Deterrence in the 1980s

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ABM
ABM Treaty
America
arms control
arms control policy
Arms Race Stability
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cold war
Conventional Deterrence
Cuban missile crisis
deterrence strategy
Deterrence theory
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Escalation Dominance
Extended Deterrence
extended deterrence in Western alliance
ICBM
international relations theory
Limited Nuclear Options
military ethics
NATO
NATO Area
NATO Deployment
NATO Government
NATO Policy
NATO Posture
NATO Public
NATO security
NATO Strategy
NATO's Ability
NATO's Doctrine
NATO's Nuclear Posture
NATO’s Ability
NATO’s Doctrine
NATO’s Nuclear Posture
Nuclear Deterrence
nuclear strategy
Nuclear War Fighting
nuclear warfare
nuclear weapons
Nuclear-war fighting capabilities
Pershing IIs
Ronald Reagan
Soviet-American
Soviet-American strategic relations
strategic studies
United States
West Germany
Western Alliance
World War III

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367542368
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Nov 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1985, Deterrence in the 1980s offers analyses by leading American and Canadian scholars and decision-makers in the field of strategic studies of the current problems and dilemmas of contemporary international security with deterrence, nuclear and conventional, as the unifying conceptual theme. Deterrence as theory, as history, as psychology, as politics, as ethics and as policy is addressed. The authors outline the complexities of deterrence, in theory and in practice, and offer proposals regarding the future operationalization of deterrence in order both to reassure Western publics and to enhance Western and international security. Soviet-American strategic relations, along with the problems posed for the Western Alliance, are analysed.

Within the context of NATO, the dilemmas, for both Europe and North America, of extended deterrence are raised. Despite the current crisis of deterrence, no other security strategy appears viable as long as nuclear weapons are retained for purposes of national security. However, current trends in the operationalization of deterrence – nuclear-war fighting capabilities – have raised concerns about the future of deterrence.

R. B. Byers