May 24, 2011

News

Reimagining the U.S. Defense Industrial Base for Strategic Deterrence

Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies Associate Dean of Academics Dr. Deon Canyon has authored a new article in Security Nexus titled “Adaptive Power Helps the U.S. Defense Industrial Base Become a Tool of Deterrence.” His paper argues that as strategic competition with China intensifies, the U.S. Defense Industrial Base (DIB) must shift from a reactive supplier to a proactive tool of deterrence and influence. Using the Adaptive Power framework, the article reimagines the DIB as a sovereignty-aligned asset that supports U.S. strategic objectives through five operational pillars: timing, context, legitimacy, modularity, and learning.

Do States Act Rationally?

The article discusses the concept of rationality and its evolution, the state of the art on state rationality, and the strategic thinking of 14 states in the Indo-Pacific, including the United States, China, Russia, Japan, India, South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Australia, and New Zealand.

Preface

Edge of Competition Main Page The defining feature of the Indo-Pacific is its state of constant, accelerating change. But this volatility is not random. It is driven by three converging forces: strategic shocks that disrupt familiar patterns, political [...]

By |2025-12-09T13:03:54-10:00August 27, 2025|Categories: Edge|Tags: , , |
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