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98:. By direction, draft inputs were written at a classified level prior to being edited or downgraded by senior intelligence officers with the proper authorities. To illustrate the publication without revealing classified US satellite imagery and sensor capabilities, DIA artists prepared approximately 150 detailed paintings of Soviet military hardware and installations specifically for the publication. Some of this original artwork is on display in the fourth-floor museum area of the
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did not constitute any form of propaganda aimed at supporting the increasing defense budgets of the Reagan
Administration but was designed instead to alert the US public to a growing imbalance between the military capabilities of the United States and the Soviet Union. However, a 2016 publication in
120:; the 1981 edition's run numbered 36,000 copies, printed at a cost of $ 40,000. The booklets were widely distributed within the government and press, and could also be purchased by the general public at local United States Post Offices (in 1981, for $ 6.50 ). At the time of initial publication,
67:. First published in early October 1981, it became an annual publication from 1983 until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Already in draft as the Soviet Union collapsed, the 1991 version was retitled "Military Forces in Transition". In addition to the majority English version,
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asserts that this publication was largely a propaganda effort aiming at justifying the then-US defense buildup through an exaggerated presentation of the Soviet Union's military power.
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The report was produced annually by intelligence analysts and subject matter experts at DIA, incorporating all sources of intelligence from across the US
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was translated, printed, and disseminated in a variety of languages, including German, French, Japanese, Italian, and
Spanish.
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The first volume triggered an immediate response from the Soviet Union in the form of two countering propaganda documents
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Oberg, James. "Soviet
Military Power: The Pentagon's Propaganda Document, Annotated and Corrected Book Review",
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Holzman, F. D. "Politics and guesswork: the CIA and DIA estimates of Soviet military spending",
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Joint
Functional Component Command for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
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55:(DIA), which provided an estimate of the military strategy and capabilities of the
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Soviet
Military Power: The Pentagon's Propaganda Document, Annotated and Corrected
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Mapping the Cold War: Cartography and the
Framing of America's International Power
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Voilà l'armée rouge : les révélations du Ministère américain de la défense
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680:
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Perceived Images: U.S. and Soviet
Assumptions and Perceptions in Disarmament
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constituted the largest release of declassified data in
Pentagon history.
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A comparison of Soviet
Strategic Aviation aircraft from the publication
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http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/russia/mig-29-specs.htm
60:
369:
Kelly, James & Bruce Nelan. "Throwing the
Booklet at Moscow",
393:. Washington, D.C.: Center for the Study of Intelligence, 2001.
86:
279:"How the Pentagon Exaggerated Russia's Cold War Super Weapons"
331:. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2014.
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Joint Intelligence Operations Center Europe Analytic Center
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published by the Soviet Union's Ministry of Defense.
563:Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System
219:Soviet Military Power: Prospects for Change, 1989
692:United States Department of Defense publications
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389:Haines, Gerald K. & Robert E. Leggett, eds.
299:. Moscow: Military Publishing House, 1982. 77 p.
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336:The Political Economy of Soviet Military Power
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391:CIA's Analysis of the Soviet Union: 1947–1991
589:Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
359:. Totowa, NJ: Bowman & Allanheld, 1986.
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16:United States public diplomacy publication
656:Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters
494:National Center for Medical Intelligence
314:Moscow: Military Publishing House, 1983.
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100:Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters
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74:The series has been continued by DIA as
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489:Missile and Space Intelligence Center
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405:The Validity of Soviet Military Power
338:. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989.
127:According to US Secretary of Defense
702:Soviet Union–United States relations
604:United States Intelligence Community
609:United States Department of Defense
229:Military Forces in Transition, 1991
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584:United States Secretary of Defense
536:Projects, operations, and programs
499:National Media Exploitation Center
407:, Masters thesis, ADA227470, 1990
308:Soviet Union Ministry of Defense.
295:Soviet Union Ministry of Defense.
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599:Director of National Intelligence
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261:La puissance militaire soviétique
116:was traditionally handled by the
687:Publications established in 1981
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513:National Intelligence University
345:. New York: Random House, 1987.
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112:Printing of the 100-page thick
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59:during the final years of the
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697:Military of the Soviet Union
267:. Paris: Mengès, 1982. 99 p.
259:Colonel F. Douillez, trans.
104:Joint Base Anacostia–Bolling
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707:Defense Intelligence Agency
594:Military Intelligence Board
474:Defense Clandestine Service
460:Defense Intelligence Agency
311:Disarmament: Who's Against?
241:Russia Military Power, 2017
224:Soviet Military Power, 1990
214:Soviet Military Power, 1988
205:Soviet Military Power, 1987
200:Soviet Military Power, 1986
195:Soviet Military Power, 1985
186:Soviet Military Power, 1984
177:Soviet Military Power, 1983
168:Soviet Military Power, 1981
151:Disarmament: Who's Against?
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53:Defense Intelligence Agency
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297:Whence the Threat to Peace
147:Whence the Threat to Peace
118:Government Printing Office
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373:Monday, October 12, 1981.
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35:with the first copy of
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479:Defense Attaché System
364:International Security
96:Intelligence Community
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51:publication of the US
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568:Soviet Military Power
284:The National Interest
235:Russia Military Power
162:Soviet Military Power
139:The National Interest
133:Soviet Military Power
122:Soviet Military Power
114:Soviet Military Power
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76:Russia Military Power
69:Soviet Military Power
44:Soviet Military Power
37:Soviet Military Power
31:presenting President
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484:Defense Cover Office
383:GlobalSecurity.org
65:Soviet Armed Forces
422:DIA Threat Reports
380:(August 18, 1989).
366:13 (1989): 101–31.
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666:DIA Memorial Wall
558:Iraq Survey Group
403:Roberts, John A.
327:Barney, Timothy.
129:Caspar Weinberger
29:Caspar Weinberger
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543:Project Socrates
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553:Able Danger
681:Categories
649:Facilities
322:References
263:. Vol. 1:
640:Directors
577:Oversight
209:alternate
190:alternate
181:alternate
172:alternate
82:Overview
61:Cold War
628:People
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349:
47:was a
619:HPSCI
247:Notes
614:SSCI
395:ISBN
347:ISBN
149:and
106:in
102:at
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