NEW BOOK PROVIDES BLUEPRINT FOR PREVENTING WAR IN THE ARCTIC FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Robin Noonan, (410) 295-1046, rnoonan@usni.org Annapolis, Maryland (November 9, 2022) In the forward looking, highly anticipated first edition, a team of international security experts have published a manual outlining 30 international principles of security for the Arctic, one of the world’s most rapidly changing, globally competitive, and shockingly overlooked regions. “The Newport Manual on Arctic Security,” published in November 2022 by Naval Institute Press, provides naval and defense leaders around the world with a blueprint for reducing the chances of miscalculation and unintended conflict in the Arctic. With the ongoing war in Ukraine and increased military activity in the Arctic, the need for practical measures to avoid accidents and conflict escalation in the region is more relevant than ever. Dr. Walter Berbrick and his co-authors Dr. Gaëlle Rivard Piché and Colonel
ISBN: 9781682478295
Michael Zimmerman make clear that the 257–page scholarly work does
256 Pages | 6 x 9 Hardcover | $49.95
not contain any final answers or reflect the official policies of governments. Rather, the book provides a basis for important conversations among military leaders and scholars for years to come. A preview is here
PUB DATE: NOVEMBER 15, 2022
The book is based on four years of collaborative research and writing involving Newport Manual on Arctic Security will be featured in the High North Webinar Tuesday, 15 November from 12:30 PM to 2:00 PM EST. This series is produced by Ted Stevens Center for Arctic Security Studies and Wilson Center Polar Institute.
20+experts from Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and the U.S. under the auspices of the U.S. Naval War College’s Newport Arctic Scholars Initiative (NASI). Despite U.S. policy restricting Russian military participation in this initiative, lead authors were able to include peer review feedback from Russian scholars.
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In his foreword, Ambassador Kenneth J. Braithwaite, 77th Secretary of the Navy, writes, “The challenges, opportunities, and responsibilities facing people and governments in the Arctic region have grown more complex and more urgent. Our challenge is to apply naval power in a way that protects vital national interests and preserves regional security without undermining trust and triggering conflict. This manual provides a blueprint for doing just that.”
Naval Institute Press