R.L. Sivard, World Military and Social Expenditures 1976. WMSE Publications , Leesburg, Virginia, 1976, p. 5.
2.
See Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Antipersonnel Weapons . Taylor & Francis, London, 1977.
3.
The term a 'new world military order' seems to have first been used by a Danish peace researcher, Jan Øberg (Politiken, 1 July 1976).
4.
US Department of Defense News Release No. 410-75, 21 August 1975.
5.
United States Military Posture for FY 1977 (US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Washington, DC, 1976).
6.
See Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, The Ecological Consequences of the Second Indochina War. Almqvist & Wiksell, Stockholm, 1976.
7.
See B. Blechman & S. Kaplan, The Use of Military Forces as a Political Instrument (Brookings Institution, Washington, DC, 1976). This study calculates that military forces have been used as a political instrument to influence other countries on about 215 occasions by the USA and about 115 occasions by the USSR since 1945.
8.
See N. Stein , The Pentagon's protégés: US training programmes for foreign military personnel. Latin America & Empire Report (North American Congress on Latin America), 10 (1) 1976 pp. 1-32. Using data recently released under the Freedom of Information Act, this paper publishes for the first time details of US foreign military training programmes.
9.
See W.R. Kintner , The role of military assistance. Proceedings of US Naval Institute, March 1961, pp. 76-83.
10.
United Nations, The Future of the World Economy. ST/ESA/44. New York.