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The Effects of Warning on Strategic Stability

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Publisher:
 2010

Summary

Among its many important effects, the political revolution in central Europe has provided a sharp reminder that international security is as much a state of mind as it is a physical condition. The threat of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe, long hypothesized by Western defense ministries on the basis of a perceived imbalance in inherent conventional force capability, is now acknowledged to be a practical impossibility because shifts in political alignment have been credited. In the wake of that judgement, the force deployments themselves are virtually certain to be reduced, equalized, and disengaged, thereby removing firepower advantage as a threat to international stability. Moreover, though the intrinsic connection is remote, a similar judgement seems to be affecting global strategic deployments. As strategic forces are projected to be reduced to common ceilings by mutual agreement, the fear of preemptive attacks on theoretically vulnerable land-based installations appears to be receding more rapidly than the inherent capability that originally inspired it.

This relief from the narrowly focused, obsessive fears that have dominated U.S. security policy for several decades is certainly a constructive development, but unfortunately it is not comprehensively valid. For strategic forces in particular, some subtle interaction between human judgement and physical capability remain potentially dangerous, presenting a security problem that will not be resolved simply by completing the projected agenda of national weapons development and international arms control agreements. The problem arises from conceivable combinations of events that are undoubtedly improbable but unprecedentedly catastrophic should any of them ever occur. The standards of safety that have evolved for improbable disasters of much smaller magnitude—nuclear reactor meltdown, for example—have been applied to only peacetime operations and have not been extended to the circumstances of advanced crisis or to the actual implications of combat operations. To appreciate the implications of this limitation and the dangers that emerge from it requires a substantial revision of standard perspectives on strategic security.



Bibliographic data

Copyright year
2010
ISBN-Print
978-0-8157-0939-8
ISBN-Online
978-0-8157-0708-0
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
41
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Table of Contents No access
  1. Introduction No access Pages 1 - 1
  2. The Standard Strategic Perspective No access Pages 2 - 2
  3. The Obscured Problem No access Pages 3 - 4
  4. The Dynamics of Warning No access Pages 5 - 8
  5. Reassuring Illustrations No access Pages 9 - 17
  6. Reasons for Doubt No access Pages 18 - 22
  7. Deeper Reflections No access Pages 23 - 37
  8. So What? No access Pages 38 - 39
  9. Notes No access Pages 40 - 41

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