<marcxml:record xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:marcxml="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:madsrdf="http://www.loc.gov/mads/rdf/v1#" xmlns:ri="http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/RecordInfo#" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:mets="http://www.loc.gov/METS/">
	    <marcxml:leader>02337cz   2200217n  4500</marcxml:leader>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="001">sh2008004130</marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="003">DLC</marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="005">20080620074709.0</marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="008">080619i| anannbabn          |a ana      </marcxml:controlfield>
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      <marcxml:subfield code="a">sh2008004130</marcxml:subfield>
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	    <marcxml:datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">DLC</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">eng</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="c">DLC</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="150" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Strategic culture</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="550" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="w">g</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Culture</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="550" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="w">g</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Military policy</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="550" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="w">g</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">National security</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Work cat.: Johnson, Jeannie L. Strategic culture and weapons of mass destruction, 2008:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">galley (quote from Jack Snyder: "Strategic culture can be defined as the sum total of ideas, conditioned emotional responses, and patterns of habitual behavior that members of a national strategic community have acquired through instruction or imitation and share with each other with regard to strategy. In the area of strategy, habitual behaviour is largely cognitive behavior.")</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Routledge Web site, June 28, 2008:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">Strategic culture and ways of war, by Lawrence Sondhaus page ("The concept of strategic culture dates from the 1970s, when Jack Snyder introduced it to explain why leaders of the Soviet Union did not always behave according to rational choice theory")</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Know thy enemy, 2003:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">title (Know thy enemy, profiles of adversary leaders and their strategic cultures)</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Encyclopedia of United States national security. Vol. 2, 2006:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">p. 683 ("Strategic culture; How states go about viewing national security issues and concerns. A direct descendant of political culture, strategic culture is based on the idea that a national style derives logically from the concept of political culture")</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Center for Contemporay Conflict Web site, May Volume VII, Issue 2 (April 2008):</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">Pakistan's strategic culture page ("Strategic culture is made up of the shared beliefs and assumptions that frame ... choices about international military behavior, particularly those concerning decisions to go to war, preferences for offensive, expansionist, or defensive modes of warfare, and levels of wartime casualties that would be acceptable")</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="680" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="i">Here are entered works on the aggregate of learned, socially transmitted cognitive and behavior patterns characteristic of military leaders, national security decision makers, countries, societies, and organizations, when determining how, when, where, and by what means to wage war.</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	  </marcxml:record>

