
Terrorism: Commentary on Security Documents is a hardbound series that provides primary-source documents and expert commentary on the worldwide counter-terrorism effort. Among the documents collected are transcripts of Congressional testimony, reports by such federal government bodies as the Congressional Research Service (CRS) and the Government Accountability Office (GAO), and case law covering issues related to terrorism. Most volumes carry a single theme, and inside each volume the documents appear within topic-based categories. The series also includes a subject index and other indices that guide the user through this complex area of the law.Volume 119, Catastrophic Possibilities Threatening U.S. Security, discusses the nightmare scenario of a catastrophic attack on the United States. While the U.S. national security apparatus remains focused on the "wars" in Iraq and Afghanistan and appears to be postulating a future international security environment defined largely by threats increasingly posed by weak, failing, and failed states, astute strategists are not discounting the possibility of a catastrophic attack on the United States. In this volume, Douglas Lovelace presents a number of documents that help describe, explain, and assess the nature and severity of the threat of a catastrophic attack. Offering expert commentary for each section, Lovelace groups the documents into three categories: Catastrophic Potentialities in the International Security Environment, Countering the Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear Materials, and Catastrophic Cyber Attack. Documents include a Department of Defense overview of the four categories of strategic challenges, a Government Accountability Office report addressing weapons of mass destruction and the actions needed to allocate resources for counterproliferation programs, and an insightful overview of the threat of catastrophic cyber-attack by the Department of Homeland Security. The commentary and primary sources
This volume investigates the nature, severity, and strategic implications of potential catastrophic attacks against the United States within the modern international security environment. The editors, including legal scholars and security experts like Aziz Huq and Douglas Lovelace, curate a collection of primary government documents to analyze how the U.S. national security apparatus prepares for high-impact, low-probability events. By synthesizing reports from the Department of Defense, the Government Accountability Office, and the Department of Homeland Security, the text provides a framework for understanding the intersection of nuclear proliferation, cyber warfare, and state fragility.
What You Will Find
Experts and researchers utilize this series as a foundational reference for tracking the evolution of counter-terrorism policy and legal doctrine. Readers frequently note the high density of the technical prose and the utility of the expert commentary in contextualizing complex government reports.
Page Count:
504
Publication Date:
2012-01-13
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199758271
ISBN-13:
9780199758272
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