Q for Dr Nichols. I was re-reading Henry Kissinger's 'nuclear weapons and foreign policy' recently. Part of the argument was that the war fighting doctrine was so limited (everything escalated to strategic nukes v quick) that it limited the ways of actually dealing with or deterring the Soviets. Is that still true in terms of deterring or changing the behaviour of the Russians?
Q for Dr Nichols. I was re-reading Henry Kissinger's 'nuclear weapons and foreign policy' recently. Part of the argument was that the war fighting doctrine was so limited (everything escalated to strategic nukes v quick) that it limited the ways of actually dealing with or deterring the Soviets. Is that still true in terms of deterring or changing the behaviour of the Russians?
Q for Dr Nichols. I was re-reading Henry Kissinger's 'nuclear weapons and foreign policy' recently. Part of the argument was that the war fighting doctrine was so limited (everything escalated to strategic nukes v quick) that it limited the ways of actually dealing with or deterring the Soviets. Is that still true in terms of deterring or changing the behaviour of the Russians?