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Organization Theory and Nuclear Proliferation

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Title: Organization Theory and Nuclear Proliferation


1
Organization Theory and Nuclear Proliferation
  • History 5N The Challenge of Nuclear Weapons

2
Assumption of Rationality
  • Government leaders may intend to behave
    rationally, but they are influenced by
    organizational actors and constraints
  • Organizational rationality is bounded
  • Organizations use standard operating procedures
    and routines
  • Organizations satisfice
  • Organizations siphon information
  • Members are heavily influenced by past
    experiences
  • Goal displacement

3
Bureaucratic Politics
  • Organizational actors are self interested and
    competitive sub-units
  • Policy sometimes reflects the narrow interests of
    individual organizations, not the national
    interests of the state

4
Offensive Doctrines
  • New proliferators may lack civilian control of
    stockpiles
  • Military organizations have strong proclivities
    toward offensive doctrines
  • See war as an inevitable end the better now
    than later logic
  • Incentive to implement standard scenario
  • More likely to support preventive war

5
First Operational Requirement for Deterrence
  • First operational requirement for deterrence
    the first state to acquire weapons must not
    attack its rival in a preventive war now, in
    order to avoid the risk of a worse war after the
    second state has acquired a large nuclear
    arsenal.
  • Evidence proves that even in the United States
    government there was strong support for
    preventive war
  • In the Truman Administration the Joint Chiefs of
    Staff (JCS) were in support of first strike
    doctrines
  • In the Eisenhower Administration key military
    officers supported preventive options
  • Other examples
  • Russian military leaders considered a preventive
    war on China

6
Second Operational Requirement of Deterrence
  • The second operational requirement of deterrence
    is that both sides have invulnerable
    second-strike nuclear forces
  • The United States gained invulnerable forces only
    after civilians forced the production of new
    weapons systems
  • Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs)
    were opposed by US Navy leadership, hoping that
    Strategic Air Command would pick up the cost
  • Intercontinental Ballistic Missles (ICBMs) were
    not a priority in the Air Forces budget

7
Third Operational Requirement of Deterrence
  • The final operational requirement is that nuclear
    arsenals are secure from accidents and
    unauthorized use
  • Unfortunately, organizations change standard
    operating procedures after the threat has been
    noticed
  • Evidence from US experience
  • Test missile fired from Vandenberg Air Force base
    during Cuban Missile Crisis
  • Staff at a Montana silo gave themselves
    independent ability to launch missiles
  • New proliferants will choose an opaque path to
    proliferation, which is even more unstable
  • Furthermore, new proliferants will not have the
    same time security that the US and USSR had

8
Conclusions
  • The spread of nuclear weapons will make the world
    less secure
  • Realists such as Kenneth Waltz have confused
    what rational states should do with predictions
    of real states will do.
  • Organizational theory yields a troubling outlook
    on nuclear proliferations
  • Three policy implications
  • US should maintain its non-proliferation policy
  • The international community should be convinced
    that non-proliferation is not only in US
    interests but for global security
  • If proliferation does occur, the US should
    consider helping organizations develop the safety
    mechanisms to help them achieve deterrent
    capability and secure systems
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