The other day in class, a professor of mine was talking on the topic of nuclear strategies over the past 50 years or so. One of the strategies we focus quite a bit on was Massive Retaliation, coined by John Dulles. The principle behind massive retaliation is that the nuclear enabled states in the system should adopt a policy of massive nuclear retaliation against any non-nuclear or very weak nuclear state as a way to keep them in line.
Now, due to the Soviet arms race, Massive Retaliation was replaced by Mutually Assured Desctruction (MAD) as a nuclear strategy, however, since the soviet union's collapse, there has not been a decent threat for years.
Now upstart countries like North Korea and Iran have taken it upon themselves to attempt to develope nuclear capabilities.
So the question is, should the US re-adopt a policy of Massive Retaliation against these countries?
EX. Iran bombs Israel. US then turns Tehran into glass parking lot.
EX. North Korea sells nuclear bomb to Terrorist Organization A. Terrorist Organization A uses nuclear bomb against US or allies. US turns North Korea into big crater.
Both nuclear and conventional attacks can spark a Massive Retaliation when the enemy state lacks retaliatory capacity.
What are the legal, ethical, moral, political repercussions of this policy. Is worth a good hard thought by US politicians?
Now, due to the Soviet arms race, Massive Retaliation was replaced by Mutually Assured Desctruction (MAD) as a nuclear strategy, however, since the soviet union's collapse, there has not been a decent threat for years.
Now upstart countries like North Korea and Iran have taken it upon themselves to attempt to develope nuclear capabilities.
So the question is, should the US re-adopt a policy of Massive Retaliation against these countries?
EX. Iran bombs Israel. US then turns Tehran into glass parking lot.
EX. North Korea sells nuclear bomb to Terrorist Organization A. Terrorist Organization A uses nuclear bomb against US or allies. US turns North Korea into big crater.
Both nuclear and conventional attacks can spark a Massive Retaliation when the enemy state lacks retaliatory capacity.
What are the legal, ethical, moral, political repercussions of this policy. Is worth a good hard thought by US politicians?