Developments in the Soviet Union necessitate a radical
restructuring of U.S.-Soviet relations and the security system that
underpins them. Marshall Brement succinctly and masterfully
chronicles the history of this relationship and offers a
prescription for change in this important book. The United States
can influence the power struggle within the USSR by holding out the
prospect of going beyond the wary cooperation that our government
espouses, to a relationship that embodies comprehensive
partnership. It is only through such a relationship that we can
achieve a genuine new world order guaranteeing security for decades
to come and at the same time sloughing off the burden of excessive
defense costs that this nation can no longer afford. The new grand
strategy outlined here would demand much of the Soviets, but also
offers much. It has a nuclear component, a conventional arms
component, an economic component, a Third World component, and a
Western Europe component. It sets out clear benchmarks and a method
for moving ahead.
Past Soviet and American security policies are so interrelated
that they must be changed together, not separately or in sequence.
To accomplish this change, the fear doctrine of nuclear deterrence
that underlies our entire defense philosophy must be abandoned. The
sophistication and power of modern conventional weapons makes it
possible for both sides to reduce, even eliminate, nuclear weapons.
While establishing a program to eliminate nuclear weapons, we must
concurrently lay down benchmarks as to what exactly will be
required from both Moscow and Washington to make such a
transformation possible, restructure our armed forces to make them
less threatening to each other, and engage in a broad-ranging
program of economic investment and cooperation in solving critical
global problems. These proposals are radical, even visionary.
Nevertheless, only through a comprehensive program can a
fundamentally different U.S.-Soviet relationship be achieved. This
book is addressed not only to the specialist in Soviet and security
affairs, but also to a general audience of informed citizens.
General
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