during the later stages of the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), specifically with respect to the Army. Information on data available is accurate as of this date; subsequently Congress has mandated changes. The work was sponsored by the Land Forces Division in the Office of the Director of Programs, Analysis and Evaluation to provide information for its QDR analyses. Because of the tight schedule imposed by the QDR, the research relied on readily available data sources.




Army PERSTEMPO in the Post Cold War Era


Book Description

This document reports the results of an examination of available data on the rate at which military personnel are involved in military operations (PERSTEMPO). The research was conducted in early 1997 during the later stages of the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), specifically with respect to the Army. Information on data available is accurate as of this date; subsequently Congress has mandated changes. The work was sponsored by the Land Forces Division in the Office of the Director of Programs, Analysis and Evaluation to provide information for its QDR analyses. Because of the tight schedule imposed by the QDR, the research relied on readily available data sources.




Selected Rand Abstracts


Book Description

Includes publications previously listed in the supplements to the Index of selected publications of the Rand Corporation (Oct. 1962-Feb. 1963).




Military Life


Book Description

With global commitments and combat duty, our armed forces face life-threatening challenges on a daily basis. However, less visible threats also impact the mental health of our military men and women. Experts examine challenges on the battlefield, such as women coming to terms with life after being prisoners of war, or soldiers dealing with mistakenly killing civilians. But life in the armed forces presents less dramatic, daily challenges. Away from the front lines, soldiers have to raise their families, sometimes as single parents. Children have to learn what it's like to be in a military family, and to make sense of war. Gay or lesbian officers cope with a don't ask, don't tell policy. An unprecedented range of contributors—military officers, medical doctors, psychologists, psychiatrists, and professors—take us onto the bases and the battlefields and inside the minds of military personnel who face far greater challenges than most of us ever see in the headlines. These volumes also highlight factors that make members of the military resilient and stable, as well as programs and practices that can ease the psychological burdens of military personnel, families, and children. Readers can better understand how society views our military and military operations, and how each one of us can play a role in supporting our armed forces.







Engineering Peace


Book Description

In practically all the peacekeeping operations of the 1990s, a postconflict reconstruction gap of almost one year separates the end of military peacekeepers' mission of halting mass violence from the start of removing mines as well as rebuilding and repairing the host country's physical infrastructure: roads and bridges, public utilities, and buildings.In this timely work, Colonel Garland Williams analyzes the postconflict reconstruction gap in three case studies Bosnia, Kosovo, and Afghanistan and shows how military engineering brigades accompanying peacekeeping contingents can be put to use immediately after the conflict ends to restore vital infrastructure and social institutions. In the book's concluding chapter, Williams proposes changes in U.S. national security decision making to integrate military engineering brigades into postconflict reconstruction, thus making U.S. military officials less wary of mission creep and nation-building."







Department of Defense Appropriations for 1997


Book Description