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Military globalization : ウィキペディア英語版 | Military globalization
Military globalization is the increase of range within which military power can be projected through the progress of military organization and technology and the increasing strategic interrelation first of regional systems and later of the global system. Similarly to economic globalization, military globalization involves strategic integration of a system as expressed in network of alliances. Contrary to economic and socio-cultural globalization, strategic integration entails centralization under a single command. Military globalization can be traced to the earliest historical records which preserved evidence of growth of areas under military control of a single center. States began to wage wars within close proximity and warfare led to regional integration and centralization. There were several periods of intensive expansion representing a punctuated equilibrium pattern with long stable periods punctuated by short transitions to wider system (the Amarna Age and the Axial Age). The most expansive phase took place in the Columbian period (1492-circa 1900). The revolution in the technology of warfare c. 1900 resulted in drastic reduction of time required for projection of power world-wide and allowed the phenomenon of world wars. The Twentieth century witnessed the most intensive phase of strategic integration and centralization as expressed in the global network of US-led military alliances. Contrary to economic and socio-cultural globalization, the subject of military-political globalization remained omitted by research until 2007, when it was explored by Historian Max Ostrovsky in his ''Y = Arctg X: The Hyperbola of the World Order''. == History ==
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