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Rethinking National Security

UCLA Instructional media Production Archives

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Rethinking National Security
UCLA Chancellor and national security expert, Albert Carnesale, reviews the U.S. national security agenda in a post-9/11 environment. Prof. Carnesale offers his views on Russia's "loose nukes", chemical and biological weapons, national missile defense, and the US's war on terrorism.

Trained as a nuclear engineer, Prof. Carnesale has consulted regularly for many U.S. government agencies on foreign and defense policy, and he has participated in high-level international negotiations, including the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I) with the Soviet Union. He has co-authored six books and more than 50 scholarly articles.

Before becoming UCLA chancellor in 1997, Carnesale was at Harvard University for 23 years. He was professor at the John F. Kennedy School of Government and served as the school's dean from 1991 to 1995. He became provost of Harvard in 1994.

Recorded 2/28/02

220 Kbps Video 150 Kbps Video 56K Modem Video 28.8K Modem Video

This program is one of many produced by UCLA Instructional Media Production that have been submitted for broadcast on UCTV, the University of California's 24-hour national satellite broadcast network.


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