Search FresnoMall.Com
Journal of International Security Affairs
from: Jewish Inst Natl Sec Affairs
Availability: Usually ships in 3 to 6 months
This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: MagazineFirst Issue Lead Time: up to 6 months
Format: Magazine Subscription
Issues Per Year: 2
Label: Jewish Inst Natl Sec Affairs
Magazine Type: Trade magazine
Manufacturer: Jewish Inst Natl Sec Affairs
Number Of Issues: 2
Publisher: Jewish Inst Natl Sec Affairs
Studio: Jewish Inst Natl Sec Affairs
Subscription Length: 365 days
Related Items:
- Foreign Affairs
- Foreign Policy
- The U.S. Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual
- Amazon Kindle Replacement Battery
- Current History
- see more
Editorial Review:
Product Description:
Addresses U.S. national and international security policy successes and failures, myths and opportunities - often challenging conventional wisdom. Experts write for those with a professional or personal interest in national security issues, including the war on terrorism.
Average Rating: 

Rating:
- An impressive journalThis journal got off to a great start in the summer of 2001 with its inaugural issue that included an article by Natan Sharansky called "From Helsinki to Oslo." In issue #4, at the start of 2003, it saw that American troops would roll into Baghdad, but that it would be very difficult to "win the peace." We'd been successful in doing just that in Germany in 1945, but this journal pointed out that doing it in Iraq would be extraordinarily difficult. And the journal has discussed many of the problems ... Read More
Rating:
- Timely, Thought-Provoking Articles Covering a Broad SpectrumA friend of mine lent me a copy of The Journal of International Security Affairs after a cover story comparing post-World War II Germany with (what is likely to be) post-Saddam Iraq caught my eye. I found the articles within to be uniformly well-written by a broad spectrum of authors (academics, policymakers, military officials, etc) from both the U.S. and abroad (India, Russia, etc).
Published by a Washington-based organization named JINSA, the tone was fair and balanced, with topics ranging ... Read More




