How much defense spending is enough? /
Material type:
TextPublication details: Washington : American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research , c1976.Description: 64 pISBN: - 0844720925 :
- 355.03'3073 KEM
- UA23 .K39
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Monograph & others
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CBN HQ Library General Stacks | Non-fiction | 355.03'3073 KEM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31008100157193 |
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| 354.81 FER Public Debt Management and Monetary Policy in Brazil / | 355.01'17'093 GRE New Zealand after nuclear war / | 355.03'305'6 PRA Implications of the 1976 Arab-Israeli military status / | 355.03'3073 KEM How much defense spending is enough? / | 355.03'3073 NUC Nuclear Strategy and National Security: | 355.0335'47 MCC Military objectives in Soviet foreign policy / | 355.07'0973 BOR Militarism and science / |
Includes bibliographical references.
How much defense spending is enough? is a debate between two congressmen on how to determine the size of the U.S. defense budget. In this debate, the first congressman (Jack Kemp) contends that U.S. expenditures should be determined in light of the military capability of the Soviet. He argues that the steady growth of the Soviet military constitutes a threat to the United States and requires that American forces be expanded in order tp prevent deficiencies in the future. While the second (Les Aspin) contends that U.S. defense spending should be determined by the capabilities required for vital national security interests.
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