Ambiguity and Deterrence focuses on the role of competing strategic beliefs in the formulation of British nuclear strategy between 1945 and 1964. Based on recently released documents; it is argued that the British approach to nuclear weapons during this formative period was characterized by paradox and ambiguity. The paradox was that while there was a widespread consensus in political and military circles in favour of nuclear deterrence; there were constant disagreements over the requirements of an effective deterrent policy. These disagreements centred on six main questions: whether deterrence was best achieved through "punishment" or "denial"; whether detterence necessitated nuclear superiority; whether preparations had to be made for a long war or a short war; what strategic implications followed from nuclear stalemate; whether limited nuclear wars could be fought without escalation to all-out nuclear war; and whether pre-emption was politically acceptable and militarily necessary. It is argued that the failure of successive governments to provide clear political direction on these issues meant that British nuclear strategy was more ambiguous and much less coherent than is usually supposed.
#5535868 in Books 2004-03-11Ingredients: Example IngredientsOriginal language:English 6.10 x .40 x 7.90l; #File Name: 0195930886116 pages
Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The best; so far; about Kuan Yin (Guanyin); Kwan YinBy Rico RicheThis is a thin book; few pages. The author talks like she lived since the 5th century; day by day; with details of each second. It is an amazing book; with very interesting photos. It is the most precise book I have ever seen about Avalokitesvara and his way to become Kuan Yin (Kwan yin; Quanyin or Pu Sa). Buy It now and give it to everyone.