Abstract
A wide-ranging review of US military spending and defence policy is likely to follow the country’s presidential elections in November. It is possible that, for the first time in more than two decades, the Republicans will no longer be the party clearly in favour of higher military spending. Whoever wins the elections will almost certainly re-examine US military deployments overseas and the allocation of resources to weapons production. But Congress and the military-industrial establishment will fight hard against the abandonment or scaling-down of big weapons projects they hold dear.
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