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Crisis Management and Arms Control

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Title: Crisis Management and Arms Control


1
Crisis Management and Arms Control
  • The Evolutions of Nuclear Strategy
  • US Soviet Security Cooperation

Yi-Ren Chen Hist 5N May 4th, 2004
2
The Evolution of Nuclear Strategy
  • Problems
  • Schelling, theory degenerates at one extreme if
    there is not scope for mutual accomodation it
    degenerates at the other extreme if there is no
    conflict at all and no problem in identifying and
    reaching common goals.
  • Each claiming to be powerful enough to destroy
    the other and neither believing the others
    protestations of his peaceful intentions
  • task to recognize when mutual interests
    conincide

3
  • Stable conflict
  • Retaliation is not to win, but to prove to the
    attacker that his losses would be large
  • Hurt social and economic structure
  • Coercive bargaining coercion, intimidation and
    deterrence
  • Best weapons are protected from a first strike
  • Did the development of intercontinental missiles
    strengthen the concept of deterrence?
  • What do you think about the analogy of the
    modern deterrence to the ancient institution of
    the exchange of hostages?
  • Do you agree with the proposal that a nation
    should abstain from the most advanced weapons,
    while encouraging the enemy to improve his
    defenses?

4
  • Problem with arms control alien to military
    thinking, surprise attacks one needs more
    weapons so adversary cant wipe all out in first
    attack
  • Arms control over disarmament
  • From mid 1950s US negotiation position in UN
    changes how to live with the bomb
  • Can nuclear weapons be confined to the role of
    arms control?

5
  • Nuclear pacifists
  • tradition of civilized warfare
  • Nuclear weapons violated any attempts to
    proportionate violence
  • Accidents, ensured east-west conflict
  • Arms race intermediate stop to disarmament
  • Terror can be used to deter and keep
    international peace
  • Act of threatening use of nuclear weapons
    immoral? Threats imply usage
  • Does threatening to use nuclear weapons carry the
    same moral stigmas as actually using them?

6
US Soviet Security Cooperation
  • Close calls in Berlin, Korea, the Middle East,
    Cuba, South Asia
  • Managing crisis over avoiding them
  • Set standards and approach to dealing with
    management, but not avoidance

7
  • Crisis Management
  • Operational requirements
  • 1. top level political body maintain knowledge
    and informed control
  • 2. coordinate movements of military with
    diplomatic strategy
  • 3. slow down tempo of military movements
  • Avoid military threats
  • Military alerts and force movements undertaken to
    reduce vulnerability and readiness
  • Select diplomatic proposals and define interest

8
  • Prudence
  • Neither superpower shall initiate military action
    against the other
  • Shall not exploit its advantage in a crisis
  • Operate with great restraint in policies and
    actions
  • Shall not permit a regional ally to drag into
    shooting war
  • Accept intervention by the other power in a
    regional conflict if such intervention becomes
    necessary to prevent overwhelming defeat of ally,
    each shall accept responsibility for pressuring
    ally to stop sure of defeating opponent

9
  • Threats to Crisis Management
  • Tension
  • Temptation to exploit advantage
  • Regional conflicts
  • Crisis military movements
  • Controlling own military
  • Crisis induced stress

10
  • Crisis Avoidance
  • How does the US Soviet conflict defer from
    other classical forms of power conflict and how
    much do you think this affected the course of
    events?
  • Deterrence, alliance commitments, military, and
    economic aid
  • Example Berlin airlift
  • New opportunities emerged for reducing conflict,
    particularly in Europe where the vital interest
    of both sides were engaged
  • Vital interests facilitate cooperation and crisis
    prevention

11
  • Was détente oversold in the Basic Principles
    Agreement, which included general principles that
    committed the US and Soviet union to avoid
    nuclear war and outbreaks?
  • For Soviets peaceful coexistence means political
    equality with US
  • The proposal put forward in 1983 by the American
    committee on the east west accord urges the US
    and the Soviet Union to negotiate a precise set
    of ground rules having to do with specific
    geography and specific ban on direct or indirect
    use of combat forces was such an agreement
    possible?
  • Norms of competition lack institutionalized
    arrangements.

12
  • Powers should undertake case by case diplomatic
    conversations on various regions
  • Trends of third world toward greater conflict
    will confront both superpowers with declining
    influence in those areas
  • Pressures to reduce both superpowers
    involvements aboard might lead to mutual
    restraint and tacit cooperation

13
  • Bibliography
  • - Lawrence Freedman, The Evolution of Nuclear
    Strategy (Macmillan 1981) pp. 190-207.
  • - Alexander George, "U.S.-Soviet Efforts to
    Cooperate in Crisis Management and Crisis
    avoidance," in Alexander George, Philip J. Farley
    and Alexander Dallin, eds., U.S.-Soviet Security
    Cooperation, (Oxford U.P., 1988) pp. 581-599.

14
  • End

Yi-Ren Chen Hist 5N May 4th, 2004
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