From Nuclear Military Strategy to a World Without War: A History and a Proposal

From Nuclear Military Strategy to a World Without War: A History and a Proposal

by Roger Hilsman
ISBN-10:
0275962423
ISBN-13:
9780275962425
Pub. Date:
05/30/1999
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
0275962423
ISBN-13:
9780275962425
Pub. Date:
05/30/1999
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
From Nuclear Military Strategy to a World Without War: A History and a Proposal

From Nuclear Military Strategy to a World Without War: A History and a Proposal

by Roger Hilsman

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Overview

Sooner or later, if the world keeps following its current course, there will be a nuclear war. Roger Hilsman, who played a significant role during the Cuban Missile Crisis, is convinced that the only way to prevent an eventual nuclear conflict is to abolish war itself. This study examines and critiques all of the various proposals to date for incorporating nuclear weapons into strategic doctrine and concludes that these efforts have failed. Plans for abolishing only nuclear weapons are, according to Hilsman, good-intentioned but ill-advised attempts to rehabilitate war. Instead, he proposes a gradual transition to world government, which will perform the traditional social and political functions that were in the past served only by war.

War will not disappear immediately. The world must still be prepared to deal with three types of war: wars that have the potential for escalating to a nuclear World War III; wars that are self-confining; and civil wars that cry out for peacekeeping intervention on humanitarian grounds. While the United States will have to be responsible for dealing with potentially nuclear wars, an entirely new force structure will be necessary. Self-confining wars, such as Bosnia, pose a particular problem as far as world public opinion for intervention is concerned; this study proposes solutions to such dilemmas. Finally, because national forces are ill-suited to peacekeeping missions in countries ravaged by civil war, the UN must recruit and maintain an international force along the lines of the French Foreign Legion.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275962425
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/30/1999
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)
Lexile: 1410L (what's this?)

About the Author

ROGER HILSMAN has been Professor of Government and International Politics at Columbia University since 1964. Before that he was President Kennedy's Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research, then Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs. He is author of more than a dozen books on world politics and military strategy, including The Cuban Missile Crisis: The Struggle over Policy (Praeger, 1996).

Table of Contents

Preface
The First Attempts at Nuclear Strategy
The Manhattan Project and Early Strategic Thinking
Nuclear Strategy and the Attack on Korea
The New Look, Massive Retaliation, and Flexible Response
The H-Bomb and the Balance of Terror
The Debate on Nuclear Strategy
The Cuban Missile Crisis: A Case Study of Nuclear Strategy
The Crisis
The Significance
Post-Crisis Attempts at a Nuclear Strategy
McNamara II, the Schlesinger Doctrine, and Star Wars
No First Use, Counterforce,and MAD as a Strategy
The Breakup of the Soviet Union and the Bush-Yeltsin Agreement
The World Turbaned Upside Down
Developments in Weapons
The Members of the Nuclear Club and Their Arms
Soviet, Chinese, and European Nuclear Strategy
Armageddon: Six Scenarios of Nuclear War
For Arms Control and Disarmament
The History of Arms Control
The Prospects
Why War?
The Social and Political Functions of War
Nationalism
A World Political Process without World Government?
A Curious Creature
Conclusions
A Long-Term Solution, a Medium-Term Compromise, and a Short-Term Stopgap
The Lessons of the "Small Wars" Since World War II
Humanitarian and Peacekeeping Forces
Conventional Forces for the Medium-Term Compromise
Nuclear Forces for the Short-Term Stopgap
Index

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