Nuclear weapons have long played a central but often unappreciated role in American grand strategy. In spite of the unimaginable consequences of their use in war, we know far less about how the bomb shapes U.S. national security and world politics than we should. Both our leading theories and histories have failed to fully explain important choices American leaders have made about the bomb over the past eight decades. This is less a failing of scholarship and more a reflection of the steep methodological, linguistic, and normative barriers to understanding nuclear strategy and statecraft. This challenge will only deepen, as new geopolitical and technological forces return the critical question of the purpose and consequences of nuclear weap...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
One of President Barack Obama’s favorite solutions to reducing armed conflict in the world centers a...
Changes in how we think about nuclear weapons cannot strip them of their strategic value. Only a tra...
The splitting of atomic nuclei carried military implications that powerfully shaped American foreign...
The toughest and most important challenge for U.S. defense strategy is how to defend vulnerable alli...
Except for the Eisenhower administration’s threat of nuclear retaliation to even local non-nuclear a...
The article follows the author's comparative analysis of American and Russian nuclear doctrines and ...
Strategic Insights is a monthly electronic journal produced by the Center for Contemporary Conflict ...
In the domestic realm of U.S. politics, the nuclear weapons complex has always maintained two extrem...
Four recent books offer compelling political and strategic explanations for why states pursue expans...
During the Cold War, the United States constructed a nuclear triad, which consists of three componen...
As of December 2011, the Department of Defense faces significant budgetary cuts. One way of meeting ...
The Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) covers all aspects of nuclear weapons policy – the role of nuclear ...
A vigorous debate is occurring among American elites with respect to whether and when the United Sta...
Nuclear deterrence and nonproliferation no longer enjoy the broad support they once did during the C...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
One of President Barack Obama’s favorite solutions to reducing armed conflict in the world centers a...
Changes in how we think about nuclear weapons cannot strip them of their strategic value. Only a tra...
The splitting of atomic nuclei carried military implications that powerfully shaped American foreign...
The toughest and most important challenge for U.S. defense strategy is how to defend vulnerable alli...
Except for the Eisenhower administration’s threat of nuclear retaliation to even local non-nuclear a...
The article follows the author's comparative analysis of American and Russian nuclear doctrines and ...
Strategic Insights is a monthly electronic journal produced by the Center for Contemporary Conflict ...
In the domestic realm of U.S. politics, the nuclear weapons complex has always maintained two extrem...
Four recent books offer compelling political and strategic explanations for why states pursue expans...
During the Cold War, the United States constructed a nuclear triad, which consists of three componen...
As of December 2011, the Department of Defense faces significant budgetary cuts. One way of meeting ...
The Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) covers all aspects of nuclear weapons policy – the role of nuclear ...
A vigorous debate is occurring among American elites with respect to whether and when the United Sta...
Nuclear deterrence and nonproliferation no longer enjoy the broad support they once did during the C...
This dissertation investigates the social construction and discursive emergence of US nuclear weapon...
One of President Barack Obama’s favorite solutions to reducing armed conflict in the world centers a...
Changes in how we think about nuclear weapons cannot strip them of their strategic value. Only a tra...