The (Not So) Rapid Deployment Force

Bureaucratic and Political Barriers to Implementing Strategic Change

Autores

  • Luís da Vinha Assistant Professor of Political Science, Valley City State University

Resumo

Early in his Presidency, President Carter approved PD-18 which foresaw the creation of a Rapid Deployment Force (RDF) with the purpose of responding quickly to out-of-area crises and threats, particularly in the Middle East. The directive however was insufficient to catalyze the RDF’s implementation. The paper analyzes the main impediments to the implementation of the RDF, highlighting the bureaucratic and political barriers. The existing studies on the development of the RDF have essentially highlighted the bureaucratic resistance to its implementation. While acknowledging these constraints, the value of the current paper is its focus on the political barriers to the RDF, particularly those resulting from the interagency debate regarding the nature of détente. Based an assortment of primary sources the paper argues that the main barrier to the creation and implementation of the RDF was the political struggle to define United States strategy within the Administration, particularly between the NSC and the State Department.

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Publicado

2024-10-07

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