10:00AM
WPR's The New Rules: Nuclear Deterrence Ain't Broke, So Don't Fix It
Monday, March 21, 2011 at 10:00AM
For decades now, strategic experts have predicted that our world was on the verge of a break-out in nuclear proliferation that would see us grappling with two- or three-dozen nuclear powers. Indeed, the inexorable spread of nuclear weapons is the closest thing to an unassailable canon in the field of international relations, as one cannot possibly employ the term "nuclear proliferation" without preceding it with the modifier "increasing." This unshakeable belief, wholly unsupported by any actual evidence, drives many Cold War-era "wise men" to argue that mutually assured destruction (MAD) and strategic deterrence in general are obsolete and therefore immoral in the post-Cold War era.
Read the entire column at World Politics Review.
Reader Comments (2)
Just keep coming with your soothing common sense. We all need it.
Great perspective to remind that MAD has diverted AND enabled the fruits of Globalization!
I've been writing about this on and off for several years, and my concern has never been the credibility of nuclear state to nuclear state deterrence. The tricky and most vexing question with respect to nuclear deterrence is situations where there are significant assymetries.
Is there a way to deter an actor from "going nuclear" when there appears to be insufficient reason?