Center for Defense Studies
I headed downtown last night to attend a reception for the kick-off of American Enterprise Institute’s Center for Defense Studies. AEI was a first-class host (h/t to Tom Donnelly and crew) making for a very enjoyable evening. CJCS Admiral Michael Mullen was the guest of honor and he delivered an insightful overview address concerning national security issues in general and of course Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq in particular.
The Center for Defense Studies can be found here. From the “About” page:
The American Enterprise Institute is pleased to announce the creation of its Center for Defense Studies (CDS). The primary purpose of the center is to impart a distinct identity to the scholarship on defense issues and military affairs currently produced at AEI, while signaling a new, focused intent to pursue rigorous studies and analysis on a range of strategic, programmatic, and budgetary issues.
The center will be anchored by a series of targeted studies and reports. The American military establishment is an enormous and complex institution, only occasionally (and usually in moments of crisis) amenable to decisive direction, but also requiring constant smaller course corrections. For every major strategic point of deflection in American defense policy, there are dozens of programmatic, budgetary, and force posture decisions and assessments to be made. One purpose of CDS will be to better shape and influence these decisions, to the extent that they both determine larger strategic choices and are the systemic expressions of American strategic purposes. To that end, CDS has undertaken the following projects:
– a study, cosponsored by the Brookings Institution, on the emerging requirements for U.S. nuclear forces which will re-examine the purpose and posture of America’s strategic systems and capabilities;
– a comprehensive assessment of American security commitments and defense requirements modeled on the Defense Department’s Quadrennial Defense Review;
– an ongoing study on the performance of the first Stryker brigade deployed to Afghanistan, undertaken in an effort to better understand and communicate to policymakers the technological requirements for conducting mounted operations in the theater;
– an evaluation of the “hard power” capabilities of America’s allies and security partners—and how they impact U.S. defense spending and alliance culture.
To complement these scholarly efforts, CDS will also host a blog, FYSA “For Your Situational Awareness” where AEI scholars and others will regularly post commentary and analysis. The CDS website also features a frequently updated column titled “Must Reads,” designed to highlight a selection of noteworthy books, reports, and articles which are (or should be) informing and driving the day’s defense policy debates.
We hope that the website serves as a useful resource, and we welcome your comments.