Three questions are addressed in this study: (1) Does a nuclear retaliatory capability contribute to extended deterrence against a nonnuclear power? (2) If so, is the deterrent value of nuclear weapons contingent upon the prior credible threat of conventional armed engagement by the defender? (3) Or, is the deterrent impact of nuclear weapons so potent that the conventional balance of forces has little deterrent impact? Competing hypotheses are formulated and then tested by probit analysis. The empirical findings indicate that (a) nuclear weapons do contribute to extended deterrence success, but (b) that effect is not contingent upon the prior threat of conventional armed conflict, and (c) there is an inverse relationship between the conven...
International audienceThis study determines the nuclear pragmatic limit where the direct physical ne...
The study advances four other propositions on the implications of nuclear weapons and strategies for...
So much has been done in the name of nuclear deterrence, so much destructive power built by ourselve...
Since the mid-twentieth century, nuclear weapons have played a major role in the policies of the sta...
This study advances four propositions on the role of nuclear weapons in national security in the twe...
Changes in the international environment and potential deep cuts in nuclear arsenals have raised iss...
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...
Nuclear and conventional deterrence are in fact quite different in terms of theory, practice, and im...
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...
Despite a significant amount of research addressing the effects of Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) o...
Changes in how we think about nuclear weapons cannot strip them of their strategic value. Only a tra...
Nuclear weapons remain salient to international security and stability given their continued existen...
We examine the effect of nuclear weapons on interstate conflict. Using more appropriate methodologie...
Perhaps no technological innovation in modern history made more of an impact on the course of intern...
According to this analysis, the deterrent relationship is bounded by two concepts, the nuclear thres...
International audienceThis study determines the nuclear pragmatic limit where the direct physical ne...
The study advances four other propositions on the implications of nuclear weapons and strategies for...
So much has been done in the name of nuclear deterrence, so much destructive power built by ourselve...
Since the mid-twentieth century, nuclear weapons have played a major role in the policies of the sta...
This study advances four propositions on the role of nuclear weapons in national security in the twe...
Changes in the international environment and potential deep cuts in nuclear arsenals have raised iss...
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...
Nuclear and conventional deterrence are in fact quite different in terms of theory, practice, and im...
Existing nuclear deterrence scholarship evinces a pervasive ‘‘existential bias,’’ assuming that once...
Despite a significant amount of research addressing the effects of Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) o...
Changes in how we think about nuclear weapons cannot strip them of their strategic value. Only a tra...
Nuclear weapons remain salient to international security and stability given their continued existen...
We examine the effect of nuclear weapons on interstate conflict. Using more appropriate methodologie...
Perhaps no technological innovation in modern history made more of an impact on the course of intern...
According to this analysis, the deterrent relationship is bounded by two concepts, the nuclear thres...
International audienceThis study determines the nuclear pragmatic limit where the direct physical ne...
The study advances four other propositions on the implications of nuclear weapons and strategies for...
So much has been done in the name of nuclear deterrence, so much destructive power built by ourselve...