This book explores the U.S. security strategy in the Asia-Pacific region in the post-Cold War era. It focuses on the evolution of U.S. Asia-Pacific security policies from the George Bush Administration to the fist term of George W. Bush Administration (1989-1004).
The following questions receive particular attention: What are the dynamics driving adjustments in the U.S. regional security strategy in the post-Cold War era? What are the content and characteristics of the U.S. Asia-Pacific security policy during three presidential administrations? How has evolving U.S. regional security strategy affected the security landscape in the Asia-Pacific region? By penetrating into these questions, the author provides us a new dynamic perspective on the U.S. Asia-Pacific security strategy.