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ID158009
Title ProperMAD, not Marx
Other Title InformationKhrushchev and the nuclear revolution
LanguageENG
AuthorCraig, Campbell ;  Radchenko, Sergey
Summary / Abstract (Note)The revival of nuclear strategy in US policy and scholarship has been strengthened by arguments that the ‘nuclear revolution’ – the assumption that thermonuclear bombs and missiles had made major war too dangerous to wage – does not affect international behaviour as much as nuclear revolution advocates claim. This article shows that the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev indeed regarded nuclear war as too dangerous to wage, a decision which manifested itself not so much in foreign policy or military doctrine but in his determination to avoid war when the possibility arose. We argue that Khrushchev’s experience provides us with a more useful way to characterise the nuclear revolution and suggest some implications of this argument for contemporary debates about nuclear weaponry.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Strategic Studies Vol. 41, No.1-2; Feb 2018: p.208-233
Journal SourceJournal of Strategic Studies Vol: 41 No 1-2
Key WordsNuclear Strategy ;  Nuclear Revolution ;  Soviet Union ;  Cold War ;  Nikita Khrushche


 
 
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