Lethal Frontiers: A Soviet View of Nuclear Strategy, Weapons, and Negotiations

Lethal Frontiers: A Soviet View of Nuclear Strategy, Weapons, and Negotiations

Lethal Frontiers: A Soviet View of Nuclear Strategy, Weapons, and Negotiations

Lethal Frontiers: A Soviet View of Nuclear Strategy, Weapons, and Negotiations

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Overview

Lethal Frontiers is one of the first samples of Soviet scholarship on nuclear strategy readily available to Western readers. A rising star in the Soviet foreign policy establishment, Arbatov offers a remarkable view of the evaluation of U.S. nuclear policy and strategy. This scholarly book is free of the ideological constraints and negative effects of excessive Soviet secrecy so often characterizing Soviet works on this subject. The author begins by tracing the buildup of U.S. nuclear and conventional forces during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, and examines initial U.S. reactions to the achievement of strategic nuclear parity by the Soviet Union in the late 1960s and early 1970s. From notions of flexible response, to the Schlesinger doctrine, and ideas of fighting a limited nuclear war, Arbatov argues that the U.S. national security establishment has had enormous difficulty in reconciling itself with Soviet strategic parity. Consequently, U.S. strategy and arms programs have invariably collided with and contradicted the arms control process and efforts to decrease U.S.-Soviet tensions. In light of this, and of the new Soviet approach to security, Arbatov observes the challenges lying ahead in the new era of Soviet-American relations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275930172
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/24/1988
Series: Praeger Security International
Pages: 318
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Alexei G. Arbatov is head of the Department of Disarmament and Security Affairs in the Institute for World Economy and International Relations of the USSR Academy of Sciences. He has published a large number of articles and three books dealing with problems of disarmament negotiations, the military balance, and military strategy. He presently lives in Moscow, where he is a member of the Council of Soviet Scientists for Peace against the Nuclear Threat.

Kent D. Lee is a PhD candidate in political science at Columbia University's W. Averell Harriman Institute for Advanced Study of the Soviet Union, where he specializes in Soviet security policy. He and the author, Alexi Arbatov, have worked together extensively over the past two years in both the U.S. and the Soviet Union to produce this translation. Lee also works at the New York-based Institute for East-West Security Studies, and lives in New York city with his wife and daughter.

Table of Contents

Foreword by William G. Hyland
The Emergence of Strategic Nuclear Parity
The Consolidation of Parity: Logic and Contradictions
The Carter Presidency: Inconsistency of American Policy
The SALT II Treaty and the Deterioration of Détente
The Reagan Administration's Military-Political Platform
The Republican's Nuclear Policy: In Pursuit of Superiority
U.S. Policies Clashing with the Realities of the Strategic Balance
A New Era in Soviet-American Relations: Nuclear Arms Reductions and the Prevention of an Arms Race in Space
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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