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Nuclear Weapons and American Grand Strategy

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Exploring what we know--and don't know--about how nuclear weapons shape American grand strategy and international relations

The world first confronted the power of nuclear weapons when the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. The global threat of these weapons deepened in the following decades as more advanced weapons, aggressive strategies, and new nuclear powers emerged. Ever since, countless books, reports, and articles--and even a new field of academic inquiry called "security studies"--have tried to explain the so-called nuclear revolution.

Francis J. Gavin argues that scholarly and popular understanding of many key issues about nuclear weapons is incomplete at best and wrong at worst. Among these important, misunderstood issues are: how nuclear deterrence works; whether nuclear coercion is effective; how and why the United States chose its nuclear strategies; why countries develop their own nuclear weapons or choose not to do so; and, most fundamentally, whether nuclear weapons make the world safer or more dangerous.

These and similar questions still matter because nuclear danger is returning as a genuine threat. Emerging technologies and shifting great-power rivalries seem to herald a new type of cold war just three decades after the end of the U.S.-Soviet conflict that was characterized by periodic prospects of global Armageddon.

Nuclear Weapons and American Grand Strategy helps policymakers wrestle with the latest challenges. Written in a clear, accessible, and jargon-free manner, the book also offers insights for students, scholars, and others interested in both the history and future of nuclear danger.

300 pages, Paperback

Published January 21, 2020

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Francis J. Gavin

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163 reviews7 followers
July 31, 2020
Very good individual chapters, although not stitched into a whole as the introduction admits from the beginning which also leads to redundancies across chapters (2 and 3 both tell The Who was the aggressor in 1958-62 story in nearly identical language) and some not being updated (one chapter, probably written in 2012, declares no presidential candidate ever questioned nonproliferation as a US goal when Trump in 2016 did and the book was published in 2020).

The best chapter on grand strategy (Strategies of Inhibition) is an exceptional IS article
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