Enduring Misconceptions of Strategic Stability: The Role of Nuclear Missile-Carrying Submarines

This article exposes many of the flawed assumptions about the submarine leg of the nuclear triad implicit in traditional strategic stability theory. It argues that the US strategic studies literature has put too much emphasis on traditional stability theory and that stability, whether defined tradit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of peace research 1992-02, Vol.29 (1), p.23-37
1. Verfasser: Glasser, Robert D.
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description This article exposes many of the flawed assumptions about the submarine leg of the nuclear triad implicit in traditional strategic stability theory. It argues that the US strategic studies literature has put too much emphasis on traditional stability theory and that stability, whether defined traditionally or in modern terms, is more threatened by submarine-based nuclear weapons than is generally realized. The article notes that, although the possibility of a major nuclear surprise attack is becoming increasingly remote, insofar as there currently exist military incentives to launch such attacks it is due in large part to submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) which facilitate command and control decapitation strikes and threaten to negate options such as Launch on Warning. It moreover suggests that SLBMs are the strategic weapons most likely to endanger efforts to prevent loss of control in crises because: (1) US SLBMs do not contain Permissive Action Links (PALs); (2) in contrast to ICBMs, SLBMs regularrrl come into direct and potentially violent contact with enemy military forces in peacetime and are significantly more likely to come under direct attack in conventional war; and (3) SLBMs could make it particularly difficult for decision-makers to determine the source of a nuclear attack. The article concludes with several recommendations for enhancing strategic stability.
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Arms control
Bomber aircraft
Intercontinental ballistic missiles
Military Strategy
Missiles
National security
Navies
Navy
Nuclear strategy
Nuclear Weapons
Peacetime
SECURITY
Spacecraft launching
Strategic planning
STRATEGY
Submarines
Theory
THEORY BUILDING OR THEORETICAL APPROACH
WAR
Warheads
Weapons
title Enduring Misconceptions of Strategic Stability: The Role of Nuclear Missile-Carrying Submarines
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