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From the Gulf War until 2002, debates on the future of war seemed intoxicated by the new military technology and the promise of quick, low-risk, low-casualty conflict. Wars in Kosovo and Chechnya, did not disabuse the public, the press or seemingly the policy-makers of this perspective. Then on September 11th the myth that wars were to be fought elsewhere on Western terms was destroyed in the World Trade Center attacks. Jeremy Black's book prophetically explores the realities of war in a globalised world where growing prosperity can increase the likelihood of conflict and American power is likely to be increasingly challenged.
Jeremy Black is Professor of History at the University of Exeter, UK, and a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of America and the West at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia, USA.
"Black's interesting book assesses the bellicological prospects for the next 99 years or so."--The Guardian, July 7, 2001
Jeremy Black, Jaap R. Bruijn, Christer Ericsson, Anna Maria Forssberg, Bo Franzén, Mats Hallenberg, Marika Hedin, Orsi Husz, Arne Jarrick, Ulf Jonsson, Gunner Lind, Enrique Martínez Ruiz, Leos Müller, Jonas Nordin, Magdalena de Pazzis Pi Corrales, Johan Söderberg, Maria Wallenberg Bondesson, Klas Åmark, Gunnar Åselius, Anna Maria Forssberg, Mats Hallenberg, Orsi Husz, Jonas Nordin