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238 AUSTRALIAN MARITIME ISSUES 2006: SPC-A ANNUAL<br />

16<br />

For the most complete analysis of security communities see E. Adler and M. Barnett, Security<br />

Communities, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998.<br />

17<br />

A. Acharya, Regionalism and Multilateralism, Times Academic Press, Singapore, 2002, p. 17.<br />

18<br />

Acharya, Regionalism and Multilateralism, p. 184.<br />

19<br />

J. Tang, Multilateralism in North-East Asia International Security: An Illusion or a Realistic Hope,<br />

Working Paper No. 26, North Pacific Cooperative Security Dialogue Research Programme,<br />

York University, 1993, p. 11.<br />

20<br />

C.M. Lee, ‘Reconfiguring East Asia’s strategic architecture: the road toward a Pacific Alliance’<br />

in Albinski and Dalrymple (eds), The United States – <strong>Australian</strong> Alliance in an East Asian<br />

Context, p. 220.<br />

21<br />

Department of Defence, Defence 2000: Our Future Defence Force, Defence Publishing Service,<br />

Canberra, 2000, p. x.<br />

22<br />

Department of Defence, Australia’s National Security: A Defence Update 2003, Defence<br />

Publishing Service, Canberra, 2003.<br />

23<br />

Department of Defence, Defence Update 2003, p. 11.<br />

24<br />

Department of Defence, Defence Update 2003, p. 13.<br />

25<br />

<strong>Royal</strong> <strong>Australian</strong> <strong>Navy</strong>, <strong>Australian</strong> Maritime Doctrine, RAN Doctrine 1, Defence Publishing<br />

Service, Canberra, 2000, p. 156.<br />

26<br />

Defined as ‘the ability to use the sea in its entirety for one’s own purposes at any time and to<br />

deny its use to an adversary’, <strong>Australian</strong> Maritime Doctrine, p. 144. Defined as ‘that condition<br />

which exists when one has freedom of action to use an area of sea for one’s own purposes for<br />

a period of time and, if required, deny its use to an adversary’, <strong>Australian</strong> Maritime Doctrine,<br />

p. 162. Defined as ‘that condition which exists when an adversary is denied the ability to use<br />

an area of the sea for his own purposes for a period of time’, <strong>Australian</strong> Maritime Doctrine,<br />

p. 162.<br />

27<br />

G. Till, Maritime Strategy and the Nuclear Age, St Martins Press, New York, 1982,<br />

pp. 91, 121.<br />

28<br />

Till, Maritime Strategy and the Nuclear Age, p. 75.<br />

29<br />

A. Borgu, Strategic Insight 10 – Understanding Terrorism: 20 Basic Facts, <strong>Australian</strong> Strategic<br />

Policy Institute, Canberra, September 2004, p. 3.<br />

30<br />

These Moro organisations include: the Moro National Liberation Front, its splinter partner<br />

the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, and Abu Sayyaf, The Sydney Morning Herald, 2-3 October<br />

2004.<br />

31<br />

I. McAllister, Attitude Matters: Public Opinion in Australia Towards Defence and Security,<br />

<strong>Australian</strong> Strategic Policy Institute, Canberra, August 2004, p. 4.<br />

32<br />

This view goes against the grain of traditional military thinking. It was the 18th century<br />

Prussian military strategist Karl von Clausewitz who famously declared, ‘war is the<br />

continuation of policy (politics) by other means … it is clear that war is not a mere act of<br />

policy but a true political instrument’.<br />

33<br />

K. Beazley, ‘Asia Pacific Security – The Challenges Ahead’, Speech presented at the <strong>Australian</strong><br />

College of Defence and Strategic Studies, Weston Creek, 1996.

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