Lessons from U.S. Allies in Security Cooperation with Third Countries
The Cases of Australia, France, and the United Kingdom

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https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7249/TR972AFAuthor(s)
Moroney, Jennifer D. P.
Gventer, Celeste Ward
Pezard, Stephanie
Smallman, Laurence
Language
EnglishAbstract
Several key U.S. allies engage in security cooperation, albeit on a smaller scale than the United States. To see what the U.S. Air Force can learn from these efforts, the authors examined how and why three allies--Australia, France, and the United Kingdom--provide security cooperation and highlight three key areas that could benefit from further collaboration: staff talks, exercises, and training followed by exercises.
Keywords
History; Political ScienceDOI
10.7249/TR972AFISBN
9780833059116, 9780833052629Publisher
RAND CorporationPublication date and place
2011Classification
Defence strategy, planning & research
Diplomacy
Treaties & other sources of international law