The potential for hostilities in the 21st Century is not likely to be deterred by a Cold War deterrence strategy. And while nuclear deterrence remains important, regional powers armed with weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and accompanying long-range delivery capabilities are a rising concern. New technological breakthroughs in the space, cyber, and unforeseen realms could also provide asymmetric means of undermining deterrence. Moreover, the effort to achieve strategic stability in this day and age has become increasingly complicated in light of the changing relationship among the great powers. Today’s world has become one of “security trilemmas.” Actions one state takes to defend against another can, in-turn, make a third state feel insec...
Faced with America's conventional military superiority, many countries are turning to weapons of mas...
The proliferation of nuclear weapons presents one of the greatest international security challenges....
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...
The potential for hostilities in the 21st Century is not likely to be deterred by a Cold War deterre...
While deterrence is as old as human conflict itself, it became particularly important with the adven...
ABSTRACT Deterrence can be considered a theory, a tactic, a national security strategy, or a broade...
Changes in the international environment and potential deep cuts in nuclear arsenals have raised iss...
The 1990\u27s will see the emergence of a new and qualitatively different world order that will requ...
The 2017 U.S. National Security Strategy appeared to bring deterrence back: departing from its prede...
The risks of sharp reductions are of the greatest magnitude, and so are the possible consequences. “...
eterrence is no mystery; it is a feature of many human activities, behaviours and relationships, ran...
So much has been done in the name of nuclear deterrence, so much destructive power built by ourselve...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68623/2/10.1177_106591296201500303.pd
This study advances four propositions on the role of nuclear weapons in national security in the twe...
In 1938, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain hoped that a policy of appeasement would satisfy Adolf H...
Faced with America's conventional military superiority, many countries are turning to weapons of mas...
The proliferation of nuclear weapons presents one of the greatest international security challenges....
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...
The potential for hostilities in the 21st Century is not likely to be deterred by a Cold War deterre...
While deterrence is as old as human conflict itself, it became particularly important with the adven...
ABSTRACT Deterrence can be considered a theory, a tactic, a national security strategy, or a broade...
Changes in the international environment and potential deep cuts in nuclear arsenals have raised iss...
The 1990\u27s will see the emergence of a new and qualitatively different world order that will requ...
The 2017 U.S. National Security Strategy appeared to bring deterrence back: departing from its prede...
The risks of sharp reductions are of the greatest magnitude, and so are the possible consequences. “...
eterrence is no mystery; it is a feature of many human activities, behaviours and relationships, ran...
So much has been done in the name of nuclear deterrence, so much destructive power built by ourselve...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68623/2/10.1177_106591296201500303.pd
This study advances four propositions on the role of nuclear weapons in national security in the twe...
In 1938, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain hoped that a policy of appeasement would satisfy Adolf H...
Faced with America's conventional military superiority, many countries are turning to weapons of mas...
The proliferation of nuclear weapons presents one of the greatest international security challenges....
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...