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    Populist leaders often seem besotted with soldiers, the trappings of military life, and the virtues of battlefield sacrifice. Narendra Modi of India built a memorial to the military fallen in the heart of Delhi, celebrated Hindu festivals with soldiers, and paraded about in uniform. Recep Tayyip Erdo&amp;#x11F;an of T&amp;#xFC;rkiye poured resources into promoting the memory of Ottoman victory over the Allied forces at Gallipoli, or what Turks call &amp;#xC7;anakkale, in World War I and centering the sacrifices of Ottoman &amp;#x201C;martyrs&amp;#x201D; in the Turkish national narrative. Viktor Orb&amp;#xE1;n of Hungary revived lapsed honorary military guards and established new ones, advocated popular military training and readiness, and militarized the schools.1 Donald 
    ... &#x3C;a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/article/985824"&#x3E;Read More&#x3C;/a&#x3E;
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    For several years, scholars and analysts have predicted that artificial intelligence (AI) will fuel a revolution in cyber conflict, but this has not happened. To be sure, a technological revolution is underway. Rapid advances in machine learning, and specifically deep learning, have made science fiction scenarios a fact of life. AI models outperform humans in a variety of complex problem-solving tasks and specialist tasks, such as medical diagnoses.1 These advances, many predict, will vastly increase productivity, upend professions, and disrupt businesses&amp;#x2014; causing some to draw an analogy between the AI revolution and the industrial revolution.2The same advances also provide significant opportunities for actors in 
    ... &#x3C;a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/article/985824"&#x3E;Read More&#x3C;/a&#x3E;
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    Artificial intelligence (AI) is accelerating trends in kinetic and information warfare and changing the ways in which intelligence agencies collect, process, and analyze information.1 That change is sweeping, and it has produced more than a few announcements that the world is in the midst of an intelligence revolution.2 Whatever the merit of the rhetoric of revolution&amp;#x2014;more on that below&amp;#x2014;widespread, disruptive change is underway. To understand and evaluate that change, it is essential to distinguish among three levels of AI application and the autonomy that AI offers at each level. The first level is the administration of military and other organizations, where AI has already dramatically improved scheduling 
    ... &#x3C;a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/article/985824"&#x3E;Read More&#x3C;/a&#x3E;
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    Does the consent of the local population to a military intervention affect public support in the intervening country? The question looms particularly large in the United States, the country that has used military force outside its own borders most frequently in the postwar international order. U.S. military interventions have shaped the international system, they have shaped the American people,1 and they have often had staggering costs for the populations on whose territory the United States has used force.2 Research shows that in the United States, public opinion influences policy decisions about military intervention.3 It is  therefore important to understand what affects U.S. public support for military 
    ... &#x3C;a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/article/985824"&#x3E;Read More&#x3C;/a&#x3E;
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    Military effectiveness has attracted a large and growing literature in political science.1 To date, however, most of this work focuses on land warfare. With the rise of China, attention is shifting to maritime conflict, given its salience for the Sino-American competition in the Western Pacific. A host of important but understudied questions emerge from this shift. What explains victory and defeat at sea?2 In particular, what is the relative contribution of material variables, such as technology or numerical superiority, and nonmaterial behavioral variables, such as skill, motivation, or leadership,3 and what does this mean for a potential war between the United States and China in the Western Pacific? U.S.-China 
    ... &#x3C;a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/article/985824"&#x3E;Read More&#x3C;/a&#x3E;
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