Program on National Security

The United States has maintained the best military in the world in terms of people and weaponry. Conventionally, the U.S. military remains without peer. Unfortunately, the conventional dominance demonstrated in the Persian Gulf War signaled to adversaries that symmetrical confrontations with the United States were at best foolhardy and at worst suicidal. Conflicts from Somalia to Haiti to the Balkans proved that adversaries, while not always successful, had indeed learned that asymmetrical strategies worked best against the American conventional juggernaut.

No event has proven this more correct than the 9/11 attacks. As a consequence, the United States is confronted with an urgent conflict and clear enemy, defined as international terrorists and the countries that help them. That said, many questions remain unanswered in regards to American national security strategy. For instance:

Program Activities

Building on four conferences convened by FPRI’s Defense Task Force since 1996, which culminated in the publication of a book in 2002 entitled America the Vulnerable: Our Military Problems and How to Fix Them, FPRI’s Program on National Security is designed to address the questions posed above through a focus on research, publication, and education.

Personnel

Contact Information

For further details, contact Michael Noonan at mn@fpri.org or (215) 732-3774, ext. 203.