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History 5N: The Challenge of Nuclear Weapons |
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Government leaders may intend to behave
rationally, but they are influenced by organizational actors and
constraints |
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Organizational rationality is “bounded” |
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Organizations use standard operating procedures
and routines |
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Organizations satisfice |
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Organizations siphon information |
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Members are heavily influenced by past
experiences |
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“Goal displacement” |
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Organizational actors are “self interested and
competitive sub-units” |
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Policy sometimes reflects the narrow interests
of individual organizations, not the national interests of the state |
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New proliferators may lack civilian control of
stockpiles |
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Military organizations have strong proclivities
toward offensive doctrines |
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See war as an inevitable end: the “better now
than later logic” |
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Incentive to implement “standard scenario” |
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More likely to support preventive war |
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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.” |
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Evidence proves that even in the United States
government there was strong support for preventive war |
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In the Truman Administration the Joint Chiefs of
Staff (JCS) were in support of first strike doctrines |
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In the Eisenhower Administration key military
officers supported preventive options |
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Other examples: |
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Russian military leaders considered a preventive
war on China |
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The second operational requirement of deterrence
is that both sides have invulnerable second-strike nuclear forces |
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The United States gained invulnerable forces
only after civilians forced the production of new weapons systems |
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Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs)
were opposed by US Navy leadership, hoping that Strategic Air Command would
pick up the cost |
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Intercontinental Ballistic Missles (ICBMs) were
not a priority in the Air Forces budget |
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The final operational requirement is that
nuclear arsenals are secure from accidents and unauthorized use |
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Unfortunately, organizations change standard
operating procedures after the threat has been noticed |
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Evidence from US experience |
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Test missile fired from Vandenberg Air Force
base during Cuban Missile Crisis |
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Staff at a Montana silo gave themselves
independent ability to launch missiles |
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New proliferants will choose an “opaque” path to
proliferation, which is even more unstable |
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Furthermore, new proliferants will not have the
same time security that the US and USSR had |
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The spread of nuclear weapons will make the
world less secure |
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Realists such as Kenneth Waltz have “confused
what rational states should do with predictions of real states will do.” |
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Organizational theory yields a troubling outlook
on nuclear proliferations |
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Three policy implications: |
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US should maintain its non-proliferation policy |
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The international community should be convinced
that non-proliferation is not only in US interests but for global security |
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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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