User:Yngvadottir/Alan Sabrosky rewrite

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Alan Ned Sabrosky is an American military and political analyst who served as director of the Strategic Studies Institute at the United States Army War College.

Early life and education

Sabrosky earned a Bachelor's degree from East Carolina University in 1969, Master's degrees from the University of Michigan in 1971 and 1972, and a Ph.D. also from the University of Michigan in 1976, with a dissertation titled "Why Wide Wars? Capability Distribution, Alliance Aggregation, and the Expansion of Interstate War, 1820–1965".[1]

Career

Sabrosky served in the Marines and held faculty positions at Catholic University and Georgetown University, and at the University of Pennsylvania while working as a research associate at the Foreign Policy Research Institute during the 1970s. In 1981 he became director of FPRI for a year; he then moved to Washington, D.C., and a year after that became Director of Studies at the Army War College,[2] where he received the Superior Civilian Service Award in 1988 and held the General of the Army Douglas MacArthur Chair of Research;[3][4] he remained there until retirement.

Research and publications

Sabrosky edited Blue-Collar Soldiers? Unionization and the U.S. Military (1977), a collection of papers from an FPRI conference.[5][6][7] In it he argued that "military unions are simply too great a risk for a political democracy [because it would be] unwise to expect unions not to act like unions over the long term, and in doing so call into question the basis of our national security".[8]

In 1985, he edited and contributed an article to Polarity and War: The Changing Structure of International Conflict, published in association with the University of Michigan Correlates of War Project.[9] Distinguishing between "localized wars" between the original belligerents, "expanded wars" that include several belligerents, and enlarged wars that include a major power on both sides of the conflict,[10][11] he has argued that a conflict escalates when a major power intervenes in a war between a minor state and another major state,[12] and that conflicts are likely to expand more rapidly than they did in the 19th century.[9] In the field of alliance systems, he has also published Alliances in US Foreign Policy: Issues in the Quest for Collective Defense (1988).[13]

In 2009, Sabrosky published an opinion piece titled "Treason, Betrayal and Deceit: The Road to 9/11 and Beyond" in which he argued that the September 11 attacks were a Mossad operation.[14][15][16] In 2010, he wrote that "a large majority of American Jews ...espouse a form of political bigamy called dual loyalty", and criticized those who serve in the Israel Defense Forces but not in the U.S. Armed Forces.[3] In responding to the latter article, Daniel Flesch, a former IDF paratrooper, called him a conspiracy theorist.[17] In 2011 the Anti-Defamation League named him as a key figure in anti-Semitic 9/11 conspiracy theories.[15][18][19]

Books

  • (Editor, contributor) Blue-Collar Soldiers? Unionization and the U.S. Military. Westview special studies in military affairs. Boulder, Colorado: Westview. 1978. ISBN 9780891580553.
  • Defense Manpower Policy: A Critical Reappraisal. Monographs. Vol. 22. Philadelphia: Foreign Policy Research Institute. 1978. OCLC 4211186.
  • Great Power Games: The Sino-Soviet-American 'Power Transition'. Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies monograph series. Vol. 14. Washington, DC: Council on American Affairs. 1982. ISBN 9780930690137.
  • (Editor, contributor) Polarity and War: The Changing Structure of International Conflict. Westview special studies in international relations. Boulder, Colorado: Westview. 1985. ISBN 9780813370002.
  • (Co-editor, contributor) The Strategic Dimension of Military Manpower. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ballinger; Georgetown University Center for Strategic and International Studies. 1987. ISBN 9780887301551.
  • (Editor, contributor) Alliances in U.S. Foreign Policy: Issues in the Quest for Collective Defence. Studies in global security. Boulder, Colorado / London: Westview. 1988. ISBN 9780813371955.
  • (Co-editor, contributor) The Recourse to War: An Appraisal of the 'Weinberger Doctrine'. Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania: U.S. Army War College. 1988. OCLC 717679933. Repr. London: F. Cass, 1990. Small Wars & Insurgencies 1.2. OCLC 41290310.
  • (Co-editor, contributor) Prisoners of War? Nation-States in the Modern Era. Lexington, Massachusetts: D.C. Heath/Lexington. 1990. ISBN 9780669171419.

References

  1. ^ Long, Alma E. (Autumn 1976). "Doctoral Dissertations in Political Science, 1976". PS. 9 (4): 511. JSTOR 418087.
  2. ^ Wiarda, Howard J. (2010). Think Tanks and Foreign Policy: The Foreign Policy Research Institute and Presidential Politics. Lexington Books. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-7391-4164-9.
  3. ^ a b Sabrosky, Alan (October 4, 2010). "Zionism Unmasked — The Dark Face Of Jewish Nationalism". Veterans Today.
  4. ^ Murray, Douglas J.; Viotti, Paul R., eds. (1989). The Defense Policies of Nations: A Comparative Study (2nd ed.). Johns Hopkins University. p. xiii. ISBN 9780801835995.
  5. ^ Segal, David R. (June 1979). "Review: Blue-Collar Soldiers? Unionization and the U.S. Military by Alan Ned Sabrosky". The American Political Science Review. 73 (2): 603–04. doi:10.2307/1954947. JSTOR 1954947.
  6. ^ Head, Richard G. (April 1978). "Recent Books". Foreign Affairs. 56 (3): 669. JSTOR 20039938.
  7. ^ Mittelstadt, Jennifer (Fall 2011). "'The Army is a Service, Not a Job': Unionization, Employment, and the Meaning of Military Service in the Late-Twentieth Century United States". International Labor and Working-Class History. 80: 29–52. JSTOR 41307192.
  8. ^ McCollum, James K. (1978). "Blue Collar Soldiers/Military Unions (Book)". Monthly Labor Review (review). 101 (9): 66. ISSN 0098-1818.
  9. ^ a b Mussington, Brian David (July–September 1987). "Review: Polarity and War: The Changing Structure of International Conflict by Alan Ned Sabrosky". International Journal on World Peace. 4 (3): 121–24. JSTOR 20751167.
  10. ^ Vasquez, John A. (1993). The War Puzzle. Cambridge Studies in International Relations. Vol. 27. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-521-36674-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  11. ^ Valeriano, Brandon; Vasquez, John E. (2010). "Identifying and Classifying Complex Interstate Wars" (PDF). International Studies Quarterly. 54: 564.
  12. ^ Chan, Steve (2013). Enduring Rivalries in the Asia-Pacific. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-107-04143-1.
  13. ^ Scales, Robert H., Jr. (Winter 1998). "Trust, Not Technology, Sustains Coalitions". Parameters: 4 10, note 5.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Sabrosky, Alan (September 10, 2009). "Treason, Betrayal and Deceit: The Road to 9/11 and Beyond". Salem-News.com.
  15. ^ a b Kestenbaum, Sam (September 8, 2016). "9/11 Anniversary Sparks New Wave of Anti-Semitic Conspiracy Theories". Daily Forward.
  16. ^ Barrett, Kevin (May 30, 2018). "Censorship Plague Infects America". American Free Press.
  17. ^ Flesch, Daniel (February 1, 2015). "Slandering Americans Who Fight for Israel". Commentary. 139 (2): 35. ISSN 0010-2601.
  18. ^ "Decade of Deceit: Anti-Semitic 9/11 Conspiracy Theories 10 Years Later" (PDF). Anti-Defamation League. August 30, 2011.
  19. ^ "ADL: Anti-Semitic 9/11 theories still strong 10 years on". The Jerusalem Post. August 31, 2011.


Category:United States Marines Category:American academics Category:Living people