"This is a major contribution to the study of US war expenditures. Miller examines US funding of three wars: Korea, Vietnam, and the global war on terror. For each he covers cost estimates and appropriation, allocation, and spending. He tries to place the material in context by preceding each introduction with a caption from a prominent source. Miller clearly explains the funding process in each case study and raises many questions, which he answers with healthy cynicism. One conclusion is that all estimates depend on assumptions; hence, they all end up wrong. Supplemental funding has been significant, incremental, and expensive in terms of opportunity costs. In discussing resources, Miller considers 12 serious issues including cost estimates, transition from supplemental to baseline budgets, advantages and disadvantages of supplemental budgeting, benefits and durability of flexible appropriations, importance of authorities relative to funding, cost components, overtime, predisposed outlook of the political leaders, congressional activism, and tensions and suspicions surrounding war expenditures.... Charts, tables, glossary, footnotes, plus introductions and summaries of chapters and sections enrich the text. Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduate students through professionals." - <i>Choice</i>

"Miller, a serving officer in the US Navy with extensive economic and budgetary experience at the national level, uses the extended conflicts in Korea and Vietnam as case studies as he describes the fundamentals of financing and budgeting for war and problems in defining war costs. He examines the Korean War from 1951 to 1953, defining the security strategy and the supplemental financing requests built from it, the war in Southeast Asia from 1965 to 1975 and the record of spending, and the war that will likely top them all in cost, that on terror starting in 2001, including homeland security since 9/11. He gives 12 elements to consider in creating financing and budgets for upcoming wars." - <i>Reference & Research Book News</i>

One aspect of war is often overlooked: how much do they cost and how are they funded. Funding Extended Conflicts develops a baseline on Federal spending for the two extended conflicts of the Cold War era, Korea and Vietnam, and compares them with the global war on terror, including current outlays for Iraq and Afghanistan. It also provides wartime cases that offer recommendations on how to pay for future wars and focuses on the length of the tails of such spending, which are often omitted in the final analyses and distort funding estimates. Background chapters examine financing and budget issues as well as problems associated with defining the real cost of Korea, Vietnam, and the so-called long war against terrorism and are complemented by an assessment of the open-ended commitment to support homeland defense and conduct ongoing military operations in Southwest Asia.

One aspect of war is often overlooked: how much do they cost and how are they funded. Funding Extended Conflicts develops a baseline on Federal spending for the two extended conflicts of the Cold War era, Korea and Vietnam, and compares them with the global war on terror, including current outlays for Iraq and Afghanistan. It also provides wartime cases that offer recommendations on how to pay for future wars and focuses on the length of the tails of such spending, which are often omitted in the final analyses and distort funding estimates. Background chapters examine financing and budget issues as well as problems associated with defining the real cost of Korea, Vietnam, and the so-called long war against terrorism and are complemented by an assessment of the open-ended commitment to support homeland defense and conduct ongoing military operations in Southwest Asia.

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One aspect of war is often overlooked: how much do wars cost and how are they funded? This book reveals US Federal spending for the two extended conflicts of the Cold War era, Korea and Vietnam, and compares them with the global 'War on Terror', including the outlays for Iraq and Afghanistan.
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"Rick Miller has done a great service for those who are charged with national security resource management in a time of protracted conflict. His book fairly and logically treats the budgeting, appropriations requests, and execution costs of the conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, and now the GWOT. It should be required reading for future national security resource managers at war colleges and public policy schools."
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"Rick Miller has done a great service for those who are charged with national security resource management in a time of protracted conflict. His book fairly and logically treats the budgeting, appropriations requests, and execution costs of the conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, and now the GWOT. It should be required reading for future national security resource managers at war colleges and public policy schools." -- Donald L. Pilling, ADM, USN (Retired) "Think of it this way: accurate war fund prediction is analogous to forecasting springtime weather in the South--at best, you might not get wet. Richard M. Miller, Commander, US Navy, deftly navigates the sometimes abstruse and always unpredictable waters that are military conflict resourcing. With history as his beacon, Commander Miller presents a lucid analysis of, and keen insight into, the inherently equivocal and difficult task of projecting war funding. Timely. Relevant. Immensely readable." -- Richard B. Myers, General USAF (retired) and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff "When my Congressional Nominee, Rick Miller, was selected for admittance by the U. S. Navel Academy in 1985 I was impressed with his accomplishment and hopeful regarding his future. Now, he not only has a distinguished and honorable service record but he has also written an important treatise on the funding of defense efforts. Having been a part of it for many years, I believe CDR Miller has given us an important understanding of how Congress funds our military and how we can more fully understand the complete cost of war. This book is destined to be critical reading for anyone who wants to understand how we fund the dogs of war." -- Dick Armey, Former Majority Leader, U.S. House of Representatives
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Covering global hot spots from Iran to Venezuela and subjects ranging from terrorism and cyber warfare to food security, books in the Praeger Security International series give readers access to carefully considered and highly informed viewpoints on the critical security issues that threaten to destabilize our world. With titles authored by diplomats, academic researchers, journalists, military leaders and combatants, legal experts, psychologists, and other knowledgeable specialists, these books offer in-depth analysis and international perspectives that are unavailable in the mass media. These titles represent an invaluable resource for students, researchers, and policymakers as well as for anyone who seeks a deeper understanding of the complex issues that affect our lives and future.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780275998967
Publisert
2007-08-01
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
200

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Richard M. Miller Jr., is a serving officer in the U.S. Navy with extensive background in budget issues who most recently worked as a congressional analyst for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A distinguished graduate of the National War College and the Naval War College, Commander Miller is a winner of the B. Franklin Reinauer Defense Economics Prize. In addition, he was a Federal Executive Fellow in the Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy at Boston University.