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  1. objective-the strategic bombing campaign named LINEBACKER II. The campaign illustrates the application of military power to achieve a political goal. This study describes the evolution of U.S. strategy leading up to the campaign, the strategy of the campaign, and the consequences of that strategy.

    • Phillip S. Michael
    • 2003
  2. Apr 7, 2003 · This SRP will describe the instrument of national power he chose to fulfill that objective-the strategic bombing campaign named LINEBACKER II. The campaign illustrates the application of military power to achieve a political goal.

  3. This SRP will describe the instrument of national power he chose to fulfill that objective-the strategic bombing campaign named LINEBACKER II. The campaign illustrates the application of military power to achieve a political goal.

    • Phillip S. Michael
    • 2003
  4. Apr 7, 2003 · The campaign illustrates the application of military power to achieve a political goal. This study describes the evolution of U.S. strategy leading up to the campaign, the strategy of the campaign, and the consequences of that strategy.

  5. Apr 17, 2014 · 8 This reference seems to strengthen the difference made by Emile Simpson between the use of armed force within a military domain that seeks to establish military conditions for a political solution on one side and the use of armed force that directly seeks political as opposed to specifically military outcomes; nevertheless, war remains a political instrument for Clausewitz; what he might ...

    • Andreas Herberg-Rothe
    • 2014
  6. www.pacific-geographies.org › 2/2016/07 › PG46_HMuecklerSukarno, Gandhi and Rizal

    Abstract: This article highlights exponents of Asian nationalism, who followed a strategy of non-violent acting to achieve the political goal, in their capacity for being role models for Pacific Islands nations in their struggle for independence and/ or autonomy from the 1960s onwards.

  7. Jul 1, 2015 · Equally important, though, were the negative political goals—those achievable only by limiting military force. To achieve true victory in Vietnam, both the positive and negative objectives had to be obtained—a truism for any conflict. That challenge was enormously difficult for American political and military leaders in Vietnam because the ...

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