Record ID | ia:balticseaintrans00gree |
Source | Internet Archive |
Download MARC XML | https://archive.org/download/balticseaintrans00gree/balticseaintrans00gree_marc.xml |
Download MARC binary | https://www.archive.org/download/balticseaintrans00gree/balticseaintrans00gree_meta.mrc |
LEADER: 02497cam 2200349 a 4500
001 ocn640386782
005 20100622113151.7
008 920226s1991 cau f000 0 eng d
035 $a
035 $a
037 $aADA245947
040 $aCMontNP$cCMontNP
100 1 $aGreen, John L.
245 14 $aThe Baltic :$ba sea in transition /$cby John L. Green.
260 $aMonterey, Calif. :$bNaval Postgraduate School ;$aSpringfield, Va. :$bAvailable from the National Technical Information Service,$c1991.
300 $aviii, 177 p. ;$c28 cm.
500 $aThesis advisor: Donald Abenheim.
500 $aADA245947.
500 $a"September 1991"
502 $aThesis (M.S. in National Security Affairs) Naval Postgraduate School, September 1991.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 169-175)
506 $aApproved for public release; distribution unlimited.
520 $aThe objective of this thesis is to analyze naval developments in the countries abutting the Baltic Sea. Major international security events have radically altered the political landscape surrounding the region. Fundamental changes to the regional security environment are affecting naval building and modernization plans. This region should be of primary concern to the United States political and naval leadership because it comprises one of the world's largest concentrations of naval combatants. The navies deployed in the Baltic Sea are highly capable, and the geographic importance of the region has predicated a unique pattern of naval development. As regional threats to international security emerge, littoral naval warfare will become increasingly difficult to manage. Examination of the Baltic naval balance should provide a useful tool for monitoring national intentions in that region as well as forecasting future littoral naval threats elsewhere.
710 2 $aNaval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
992 $aBALANCE, BALTIC SEA, CONCENTRATION(COMPOSITION), ENVIRONMENTS, GLOBAL, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, NAVAL VESSELS(COMBATANT), NAVY, PATTERNS, POLITICAL SCIENCE, SECURITY, TERRAIN, THESES, THREATS
035 $a
590 $aUS Navy (USN) author.
590 $aDegree received should read: M.A. in National Security Affairs. Error on title page.
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