Defending the Lion City: The armed forces of Singapore

ปกหน้า
Allen & Unwin, 2000 - 360 หน้า
Singapore is located in the heart of the Muslim Malay world, yet 78 per cent of its population is ethnically Chinese. The prosperous city-state relies on outside sources for virtually all its water and food; it has no access to the high seas, on which it depends for 85 per cent of its trade, except through its neighbours' waters. Physically linked to Malaysia by a causeway and a bridge, only twenty kilometres of sea separate Singapore from the nearest Indonesian territory.

Surrounded by larger and more populous nations, Singapore has been acutely aware of its vulnerability since separating from the Malaysian federation in 1965. Singapore's government has met its defence needs with characteristic determination, building powerful, well-equipped and highly-trained armed forces based on a relatively small professional core and much larger numbers of conscript and reservist citizen soldiers.

Defending the Lion City, the first-ever major study of the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF), provides a comprehensive and up-to-date assessment of Singapore's impressive military capability and the strategic outlook and policies which have shaped it. The book analyses the roles, structure, training and logistic arrangements of each branch of the SAF - army, air force and navy - as well as recent moves to enhance combined arms and joint service capabilities. It investigates Singapore's growing military cooperation with other armed forces in the region - and further afield - and assesses the SAF's personnel policies, the role of SAF officers in politics and civilian administration, and Singapore's burgeoning defence-industrial capability. In light of the crucial role the SAF plays in maintaining the security of Singapore, Defending the Lion City also asks the question: what are the areas of potential vulnerability in Singapore's defence posture?
 

เนื้อหา

1 The Singapore Armed Forces origins and early years
1
2 Defence policy threat perceptions and strategy
24
3 Command and control
73
4 Personnel
93
5 Singapores army
122
6 The Republic of Singapore Air Force RSAF
141
7 The Republic of Singapore Navy RSN
159
8 Defence procurement RD and industry
172
10 Political and administrative roles
229
Conclusion
248
Appendix 1 Summary of forces
258
Appendix 2 Paramilitary forces
264
Notes
268
Bibliography
300
Index
325
ลิขสิทธิ์

9 Regional and international links
196

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คำและวลีที่พบบ่อย

เกี่ยวกับผู้แต่ง (2000)

Tim Huxley is Director of the Centre for South-East Asian Studies at the University of Hull, England. He is also an Associate Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies in London, and was a Fellow of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore during the 1980s. He has written extensively on Southeast Asian politics and international relations, specialising in security and defence issues. His recent publications include Insecurity in the ASEAN Region (1993) and Arming East Asia (IISS Adelphi Paper 329, 1999).

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