Maintaining Effective Deterrence

Download Maintaining Effective Deterrence PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Maintaining Effective Deterrence book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Maintaining Effective Deterrence

While deterrence is as old as human conflict itself, it became particularly important with the advent of nuclear weapons when armed conflict between the superpowers had the potential to end civilization. Today, though, there is a sense that terrorism has rendered deterrence obsolete and forced the United States to substitute preemption for it. In this monograph, Dr. Colin Gray illustrates that strategic reality is not simple. Instead the two are inextricable. 'Preemption,' as Dr. Gray notes, 'needs all the assistance that it can garner from effective deterrence.' The United States 'has no practical choice other than to make of deterrence all that it can be, albeit in some seemingly unpromising conditions.' Dr. Gray provides both a conceptual framework for understanding deterrence-or, more accurately, the psychology of deterrence and policy guidance on how the United States can most effectively use it. He concludes that an adaptable and flexible military with robust landpower is the only tool that can maintain deterrence. The Strategic Studies Institute is pleased to offer this monograph as part of the ongoing debate on American national security strategy in the era of global terrorism.
Maintaining Effective Deterrence

While deterrence is as old as human conflict itself, it became particularly important with the advent of nuclear weapons when armed conflict between the superpowers had the potential to end civilization. Today there is a sense that terrorism has rendered deterrence obsolete and forced the United States to substitute preemption for it. The author illustrates that strategic reality is not simple. He provides both a conceptual framework for understanding deterrence or, more accurately, the psychology of deterrence and policy guidance on how the United States can most effectively use it. The author concludes that an adaptable and flexible military with robust landpower is the only tool that can maintain deterrence.