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The Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution - Statecraft and the Prospect of Armageddon (Paperback, New edition)
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The Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution - Statecraft and the Prospect of Armageddon (Paperback, New edition)
Series: Cornell Studies in Security Affairs
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Here, Jervis (Poli. Sci./Columbia) charts a heavily studied area -
nuclear politics - from an unusual perspective. Eschewing the
straight historical approach of John Newhouse's War and Peace in
the Nuclear Age (1988) or the philosophic approach of Joseph Nye's
Nuclear Ethics (1986), Jervis goes to the heart of the matter -
demonstrating how nuclear weapons have created a revolution in
military strategy and international relations. Jervis' analysis is
flawed only by his cloying insistence that American leaders are
somehow the international villains of nuclear policy as a result of
their inability to recognize that nuclear weaponry is different
from conventional. The author implies that the US is at fault for
continuing to see such weapons as a tool requiring persistent
quests for superiority. Such judgments may be disputed, but when
Jervis sticks to in-depth analysis of fundamental concepts of
military policy, he is superb. He shows how nuclear weapons have
altered conventional deterrence from a "deterrency by denial" -
i.e., the ability to repel attacks - to a "deterrence by
punishment' - or deterring adversaries by raising the costs of the
conflict to unacceptably high levels: "It is the prospect of
fighting the war rather than the possibility of losing it that
induces restraint." Jervis takes issue with such analysts as Severo
and Milford (The Wages of War, p. 281), who argue that it's the
modernization of political theory and economics - rather than the
fear of nuclear weaponry per se - that has rendered most wars
obsolete. He also cites the smugness of the American and Soviet
systems as motivators for peace: "While both would prefer a
somewhat different world, they already have what is most important
for them." A comprehensive analysis that thrusts Jervis into the
front ranks of nuclear essayists. (Kirkus Reviews)
Robert Jervis argues here that the possibility of nuclear war has
created a revolution in military strategy and international
relations. He examines how the potential for nuclear Armageddon has
changed the meaning of war, the psychology of statesmanship, and
the formulation of military policy by the superpowers.
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